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Why We Fight - Prelude To War (1942) - Video On Demand

  Why We Fight - Prelude To War - Prelude To War  

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Why We Fight - Prelude To War - Movie Review

Prelude to War (1942) was the first film of Frank Capra's the Why We Fight propaganda film series and won the 1942 Academy Award for Documentary Feature. World War II is introduced in black and white terms, with Henry Wallace's quote "This is a fight between a free world and a slave world" pictorialized with the "free world" of the Allies as a brightly-illuminated planet and the "slave world" of the Axis Powers as a planet deep in shadow.

The Axis is depicted as seeking total world conquest. An animated map first shows Mussolini's ambition to re-create the Roman Empire, complete with the Mediterranean as "Our (the Italians') Sea", then Japan's ambition - described in the Tanaka Memorial (Its authenticity is still a matter of dispute) - to conquer Manchuria, China, Indochina, Siam, Burma, the East Indies, India, Australia, New Zealand and Russia east of Lake Baikal, before moving east to crush the United States. The Nazis are shown as first claiming Europe, then moving east through Iraq and Iran into India, then south to conquer Africa. Once this is accomplished, the Nazis would cross the Atlantic Ocean from Dakar to Brazil - meeting up with the Japanese who have crossed the South Pacific. Simultaneously, the Nazis would cross the North Atlantic Ocean from Scandinavia into Canada, meeting the Japanese forces (pejoratively referred to as Germany's "buck-toothed friends") crossing from Siberia. The combined Axis armies then overrun the United States.

Isoroku Yamamoto, commander-in-chief of the Imperial Japanese Navy is shown making a speech which is deliberately mistranslated (as in other US World War II propaganda) as "When war comes between Japan and the United States, I shall not be content to merely occupying Guam, the Philippines, Hawaii, and San Francisco. I look forward to dictating the peace to the United States in the White House at Washington." - this is followed by a scene showing the "conquering Jap army" marching down Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington DC, as the narration alludes to Japanese atrocities in Nanking, Hong Kong and Manila.

The film exposes the mendacity of Axis claims that they need living space due to their overpopulation, by showing that they deliberately encouraged a high birth rate in order to increase their military manpower. It also points out that while they claimed to lack raw materials, they were able to build enormous war machines. The Nazi Wehrmacht is mentioned to have "30 Panzer divisions, 70 motorized divisions and 140 infantry divisions".

The film notably takes the position that the war started on September 18, 1931 with Japan's invasion of Manchuria, which is covered towards the end of the film along with Mussolini's invasion of Ethiopia. The animation showing a Japanese dagger plunging into Manchuria is re-used in The Battle of Russia, The Battle of China and War Comes To America.

Why We Fight is a series of seven propaganda films, commissioned by the United States government and directed by Frank Capra, designed to convincing an isolationist nation of the need to become involved in WWII. Capra was daunted and terrified by Leni Riefenstahl's propaganda film Triumph of the Will, and worked in direct response to it.

Why We Fight - Prelude To War - Cast & Crew

Directed by: Anatole Litvak, Frank Capra
Produced by: Office of War Information
Crew: Robert Flaherty, Walter Huston, William Hornbeck
Copyright: Public Domain
Format: Black + White
Duration: 53 mins
Year: 1942
Tags: Capra, Propaganda, World War II

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Why We Fight - Prelude To War Trivia - Did You Know?

In many of the films, Capra and other directors spliced in Axis powers propaganda footage – recontextualizing it so it promoted the cause of the Allies instead. The films were edited mostly by William Hornbeck, and are some of the best examples of found-footage montage ever produced. The animated portions of the films were produced by the Disney studios. U.S. Army Special Service Division.

Related Films

Why We Fight - The Nazis Strike | Why We Fight - Divide and Conquer | Why We Fight - The Battle Of Russia | Why We Fight - The Battle Of Britain | Why We Fight - The Battle Of China |

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