Operation Vittles (1948) Poster

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6/10
Airlift
boblipton13 March 2014
Following the defeat of Germany in the Second World War, that nation was occupied by Great Britain, the United States, France and the Soviet Union. Each power occupied a different section of the nation. Berlin, Germany's capital, was within the Soviet sector, but was likewise split up into four occupation zones.

On 24 June 1948, the Soviets closed off the roads to Berlin This was seen as the other powers as attempting to assert control over the entire city. They responded with Operation Vittles, a major operation under the command of General Curtis Lemay, to supply the city. This short subject offers the background of the situation and discusses the response.

It offers itself as a dry recitation of the facts, a series of newsreel clips with a narrator explaining what each image means: the power stations that do not run because of lack of fuel; the people standing in line for milk; the burning crashed supply plane that did make a clean landing. The use of newsreel images offers film of a lower quality, arguing a sense of reality. The real art, such as it is, lies in the editing together of the images to tell a cogent story.
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10/10
Big Chocolate
omcquaid8 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
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8/10
Fascinating documentary on the 1948-49 Berlin Airlift
llltdesq20 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This was nominated for the Academy Award for Documentary, Short Subject, losing to Toward Independence. There will be spoilers ahead:

In 1948, trains which carried supplies into the city of Berlin, which was in the Soviet zone of Germany. The other three powers, the United States, the United Kingdom and France, had troops stationed in their respective zones in Berlin. The lack of supply was going to be a serious problem for the residents of Berlin. Thus, the Berlin Airlift was born.

This documentary tells the story of how the airlift began, how it was accomplished and what the results were. It's a bit 15 minutes long and some of the narration is rather dry, but it succeeds in doing what the United States Air Force wanted it to accomplish-it promotes the value of a standing air force in peacetime by showing just how successful the airlift was in keeping Berliners and Allied forces from starving or freezing to death.

Using a mix of newsreel footage, graphics and charts, the sheer magnitude of the operation becomes very apparent. The complexities of keeping the numbers of planes in the air, basically around the clock, not to mention the convoy of ships needed to bring fuel for the planes, is mind-boggling. It's a fascinating short.

This should be more widely available is is worth seeking out. Recommended.
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