Sunday, November 13, 2011

'The Americans in The Bulge' on Veterans Day at Fort Benning

Entrance to the imposing museum.
It was a great honor to have the opportunity to screen The Americans in The Bulge, on Veterans Day at Fort Benning, as part of Livingbattlefield.org's non-profit, educational, outreach program. The museum is an incredible tribute to  U.S. armed forces through the ages.

Carl Beck, Marilyn Pahr and Richard Lanni

We were joined by Veteran Screaming Eagle, Carl Beck, who appears in The Americans on Hell's Highway. Carl drove down from Atlanta with Livingbattlefield.org's board member and friend, Marilyn Pahr. Carl joined in a Q&A session after the screening.





Lieutenant Jordan Beck, introduces the show.


IMAX Director, Mark Balsinger and AV Director, Lieutenant Jordan Beck, pulled out all the stops to make Veterans Day 2011 at Fort Benning, a memorable occasion for everyone.






Director Richard Lanni addresses the audience.



Although not present, 101st Airborne veteran, Jim "Pee Wee" Martin's words, stole the show. The audience were captivated by his gripping account of life in Bastogne during the siege, and his humorous description of how the German surrender pamphlet was used as toilet paper.












The National Infantry Museum is undoubtedly one of the most engaging historical sites that we have ever visited. We are sure that during our WWI research, we will be spending a lot of time here.

Statue of a GI, rifle in hand, charging forward.
It was incredible to see the film on the enormous IMAX screen, which measures 70' across and 5 stories high. The powerful sound system enabled the audience to hear every sound effect with alarming clarity.

Opening sequence.



Carl answering questions.


After the screening, Carl Beck, answered viewers questions about 'The Bulge'. Ever the comedian, Carl gave his own humorous recollections of that fateful battle.





Richard Lanni and WWII vets


Other WWII veterans, who volunteer their time to talk with people attending the museum, were also present at the screening. They were given a warm welcome and a rapturous round of applause.





1st Sgt. Chris Goodrow meets Carl

The U.S army showed their appreciation for the screening.  It was even suggested that every young soldier should see the films as part of their training, Wow!! Wouldn't that be great.





Carl talks with Dorothy Ziegler

Another special moment occurred when audience member, Dorothy Ziegler, realized that Carl Beck had served under her father, Col. Ewell, in the Hell's Highway campaign.






This film will be showing for another two weeks at Ft. Benning. Who knows, maybe the trilogy will become a fixture at this amazing theater. This was the first of a number of screenings this month and next, culminating with our final screening of the year in New York on December 7th.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

New WWI Project


From the producers of
The American Road to Victory
Comes
A Four Part Series for Television

Following hot on the heels of the groundbreaking American Road to Victory, a little understood period of American history is to be dramatically explained in a new four part mini series for Public Television.
President Woodrow Wilson asked Congress for A war to end all wars.

Livingbattled Doughboy
Over There, Doughboys in The Great War,
will follow young Americans in that war from April 1917 to the close of hostilities in November 1918.  Names of battles like Cantigny, Belleau Woods and Saint Mihiel will be brought to life as gripping re-enactments and veteran accounts draw viewers into the action.

Livingbattlefield’s unique approach to story telling, together with on location filming, special effects, and graphic moving maps will orientate and engage viewers at a foxhole level, in the bloodiest of conflicts.

By November 1918, more than one million, five hundred thousand souls had crossed the treacherous, U-boat infested Atlantic Ocean to join the conflict. Many went to a watery grave.

No detail will be spared in dramatizing the horror; waterlogged trenches will be constructed and a liberal use of pyrotechnics will be used to convey the real look and feel of battle.

Early model tanks, like prehistoric beasts, will trundle over the scorched earth of the battlefields, while bi-planes, climbing and rolling, perform deadly dogfights in the skies above.

The valiant contribution of African and Native Americans will be explained together with details of more than 25,000 women who gave their all in support of their Doughboys.

From the actions of heroes like Sgt Alvin York, to the exploits of the dashing young Major, George S. Patton jnr, American audiences will see how great men were forged on the killing fields of Northern France.

Livingbattlefield is a 501(c)3, not for profit educational media foundation.
Anyone requiring more information, or wishing to donate to this project should email: heidi@livingbattlefield.org


Sunday, October 9, 2011

Where did we find German tanks?

We received an email from a client, who had purchased our film 'The Americans in The Bulge'. He could not understand how we had managed to film German armor, particularly the Tiger II tank and the Panther.

Unlike Holland, during the filming of Hell's Highway, where we had the use of a WWII American tank, we had no such luxury with 'The Bulge'.
Cameraman Philip Robertson with WWII American tank in Holland
There are only 2 working examples of the 'King Tiger' in the entire world and the Panther is also a rare beast.


La Gleize, Belgium.Shell of Tiger II left behind by SS
After a series of negotiations with the famous tank museum at Saumur in France, we decided that hiring the working King Tiger, for the day and filming it in front of a giant blue screen, was not a viable option. Apart from the significant cost involved, the logistics were too difficult.


                                                                  

We knew that trying to portray the actions in the Ardennes without examples of menacing German tanks lurking down every snowy forest path, would be challenging and could well lack the  element needed to maintain the interest of a younger audience.

Cem prepares for filming.





Racking our brains, we came up with the idea of filming miniature 1/6th scale, remote control tanks on blue screen. We located a company in England, Mark-1-Tanks, who build these incredible models and sell them to enthusiasts around the world. We assembled our camera team and accompanied by our  young visual effects artist Cem Hizli, we spent several days filming a variety of tanks, assault guns and halftracks. 

For all you would be purchasers  a King Tiger model can cost up to $15,000, depending on final level of equipment and finish.





Tiger II on blue screen


Filming the models was just the start. The next problem would be capturing the right shots in Belgium and then with the aid of Adobe after effects, adding the models to the scenes. During the film edit, our editor Matt Hart often managed skilfully to meld the new shots with archive footage. There is only so much archive footage and it has been seriously overused, so the models gave us a new dimension.





  Here is a 'StuG' mobile assault gun and
our presenter hiding from it.





 Model 'Panther' in snow and on blue screen

 
            





  Massed German Armor and Infantry


 Our new production, 'Over There' The Doughboys in WWI, will involve a number of model WWI Renault tanks, which will be specially built for the production. Viewers will be able to see the dashing young, George S. Patton jnr, champion of early tank warfare, charging with his machines across the rolling hills of Northern France.








                                                                                                  

Monday, October 3, 2011

Design ideas

We are in the process of designing our new trilogy cover for The American Road to Victory series (click on this to see the individual dvd covers). We would appreciate your feedback. Which one do you like most? Do you have suggestions about something you think would improve your favorite design? We look forward to reading your comments!

Idea #1 - black
Idea #2 - flag
Idea #3 - map

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Operation Market Garden



Operation ‘Market Garden’ is usually considered a complete failure, but was it? Certainly in it’s entirety, the operation, the largest daylight airborne drop ever mounted, failed to achieve it’s overall objective. But American forces, although hampered by setbacks, did secure all the bridges and crossings allotted to them. A substantial German force was also tied up for the remainder of the war.

This post will seek to explain what happened during  4 crucial days in September 1944.

Unlike D-Day, which was 2 years in the planning, Market Garden was hastily put together in a matter of days. It involved the largest parachute drop of the war. 

Field Marshall Bernard Montgomery
Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery, fresh from his success in Normandy, believed he could 'walk on water', and this buoyed optimism led to an audacious, but hasty and ill prepared operation.

The operations were split into two phases, 'Market' and 'Garden.' 'Market' was the code name given to the massive Allied parachute drop and 'Garden,' the ground offensive. 

Two American Airborne Divisions, the 82nd and the 101st, were to seize bridges and hold road crossings between Eindhoven and Nijmegen, and take control a stretch of highway between the two cities, while the British 1st Airborne were to drop on the Northernmost town of Arnhem and take control. Arnhem was the final barrier to entry into the German industrial heartland of the Ruhr.

As the various airborne divisions landed and took control of their objectives, British XXX Corps an armored and infantry force, waiting on the Belgian side of the Dutch border, were to jump off from their start point, rush up the newly seized highway and cross the Rhine river at Arnhem, opening a spearhead into Germany thus ending the war by Christmas 1944. 

Market Garden Operational Map ©Livingbattlefield.org
As with all hastily planned operations, very little notice was taken of intelligence reports. The Dutch resistance had repeatedly informed the Allies there were German SS panzer divisions resting and re-equipping in the Arnhem and Nijmegen zones. Even RAF reconnaissance had photographed camouflaged tanks, but the line fed to the airborne troops was entirely different. They would be facing a force of "old men, boys and walking wounded" with no stomach for a fight.

 Day 1

The largest allied parachute drop of WWII took place in broad daylight on September 17th 1944. 

101st DZ at Best
Transport aircraft and gliders carried the 502nd and 506th regiments of the 101st airborne to their drop zone in the southern sector, North of Eindhoven, while their sister regiment the 501st were dropped further up the highway at Eerde. It was a beautiful sunny Sunday afternoon when the aircraft roared into view over their respective zones. 

Three regiments of the 82nd Airborne were transported to their zones in the Nijmegen and Grave areas. The British 1st Abn were dropped some 8 miles from their objective at Arnhem. The drops were virtually unopposed, most units landed on target and the Germans were clearly taken by surprise, but they soon regrouped.


Grave Bridge
By the end of Day 1, The 504 82nd Airborne had taken and secured  their objective, the Grave bridge.  The other regiments had landed unopposed on their drop zone at Groesbeek and were making probing attacks towards Nijmegen.

The 101st had achieved mixed results. The 501 had taken their objectives at Eerde, but the 506th and the 502nd had run into stiff opposition at Son and Best.The Son Bridge, vital for the British XXX Corps relief effort, had been blown in their faces.  A British Bailey bridge would be needed to cross the canal at Son, but where were the British armored columns?

British XXX Corps
After crossing the border, XXX Corps had come under heavy artillery fire from elements of German paratroopers and SS artillery, who were well dug in . After a vicious fight the British columns ground to a halt and rested for the night. The operation was already falling behind.




German Paratrooper Eckhert Schucany describes the attack.

Day 2
Leonard Funk
In the early morning of Day 2, the 82nd Airborne drop zone at Groesbeek, an area vital for the re-supply operations, came under heavy fire. Their German attackers had recovered from the initial shock of the paratroop and glider landings. In danger of being completely overrun, 1st Sgt Leonard Funk of the 508 Parachute Infantry Regiment saved the day. He mustered a group of paratroopers and repulsed the German attack, taking many prisoners.

General Maxwell Taylor 101st Airborne
The 101st Abn's 501 regiment came under heavy attack at Eerde, but beat off a determined offensive by the same German paratroopers who had attacked the British armored columns on day one. Holding only a narrow corridor, Allied paratroopers were vulnerable to attacks from the flanks. 

The Germans were using their forces as a 'fire brigade', rushing up and down either side of the highway, attacking at will. General Maxwell Taylor of The 101st Airborne Division described the position as being "like guarding the railroad from Indian attacks in the Wild West."

The 101st Airborne 506th had managed to construct a makeshift walkway across the canal at Son, they had entered  Eindhoven and had met up with the British XXX Corps. A Bailey bridge was requested and the British battled through the cheering crowds to reach Son. They would finally arrive at 23:00.

The 505 and 508 regiments of the 82nd Airborne continued to fight the stubborn Germans in Nijmegen. They were still a way from their objective, the main bridge.

Elements of the British 1st Airborne were locked in deadly combat with the German 9th & 10th SS panzer divisions at Arnhem. They were being decimated.

Day 3
  
At 06:am, U.S paratroopers and British engineers, having worked all through the night, finally waved the British tanks across the bridge at Son.
By 07:15 am the British tanks had reached the midway point of the Highway at Veghel, where some peeled of to support the 501st. 
At 08:30 the forward British elements were at the Grave Bridge South of Nijmegen, which was still firmly held by the troopers of 504th, 82nd Airborne.

Nijmegen Bridge
The tanks reached Nijmegen soon after and paratroopers and armor  battled towards the bridge.

Jan van Hoof
There was hellish street fighting and there paratroopers sustained many casualties.  The SS held a firm grip on the bridge. They had a fine vantage point and could direct accurate fire on the approaching Americans. The Germans had wired the bridge with explosives as a last ditch attempt to stop the advancing Allies. Late in the night on Day 3, a young Dutch patriot, Jan Van Hoof , is reputed to have climbed under the bridge in the dead of night and cut the detonating wires. Jan was caught and executed by the Germans on the morning of the 20th as he lay wounded after a British scout car that he had been traveling on was hit by a German grenade.

Day 4
On day 4 of 'Operation Market Garden,' the 101st airborne continued to repulse the German probing attacks up and down their narrow corridor of 'Hell's Highway,' but the real action was taking place in Nijmegen and Arnhem. The British paratroopers were still grimly holding on, but they were massively outgunned and outnumbered and they had taken catastrophic casualties. The relief columns still pinned down in Nijmegen were already 30 hours behind schedule. There was no sign of a breakthrough. A bold plan was required to take the all important bridge.

Gavin meeting British generals
82nd Airborne General, James.M.Gavin and a group of British generals met on the south side of the Waal river. They discussed how a simultaneous assault on both ends of the bridge might break the German's grip. Captain T.Moffatt Burris, of  I company 504, was present at the meeting. 
 Captain T.Moffatt Burriss explains

Original crossing boat (courtesy Groesbeek museum)

 

The boats chosen for the crossing were narrow, flimsy, canvas and collapsible.

Original crossing site, Waal River
As the troopers drifted out into the middle of the fast flowing river,  they paddled with their rifle butts as the Germans opened up with everything they had. Many of the little boats were blown clean out of the water. Casualties on the crossing alone amounted to over 50%. After the survivors reached a small sandy area on the far bank, now named 'Little Omaha,'  they had to make a 500 yard dash in the face of withering machine gun and mortar fire.

Open ground on far bank of Waal River.
 While the 504 were making the river crossing. elements of the 505 and 508, with British tanks in support, were attacking from the Southern end. After killing or capturing the German defenders on the far bank, the troopers of the 504 began their fight to the Northern end of the bridge. It was a house to house battle, which took several hours. Finally they fought up the steps of the bridge and overpowered the defenders while continuing to take fire from snipers up in the superstructure.

Steps to Northern end of Nijmegen Bridge.
The actions of the other regiments of the 82nd Airborne at the Southern end had also succeeded and British tanks started to make their dash across.

Heinz Harmel (courtesy Bundesarchiv)
SS Brigadefuhrer, Heinz Harmel, watched as the first tanks started to cross. He wanted to wait until they reached the center before giving the order to detonate. He gave the command and nothing happened! He realized the wires had been cut!



Captain Moffatt Burriss met up with the first tanks across.

The British stopped for the night, but in the morning when they moved off the Germans had re-grouped and re-supplied. There would be no relief for the British paratroopers at Arnhem. Of the 10,000 British at Arnhem, only 2000 escaped death or captivity.

Though all American objectives had been achieved,'Operation Market Garden' had failed. The war would not end by Christmas 1944 and northern Holland would not see liberation until the Spring of 1945.

The Americans on Hell's Highway  is the 2nd part of 'The American Road to Victory' trilogy, which has been broadcast on PBS stations throughout the U.S during 2011. It is available on DVD priced $ 23.95 + shipping or $69.95 including shipping for the trilogy.

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Who was this pilot?

marker placed by local resident, Ken Lewis
Heidi's son surveys crash site

Walking close to the office earlier this summer, we came across this newly planted sign, honoring Robert Sarvis, apparently a member of both the RAF and USAAF. We had heard from our neighbor that a plane crashed in this area, and was bulldozed under the road. These pieces of information led to two questions. Who was Robert Sarvis and was he part of the plane crash?

photo courtesy of Derek Frisby
Back at the office, the internet search commenced. First, a PR piece from Middle Tennessee State University confirmed that Sarvis, an alumni of MTSU, piloted a plane that crashed here, and put a group of students at the crash site recently. 

Sarvis was born on July 4th, 1917. He was actually Canadian, though he grew up in the States and married there. According to Tennessee historian Greg Tucker, Sarvis was a big guy,  6'1" tall and weighing over 200 pounds, who played left tackle for the college football team. He signed on as a volunteer for the RAF after Pearl Harbor, and then, in 1942, began wearing an American uniform, but remained with his British crew. 

As often happens, conflicting accounts of his service are scattered across the internet. But, we were lucky to find the grandson of another crew member who survived the flight that night. Simon Weir is working on a book and documentary about Sarvis. He kindly gave us permission to post this photo of the crew, and helped us sift out the truth, which he says is well documented by the Air Crew Remembrance Society.

This copyrighted photo is used with permission.
Briefly, the crew was headed to a night bombing raid on Stuttgart, Germany, but was attacked by a night fighter, and had to abort the mission. The crippled plane, a British Lancaster, headed for the safety of the Normandy beachhead. But, en route, it was further damaged by friendly ack-ack fire. The rest of the story is best told by a letter one of the crew wrote to Sarvis' wife (copied here from the Air Crew Remembrance Society site):
" . . . We were over the interior of France when we were hit. The aircraft was very badly damaged, and immediately went into a dive. While Bob was trying to regain control of the plane, he gave the order to abandon the aircraft. The engineer, who was closest to the escape hatch, jumped just before Bob was able to pull the plane out of the dive, and hold it on an even keel. As soon as he was able to do this, Bob told the rest of us to remain in the aircraft, and we altered course for the Allied lines in Normandy, hoping to get as near to them as possible before bailing out.  By skill and sheer strength, Bob was able to keep us up until we reached Allied territory. He said there was no chance of making a safe landing, and told us to prepare to jump. . . ." - Roy Gordon
Though Roy Gordon did not know it at the time, Sarvis did not get a chance to jump, and after making sure his comrades got out safely, Sarvis went down with the burning plane.

flooded fields, plane crashed on right side
As mentioned previously, we are aware that there was an American machine gun nest in our back garden, which looked out over this road where the plane crashed. At that time, the land on either side of the road was flooded by the Germans. To give you an idea what the area looks like when flooded, in contrast to the picture above, here it is last December (taken from the opposite direction).

Our next door neighbor, 10 years old at the time, remembers hearing the loud crash late at night, and going to the site the next day with a friend, where he witnessed the scattered wreckage.

There are some photos of an excavation done in 1989 on this blog.

We hope to have more photos of Sarvis' early years for future posts. We'd also like to see a memorial placed at the site of the crash to honor this hero.