Every once in awhile, a war movie comes along that does something truly innovative to make its story memorable. These are ...
From colonial America to the recent war in Iraq, Army stories have captured movie audiences for nearly a century; influencing ...
Werner Herzog had never even seen a movie until he was 11. Now 82, the visionary director is working constantly, still making ...
At director Werner Herzog's so-called "film school for rogues," he shows students how to forge a shooting permit. With more ...
An Army historian felt that while the D-Day landing scenes were realistic, the rest of the film was a “typical World War II movie.” ...
Speaking during celebrations to commemorate German Unity Day last month, Chancellor Angela Merkel stressed the importance of historical awareness. Young Germans in particular need to learn more about ...
but his movie was actually made a decade after the battle ended -- and it still stands up today. In January 1945, Allied victory in Europe was anything but assured. The German military launched a ...
After the fierce battles in the Falaise Pocket in August 1944, the remaining German Army units in Normandy were in full blown retreat for the relative safety of the eastern bank of the River Seine.
On Dec. 16, with the onset of winter, the German army launched a counteroffensive that was intended to cut through the Allied forces in a manner that would turn the tide of the war in Hitler's favor.
In this video, German He-111 Bombers take heavy damage on a bombing run to hit an allied airfield. But RAF Spitfires as well as anti-aircraft fire do everything they can to take them down.
For many decades after the end of World War II (WWII), a broad popular narrative—reinforced through thousands of films and books—cast the German military as unthinking tools of Nazi ideology. Only in ...
Terry Adams Jr., a former US Army working dog handler, rates eight military dogs in movies and television shows ... Cranston and Aaron Paul; and the German shepherd in "I Am Legend," who protects ...