John Huston War Stories
During World War II, the propaganda engine of the U.S. government made a pivotal decision with unforeseeable results: they tapped John Huston to shoot war documentaries with an expressly patriotic spin. Few could guess the degree to which Huston's documentaries would depict the sheer brutality and horror of modern warfare - particularly his Let There Be Light and The Battle of San Pietro. The films served (by default) as cinematic protests, even as they graced new and brilliant heights within the scope of American documentary. (Indeed, Light was banned by the government for 35 years). Midge Mackenzie's 1998 documentary John Huston: War Stories explores this little known facet of Huston's career, intercutting clips from the various documentaries with a Huston interview shot just prior to his death. During World War II, the propaganda engine of the U.S. government made a pivotal decision with unforeseeable results: they tapped John Huston to shoot war documentaries with an expressly patriotic spin. Few could guess the degree to which Huston's documentaries would depict the sheer brutality and horror of modern warfare - particularly his Let There Be Light and The Battle of San Pietro. The films served (by default) as cinematic protests, even as they graced new and brilliant heights within the scope of American documentary. (Indeed, Light was banned by the government for 35 years). Midge Mackenzie's 1998 documentary John Huston: War Stories explores this little known facet of Huston's career, intercutting clips from the various documentaries with a Huston interview shot just prior to his death.
You May Like
We Are Many
★ 6.7
Busby Berkeley: A Journey with a Star
Becoming Cary Grant
★ 6.6
Art as a Weapon
★ 6.0
Island Soldier
★ 6.0
Here and Elsewhere
★ 6.5
Showbiz Goes to War
★ 10.0
The Death of "Superman Lives": What Happened?
★ 6.7
The Atomic Cafe
★ 7.3
Stories of the Kosovo War
★ 8.0
Gene Tierney: A Forgotten Star
★ 6.4
Hedda Hopper's Hollywood
★ 6.0