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NOVA: The Great Escape - The Most Daring Allied Prison Escape of World War II (2004)

NOVA: The Great Escape - The Most Daring Allied Prison Escape of World War II (2004)
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It was undoubtedly the most ingenious and brilliant act of self-liberation in contemporary history, rivaling anything undertaken by Henri Charrière or Harry Houdini and making any fictional prison escape accounts look broadly drawn and crude by comparison. It was an undertaking of humanistic triumph so astonishing that it might have risked denial in later years were it not for the wealth of overwhelming evidence and the testimonies of survivors. In the early '40s, over 600 members of the Nazi prison camp Stalag Luft III set about digging three carefully-concealed tunnels, over three stories underground and several miles long, nicknamed "Tom," "Dick," and "Harry" -- escape routes sophisticated enough to even incorporate railways and electric lights. On the evening of March 24, 1944, the inmates planned to spring two hundred men in this way. Only 77 entered one of the tunnels -- many of whom were recaptured and killed -- but a few emerged from their incarceration unscathed. Over 60 years later, historians have devoted a wealth of literature to this miraculous occurrence, and Hollywood cinematized the subterfuge in 1963 with The Great Escape, but in this astonishing 60-minute video, WGBH's NOVA series digs into an area that has eluded researchers for decades -- locating the third tunnel -- "Harry" -- which eluded the Nazis by virtue of its careful concealment. In NOVA: The Great Escape -- The Most Daring Allied Prison Escape of World War II, viewers can journey back to the site of Stalag Luft III with NOVA's camera crew and a team of archaeologists to uncover and tour this long-lost relic and listen to the miraculous accounts of surviving prisoners and escapees. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Director(s):
Mark Radice
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of NOVA: The Great Escape - The Most Daring Allied Prison Escape of World War II

It was undoubtedly the most ingenious and brilliant act of self-liberation in contemporary history, rivaling anything undertaken by Henri Charrière or Harry Houdini and making any fictional prison escape accounts look broadly drawn and crude by comparison. It was an undertaking of humanistic triumph so astonishing that it might have risked denial in later years were it not for the wealth of overwhelming evidence and the testimonies of survivors. In the early '40s, over 600 members of the Nazi prison camp Stalag Luft III set about digging three carefully-concealed tunnels, over three stories underground and several miles long, nicknamed "Tom," "Dick," and "Harry" -- escape routes sophisticated enough to even incorporate railways and electric lights. On the evening of March 24, 1944, the inmates planned to spring two hundred men in this way. Only 77 entered one of the tunnels -- many of whom were recaptured and killed -- but a few emerged from their incarceration unscathed. Over 60 years later, historians have devoted a wealth of literature to this miraculous occurrence, and Hollywood cinematized the subterfuge in 1963 with The Great Escape, but in this astonishing 60-minute video, WGBH's NOVA series digs into an area that has eluded researchers for decades -- locating the third tunnel -- "Harry" -- which eluded the Nazis by virtue of its careful concealment. In NOVA: The Great Escape -- The Most Daring Allied Prison Escape of World War II, viewers can journey back to the site of Stalag Luft III with NOVA's camera crew and a team of archaeologists to uncover and tour this long-lost relic and listen to the miraculous accounts of surviving prisoners and escapees. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
60 mins

Complete Cast of NOVA: The Great Escape - The Most Daring Allied Prison Escape of World War II


Director(s):
Mark Radice
Writer(s):
Mark Radice
Producer(s):
David Dugan
Categories:
Documentary
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    Member Reviews
     
    Michael p. M.

    This documentary provided a wonderful window into what actually happened. It showed who the real men were and gave many more accurate details that make more sense.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Glenn W.

    The movie got a lot right.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Tom C.

    I think this documentry was an ill attempt to make something from nothing. Granted, the escape was real and I respect that and the people who lived through it but there was nothing great about the story. The most impressive point was the construction of the tunnels. But in the end, they didnt finish two of the three tunnels. (The nazis found two of them) And everyone but 3 people who escaped ended up dead. (Murdered). So there is no great escape. Its just a documentry of what a few POWs did in their spare time that ended up getting a lot of their friends killed.

    Yes   |   No

     
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