Introduction

The story of what it felt like to live in Britain during World War II, told through the eyewitness accounts and cine films of ordinary people.
Outline
The story of the last years of World War II, and its immediate aftermath, told through a series of films shot by both civilians and members of the armed forces. They include fascinating footage of Warship Week fundraising events at home, digging for victory, life in the Lincolnshire town of Louth and a first-hand account by an SIS covert operations agent on active duty in the field.
This second episode includes the British breakthrough at El Alamein, revealed by a sergeant who filmed the guns pounding the German positions, and the most complete film of a Bomber Command squadron in action, made by a serviceman stationed at a Lincolnshire base.
Footage shot secretly by islander Olive Thompson offers a unique insight into life under German occupation, while a guard with an interest in home movie-making captured the daily routine of German prisoners of war in POW Camp 633 (Boughton Camp, New Ollerton, Nottinghamshire).
These lost films are a striking reminder of Britain in a different era. With much of the footage in colour, the past leaps to life with immediacy and reveals how world events impacted on the individual at home as well as in action.
Lost Films of WW2 Series
Production & Filming Details
- Production: BBC.
- Distributor: BBC.
- Release Date: 12 September 2019 (UK).
- Running time: 60 minutes.
- Country: UK.
- Language: English.
YouTube Link




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