World War II Behind Closed Doors: Stalin, the Nazis and the West | |
---|---|
Genre | Educational |
Created by |
Laurence Rees Andrew Williams |
Based on |
World War II German-Soviet relations |
Narrated by |
Samuel West (UK) Keith David (US) |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 6 |
Production | |
Running time | 300 minutes |
Production companies |
BBC PBS |
Original release | |
Network | BBC |
World War II Behind Closed Doors: Stalin, the Nazis and the West is a 2008 six-episode BBC/ PBS documentary series on the role of Joseph Stalin and German-Soviet relations before, during, and after World War II, created by Laurence Rees and Andrew Williams.
It carries new controversial material from the Soviet archives that became available to the public only after the end of the Soviet Union. Each episode lasts approximately one hour and features reenactments of the situations subject.
The 2008 film combines narrative-led documentary segments interwoven by dramatic re-enactments with actors representing main political figures of the period. The original narrative voice-over was performed by Samuel West, while Keith David, a veteran of Ken Burns's PBS series, narrates the American version. Joseph Stalin is portrayed by Alexei Petrenko, Winston Churchill, by Paul Humpoletz, and Franklin D. Roosevelt by Bob Gunton. [1] [2]
The series delves into such matters as the British, American, and Soviet cover-up of the Katyn Forest Massacre; Churchill's agreement at Yalta that Stalin should keep his gains of the Nazi-Soviet Pact, including Poland's prewar Kresy (eastern borderlands); the Polish population transfers (1944–1946); and the betrayal or persecution of figures such as Marshal Georgy Zhukov, Vyacheslav Molotov, and John H. Noble. The British historian Laurence Rees did the research compilation and the lead writing for the series, and the drama was directed by Andrew Williams. [1] [3]
# | Title | |
---|---|---|
1 | "Unlikely Friends 1/2" | |
Looks at the
Nazi-Soviet Pact of 1939 after the
Battle of Poland together with the planning and start of
Operation Barbarossa, the German invasion of the
Soviet Union of 1941. | ||
2 | "Unlikely Friends 2/2" | |
Explores the relationship between the Soviet Union and Britain during the war, the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor and plans for a
Western Front in
Europe. | ||
3 | "Cracks in the Alliance 1/2" | |
Features the
Moscow Conference between Stalin and Churchill and two battles on the
Eastern Front:
Stalingrad and
Kursk. | ||
4 | "Cracks in the Alliance 2/2" | |
Covers the
Tehran Conference, the first between the "
Big Three",
D-Day in France and the
Warsaw Uprising. | ||
5 | "Dividing the World 1/2" | |
Details the
Battle of Normandy, the
Battle of the Bulge, the
Yalta Conference, the push to
Berlin, and the victory over Germany from the perspective of Allied nations. | ||
6 | "Dividing the World 2/2" | |
Focuses on
Operation August Storm, the end to the
Pacific War, the
Potsdam Conference, the fall from grace of
Zhukov and
Molotov, the death of
Stalin, to the eventual fall of communist influence with the
Berlin Wall in 1989. |
Rees, Laurence (2008). World War II Behind Closed Doors: Stalin, the Nazis and the West. Barnes & Nobles Publishing. ISBN 978-0-307-37730-2.