Lancaster

  Рет қаралды 2,356,532

Tom Walsh Film

Tom Walsh Film

Күн бұрын

125,000 men volunteered to fight for RAF Bomber Command during World War II. 55,573 never returned.
From the dusky English coast to the flak filled night skies of war-torn Europe, 'Lancaster' tells the story of a young bomber crew as they fly one final daring night raid over occupied France in the face of insurmountable odds.
‘Lancaster’ explores the human, personal experience of the war that raged in the skies during WWII, the reality of the bravery and fear, the indiscriminate nature of combat and the impact on the individual.
From award-winning director Philip Stevens and award-winning producer Tom Walsh, ‘Lancaster’ is a powerful and moving portrayal of the courage and sacrifices of the men who took to the air in the name of duty during the bombing campaigns of the Second World War.
Written and Directed by Philip Stevens
Produced by Tom Walsh
Director of Photography - Stewart MacGregor
Production Designer - Amy Nicholson
Editing and VFX - Tom Walsh
Music - Lee Gretton
Sound Design & Mixing - Chris Hainstock
Colourist - Boyko Stankov
Executive Producers - Sam Wardhan & Lorrie Stock
Boy - Lincoln Cupples
Pilot/Skipper - Mark Burman
Bomb Aimer - Philip Stevens
Flight Engineer - James Richards
Navigator - Joe Richardson
Wireless Operator - Lewis Gemmill
Mid Upper Gunner - Giles Kristian
Rear Gunner - William Clayton
Eleanor - Kirsty Averton

Пікірлер: 2 000
@rogerbayford8323
@rogerbayford8323 4 жыл бұрын
Just had me in tears~ I lost my dad over Harburg, Nov 11,1944, in Lancaster DX-H 57 Sqd. He was the rear gunner. What stunned me was that in the movie the Rear Gunner was nicknamed Titch, the same as my dad, The real shocker was to hear another says his wife was Maisie, my mothers name! I lost it right there. I have often visited "Just Jane" at the Lincolnshire Aviation Heritage museum while attending 57 Squadron Reunions from the USA! Wow did this bring it home again! It looked like the gentleman that spoke at the end was wearing a 57 Sqd Lapel pin, can anyone confirm please. A wonderful tribute and so well done, Thanks to all involved in this wonderful production!
@FinarfinNoldorin
@FinarfinNoldorin 2 жыл бұрын
My God, how heartbreaking. One day I pray we will all be united in peace and there will be no more loss of precious lives.
@asc.445
@asc.445 Жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry for your loss. It must have deeply affected your life, I can not imagine your loss or pain.
@bobhawkboss6936
@bobhawkboss6936 Жыл бұрын
Your father was a good man, you should be proud to be his son mate.
@alisonhilll4317
@alisonhilll4317 Жыл бұрын
The comments here sound so staged , its just like hassbar shills, 😊
@Bob-zf9rr
@Bob-zf9rr Жыл бұрын
@alisonhilll4317 True lol
@kennyc388
@kennyc388 3 жыл бұрын
My Uncle Billy flew the Lancaster's as well as other bombers in WW2. He was 20 years old at the time. He made it home in one piece. He was a patriot and a gentleman. RIP Ernest William
@MachineElf
@MachineElf 6 жыл бұрын
My great uncle survived the war flying as a wireless operator, my uncle died in the rear turret of a lancaster, I joined in 76 till 85 and this really moves me because I know that I could never be as brave as these men. Never forget.
@davewilson9772
@davewilson9772 7 жыл бұрын
Most of the crews were barely out of their teens, yet proved themselves to be men of the highest order. I am humbled at their selflessness.
@removankebabzic887
@removankebabzic887 3 жыл бұрын
You call these men of the highest order? I don't see how cowardly blowinf up cities and people from the air is in any way glorious.
@davewilson9772
@davewilson9772 3 жыл бұрын
@@removankebabzic887 When you learn how to spell feel free to get back to me. In the meantime why don't you educate yourself and learn who started this carnage. Here's a hint, it wasn't the British.
@bertstokroos6138
@bertstokroos6138 3 жыл бұрын
@@davewilson9772 In my little village in the Netherlands we have 4 British airman buried at the graveyard. They got shot down in 1940 close to my home in a Handley Page Hamden , every 4th of May ( our memorial day ) we honor them for giving their lives for our freedom. they were all in the early 20s
@zazanapoli4749
@zazanapoli4749 Жыл бұрын
@@bertstokroos6138 That's why I have a problem with the above video. The pilot looks like he's over 40. Rarely were they over 30. Bad casting.
@alisonhilll4317
@alisonhilll4317 Жыл бұрын
All wars are bankers wars , international zionist bankers the Rothchilds declared war on Germany in 1933 after Hitler took back control of the German central bank from rothchilds and locked one up ( Kennedy was about to take back the federal reserve from international zionist bankers), because hyper inflation was making Germans walk with a wheel barrow full of paper money to buy a loaf of bread , do some research try Churchills " zionism vs bolshevism " or Henry Ford's " The International Jew " then just research Rothchilds front man George Sorros who's, funding NGOs like IsraAid and then just listen to Barbara Lerner Spectre, also research the USS Liberty ect .
@MrRunner
@MrRunner 5 жыл бұрын
My uncle volunteered and completed 32 Ops as a Navigator in a Lanc. My Dad said he was never the same afterwards, he wouldn't drive at night for example. An intensel private and quiet man, he never, ever discussed his wartime experiences. He died in his 60's. I loved him.
@charlotteinwonderland5954
@charlotteinwonderland5954 4 жыл бұрын
Here in France we know how high has been the price paid by the RAF to free France. As a former NCO of the French Air Force, I salute each and all of those who have fought and died for our freedom.
@Insperato62
@Insperato62 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you. My dad always felt bad about bombing France, but he saw it as one of the ways to flush out and drive back the Germans in order to end a war. Unlike many (mostly post War generation with connections with the Army) he never called the French cowards, but quietly said being occupied is an unpleasant experience (he was a master of the British understatement), and we should not judge people trying to survive. RIP Dad.
@bevnewman3646
@bevnewman3646 4 жыл бұрын
I recently discovered my great uncle who I was told was lost is actually buried in a French cemetery. Thank you to your country for looking after him and his crew. It means a lot.
@Wotdermatter
@Wotdermatter 4 жыл бұрын
While serving in the Royal Navy I was assigned to H.M.S. Mersey, a Royal Navy Reserve minesweeper for special exercises. After, three minesweepers went to St. Malo, north France and spent a week there. I went to a quiet bar by myself one evening and started talking to the owner/bartender, a lady of about 40 years of age. During our talk, I noted a Croix de Geurre propped up on the bar. I mentioned that and she told me the story of how she had been part of the French Resistance and she told me that many people in St. Malo had done the same. Many people, especially the great unwashed in England, poo-pah the bravery of the French during WWII. While talking to her, a few others came in the bar and they had also been in the Resistance. I learnt many things from them, especially that they appreciated what the British did to help them during the war, and their disdain for many of the French politicians during the war who mainly did nothing to help their war effort and that included de Gaulle who they considered as a runaway because he went to England and really did nothing to help them, only himself. 'nuf sed
@kennyc388
@kennyc388 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you !!
@smudgealdrin1512
@smudgealdrin1512 Жыл бұрын
Both my Grandfathers were with the BEF & evacuated at Dunkerque . Both of them told me the French Army fought like lions to hold back the germans . Even tho they knew they were on a loser. So a force could get back to the UK & regroup. Then eventually liberate France & the rest of occupied Europe . The French are far from pushovers & despite our history & differences.. They remain one of our biggest allies to this day.
@peterlowe8869
@peterlowe8869 3 жыл бұрын
My Dad was a Navigater on Lancastors in WW 2 ;- they sure had guts to do what they did.. He survived the War and Died in 2004, R. I. P Dad..
@keithmountain9437
@keithmountain9437 7 ай бұрын
Mine too. I wish he was still here.
@grannychoochoo5602
@grannychoochoo5602 6 жыл бұрын
Well done film. For those who have actually been in combat, they recognize the detachment of the crew to the danger they face. It is testament to their courage and their dedication that they flew into battle night after night doing their jobs with professionalism and energy. Thank you, Royal Air Force, for your service and your sacrifice. I agree with the previous comment. This deserves a full feature treatment.
@Subway1427
@Subway1427 4 жыл бұрын
My Dad and Granddad were both RAF. The lads that went up in those tin cans, getting strafed and and taking flack. No idea if this was the last mission, where they give all they have to give. Nerves of steep. Greatest generation!
@billhunter2831
@billhunter2831 7 жыл бұрын
my dad was a twenty year old navigator on halifaxes in the later parrt of the war when their odds were a little better , a mixed crew of aussies and poms. no safe spaces ove the night skies of germany. will a always be my hero . RIP. luv u dad. so happy to come across this , the tears are pouring out as i write this.
@juliansquarepants5356
@juliansquarepants5356 6 жыл бұрын
Bill Hunter my wife's uncle was mid upper gunner in 466 Squadron. Killed on bombing raid to Magdeburg Germany.
@terryofford4977
@terryofford4977 6 жыл бұрын
Well said Bill, we had many Aussies,Kiwis, Poles, Canadians and Rhodesians and South Africans at the airfields around where I lived in Britain, all fighting for the same cause. We should thank all these amazingly brave individuals. Terry Offord
@johnedwards7360
@johnedwards7360 6 жыл бұрын
to me they were all heroes, amazing how all the different commonwealth nations flew in the crews
@davidgudlaugson528
@davidgudlaugson528 5 жыл бұрын
Bill, my Dad was also a navigator on Halifaxes. He was born in 1912, and was definitely one of the older members of aircrew. He did 32 trips [actually 34 but trips to the French coast were only counted as half a trip]. He survived.
@user-bh4rx8mf8g
@user-bh4rx8mf8g 5 жыл бұрын
My granddad was also a 20 year old Halifax MkIII crewman in the later stages of the war- 1944 onwards with 578 Squadron based at Burn in Yorkshire, with a Canadian bomber squadron. He was the signaller. Thank God for all the heroes from around the Commonwealth who took up arms alongside our grandparents. May their sacrifice never be forgotten.
@paulrowe9604
@paulrowe9604 Жыл бұрын
My father was a country yokel from Hinderwell , North Yorkshire and went to join the R.A.F. at Binbrook as a teenager where he was trained as a wireless operator /air gunner on Lancasters other wise known as a WOP/AG . He met my mother at Grimsby . The last words I ever heard him say was that he has a WOP/AG on Lancasters whilst some youth made fun of him at Princess of Wales Hospital , Scartho , Grimsby after he had a heart attack ! Next thing I got a phone call from the hospital to say he had passed away ! Only 57 ! So proud of his service !
@bfhfhfhdj
@bfhfhfhdj 11 ай бұрын
My Dad was a tail gunner, I have his log book, 300 miles on one engine, shot up by FW, etc, He was an Irish volunteer, ended up in the RCAF, flew one tour and a bit, a stint in the pathfinders, etc, came home to Ireland and treated as less than dirt. The tried for a time to talk about it but none was interested. Lest we forget!
@jules2545
@jules2545 5 ай бұрын
I salute your Dad.
@nicktaylor2820
@nicktaylor2820 7 жыл бұрын
My father flew 57 missions in the second world war and died this week aged 97
@logankrywoszej5081
@logankrywoszej5081 6 жыл бұрын
Nick Taylor I am sorry for your loss I’m sure he was a great man
@RussianPenguin
@RussianPenguin 6 жыл бұрын
Thank you for his service he's a hero among many others
@robinkowen
@robinkowen 6 жыл бұрын
Rest in peace sir
@jeremydable2468
@jeremydable2468 6 жыл бұрын
I wish you long life and the blessing of happy memories.
@stevethomas-cc5lz
@stevethomas-cc5lz 6 жыл бұрын
my grandfather Sgt A.J. Laney was at normandy beach, got shot 8 times and kept going. he died in 95.
@billyrock8305
@billyrock8305 9 ай бұрын
My father flew the Lanc on many dangerous missions over the Atlantic into battle with the enemy. Thankfully he survived. 🇬🇧 Honour our heroes.
@ajpistilli
@ajpistilli 2 жыл бұрын
I am a volunteer at the Commemorative Air Force in Mesa AZ where we are so fortunate to have TWO B17G pilots still with us Every Saturday. They both flew 25 or more missions over Europe and take precious tome at their age (98 and 100) to spend with visitors and tell stores about their experiences. God Bless their humble dedication 🙏 thank you for sharing your stories!
@tomhenderson1952
@tomhenderson1952 6 жыл бұрын
“When you go Home, tell them of us and say, For your Tomorrow, we gave our Today” We will remember!!
@knightowl3577
@knightowl3577 6 жыл бұрын
My best friends father was transferred from the Infantry to the RAF to be a rear gunner in a Lancaster because of the heavy losses of bomber crews. He survived the war but suffered from " nerves" for the rest of his life.
@gavinplunkett977
@gavinplunkett977 4 жыл бұрын
I have had the privilege of meeting a Lancaster pathfinder navigator who flew 35 missions, he was so humble. he received the DFC but said he was just doing his job. RIP Don Cruden.
@BorderRebels
@BorderRebels 4 жыл бұрын
An excellent film, my thanks to the writer, director and everyone involved with making it. My Dad, Gordon Craig, was Flight Engineer with Lancaster C-Charlie, 44 Squadron, RAF Waddington. They were shot down over Osnabrück on 6th October, 1942 - two crew lost, the rest taken prisoner. My Dad went to Stalag Luft III, then after several escape attempts he was moved to the harsher Stalag VIIIB in Upper Silesia. With the advancing Eastern Front, the guards used their prisoners as human shields and forced them in freezing conditions onto what became known as the Lamsdorf Long March, or as he always called it, the Death March. They were being held in a marshalling yard on the outskirts of Dresden during the awful firestorm, which they witnessed at close range. He told me that they all cheered at first as the Allied bombers appeared, but fell silent as the full horror of the raid became apparent.
@TomWalshFilm
@TomWalshFilm 4 жыл бұрын
Wow. Thanks for sharing this. There are so many remarkable stories. Incredible for their bravery, resilience, triumph and indeed horror. It’s so important that these stories remain alive. And important to remember that these soldiers were so often boys being sent to war with no control or real understanding of the reasons for going or the terror they were to face. Thank you.
@richarddower9134
@richarddower9134 3 жыл бұрын
Our father Group Captain N.S. Dickie Dower passed away at Christmas 2020 at 99 years-old. RIP Dad ❤
@EVERYDAYLAWNCARE
@EVERYDAYLAWNCARE 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for service sir! HOORAH
@richarddower9134
@richarddower9134 3 жыл бұрын
@@EVERYDAYLAWNCARE Thank-you 🍻
@steverobinson9836
@steverobinson9836 4 ай бұрын
Group Captain N.S Dickie Dower I salute you and your comrades RIP sir and thank you for your magnificent courage
@rickrayn
@rickrayn 7 жыл бұрын
My father was a navigator in the RCAF and finished his tour on August 8th, 1944 which was also his birthday. He was 24. He was awarded the DFC.
@Markus_Andrew
@Markus_Andrew 3 жыл бұрын
Remarkable short film. There are surviving recordings of Lancaster crews made during their missions, and the actors in this short sound exactly like them. Very casual and laid-back, very matter-of-fact, like they're commenting on a cricket match as opposed to a situation in which their lives could end at any moment. They sound unflappable. This is an excellent recreation.
@cgmillington
@cgmillington 2 жыл бұрын
All air crews were volunteers, if they showed the slightest bit of fear/ nerves or refused to fly they were convicted of LMF (lack of moral fibre) stripped of their rank and sentenced to 2 years hard labour for cowardice if face of the enemy. Many were scared witless to go up time after time but they had to hide it
@enriquemunoz704
@enriquemunoz704 2 жыл бұрын
@@cgmillington that doesn't sound like volunteering to me.
@cgmillington
@cgmillington 2 жыл бұрын
@@enriquemunoz704 yup no-one was drafted into the air force
@greggblack8205
@greggblack8205 4 жыл бұрын
Whoever the Producer and Director of this short film is should seriously think of producing a full length film! The filming, framing, costuming and atmosphere is done so very well!
@thedoctor2247
@thedoctor2247 6 жыл бұрын
My Grandfather was a rear gunner for Lancs He survived the war. Being a rear gunner he saw the mesesmits coming at him, prayed to god he would not be hit, for out of all the crew, his compartment was so tight he had no parachute. Thank you Grand Pa and all who served to keep us free. We will never be able to repay the debt.........bowing.
@markstrumma4733
@markstrumma4733 6 жыл бұрын
The Doctor My biological father was also a rear gunner. I only remember meeting him once when he was in hospital I was maybe 5-6. He died not long not after that. I remember that he had horrible scarring across his torso from from being shot up in the war. Seems he was quite a character and lived a colourful life. I would have loved to have got to know him but sadly never had the chance.
@jayhenry5765
@jayhenry5765 4 жыл бұрын
These men are so damn brave. I can't imagine the feeling of being up in the air knowing that with just a blast you and your crew will be toast. Brave men they are.
@WootTootZoot
@WootTootZoot 6 жыл бұрын
My best friends father enlisted as a pilot with about 30 guys from his home town. His graduating class at flight school had over 170 guys just as pilots. He was shot down on his first mission over Germany and was the only crewman from his airplane that survived. After the war was over, he returned home to find out that out of his flight school class and all of the guys he enlisted with, he was the only one who survived the war. His entire life after the war was fairly typical, got married, raised a family, had a good job teaching math and coaching football at a local school. But just before he died he told his children the stories of his captivity and the guilt he felt being the only survivor. Sadness followed him daily, even though he tried bravely to not show it. My father, who was his best friend at work, once told me that the man carried the weight of the world on his shoulders, I never really knew what that meant until I heard the final stories of my friends fathers service. The pain of war will never replace the woe of the aftermath. Those men saved a nation.
@TheChrisrods77
@TheChrisrods77 7 жыл бұрын
Agreed more stories and movies need to be told about the RAF crews in WWII. There is still so many untold acts of bravery and heroism that are not known, so important to get the stories from these vets before they leave us. I was stationed in the UK with the USAF and had the awesome opportunity to meet and talk with aircrew vets and normal citizens who lived through the blitz on the ground. I salute my RAF brothers in the sky and on the ground. Cheers Lads
@rustykilt
@rustykilt 2 жыл бұрын
This short movie far outstrips any previous efforts portraying BOMBER COMMAND or EIGHTH AIR FORCE. A brilliant and moving work. I worked for a man who had been a pilot of a Lancaster in BOMBER COMMAND, he was Australian. My memories of him was he was always a nervous and somewhat distracted bloke, who never liked to talk about his experience. I am an honorary member of 463 and 467 Squadrons, having helped organize their reunions. Few are left now and being with these gentlemen was a privilege.
@scottfuller5194
@scottfuller5194 7 жыл бұрын
Just completed research into an RCAF pilot who flew the Lancaster in 44 (Rhodesia) Squadron, RAF......He flew nine combat bombing missions....his last being a night bombing raid on the German Navy U-Boat pens at Lorient, France in February of 1943. After dropping their bomb load, their Lancaster was hit by Anti-Aircraft fire and then seen turning away from the U-Boat pen target area, heading due west out over the Atlantic and........was never heard of again. No crew remains nor aircraft parts were ever seen and thus they "failed to return" to their station at RAF Waddington. The crew were comprised of the pilot, Royal Canadian Air Force Flying Officer John Millar, six other RCAF aircrew and two RAF aircrew. John's older brother, Lieutenant William Millar of the Royal Canadian Engineers (RCE) had been captured as a Prisoner of War during the 19 August 1942 Operation Jubilee raid on Dieppe......then repeatedly attempted escape as a POW no fewer than four times, ending up in the Oflag IVC POW camp, Colditz (the highest level of security camp for officers who had a record of attempted escapes)....where in January 1944, he successfully escaped, travelling to Czechoslovakia, where he was recaptured from his fifth escape, and subjected to the German state security service (SD) order "Kugel Erlass" (Bullet Decree), whereby all recaptured escaping POWs were ordered into Gestapo custody, taken to the Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria and shot by the SS, body cremated and ashes scattered in June 1944. Thus he, like his brother John, has no known grave...... May they both rest in peace, never forgotten.....
@terryofford4977
@terryofford4977 6 жыл бұрын
Absolutely correct Scott Fuller:: Amazingly ,the simple minded 'Revisionists' who show a tendency toward being pro NAZI' would deny this information or perhaps even turn it around to show how 'evil' those brave bomber crews were Terry Offord.
@gordonfrickers5592
@gordonfrickers5592 6 жыл бұрын
Can we ever honour such men enough? No, but we can actively fight for the same values they sought to preserve. Particularly now there is a serious attempt to foist by subversion, Islam with it's barbarous Sharia laws onto our societies and our children.
@johnmcng
@johnmcng 5 жыл бұрын
Amazing story Scott. And a very sad one. I'm always amazed by these stories of bravery. Thanks for sharing this one with us. It keeps their memories alive and in a way, gives John Millar and Willaim Millar a place to be remembered.
@shakesperezen6078
@shakesperezen6078 4 жыл бұрын
Bless em 😢💔.. (/-\)..
@masterchief-vd1xs
@masterchief-vd1xs 4 жыл бұрын
@@terryofford4977 they weren't evil guys.just normal guys in their 20s who fought in their opinion the nazis and probably they werent thinking about whom they actually killed. But even if you despite the missions they had you have to admit they must have had enormous balls going in this flying coffins over germany.
@christiannathanorr
@christiannathanorr 7 жыл бұрын
It's amazing how a film so short can have such a lasting impact.
@maranti34b
@maranti34b 7 жыл бұрын
One of my uncles piloted a Lancaster. He survived being shot down once, and flew again, in a brand new Lanc. He and his crew were all Australian.
@FlgOff044038
@FlgOff044038 6 жыл бұрын
461 460 RAAF ?
@elrjames7799
@elrjames7799 4 жыл бұрын
"One of my uncles"; not very believable: name, squadron, can the affiliation to yourself be checked, etc?
@d.thomasmoore3020
@d.thomasmoore3020 4 жыл бұрын
@@elrjames7799 Gee what an arse you are
@elrjames7799
@elrjames7799 4 жыл бұрын
@@d.thomasmoore3020 Thanks: very much appreciated, I'm sure.
@terryofford4977
@terryofford4977 4 жыл бұрын
@@elrjames7799 There's an excellent book titled LANCASTER, written by M Garbutt & B Goulding, the contents include Names/Ranks of the Major Australian Squadrons who fought As Australian Squadrons and also Aussies who flew with Mixed Crews, Poms Canucks, Aussies,Kiwis Poles,etc listed also are the Air Bases they flew from, the Aircraft Registration Numbers/Sqdns and where known, Crashes/shot downs and accidents are listed, some with photographs of the actual aircraft. Quite a few with Photographs of the crews. As a Pom, I had relations who lived near a few Bomber stations where I was, as a kid, able to see/meet the brave and amazing men who flew from Lincoln bases and some Yorkshire bases, I actually lived four miles from the Yeadon A>V> Roe Factory where the Lancs were built. hence my particular interest, I respectfully suggest that you try find the book Originally written 1971 but reprinted seven times, the latest being 1999. ISBN 1- 85648-055-0 The book actually includes a picture of a Lancaster shown in Leeds Yorkshire, P-Peter 97 Sqdn Straits Settlements B1 Model Reg No R5552 OF-P (This aircarft did 47 Sorties.I can not forget that I recall seeing this as a very small boy (6 years old) that was 77 years ago!!!Best of luck. Terry Offord
@AUSSIEDAVEROCKS
@AUSSIEDAVEROCKS 7 жыл бұрын
My great uncle was a RAAF pilot assigned to RAF Bomber Command "Pathfinder" SQN flying a Lancaster. He was not required to fly since he completed his tour with the RAF, and just waiting on his transportation papers to return home. But he decided to go on one more mission to Berlin while he waited, and on the return leg was intercepted over Holland by a German night fighter. His Lancaster was hit, and Dutch villagers reported the crippled bomber was deliberately steered away from the town it was flying over, before crashing just outside of town. Instead of bailing out and letting the bomber crash inside the town the pilot and crew sacrificed themselves. People from the town retrieved the bodies and gave them a proper burial, and even today they still tend to the graves of those men.
@jamesdale8301
@jamesdale8301 6 жыл бұрын
AUSSIEDAVEROCKS m
@camrenwick
@camrenwick 6 жыл бұрын
That's an amazing story. My respect
@racheltaylor6578
@racheltaylor6578 6 жыл бұрын
AUSSIEDAVEROCKS That’s a great story.
@davidlloyd8374
@davidlloyd8374 6 жыл бұрын
A true story...... Dambusters pilot Les Knight honoured by Dutch village Remembering Dambuster Les Knight DSO permanent memorial to Australian pilot Les Knight can be seen in the village of Den Ham where he is buried A memorial service has been held to commemorate a pilot who saved his seven-man crew and a Dutch village during World War Two. Flt Lt Les Knight was killed during a Dambusters raid on Germany in 1943. After his Lancaster bomber was badly damaged he is said to have steered the aircraft away from Den Ham, in the Netherlands, before crashing outside the village. The service was held in Den Ham to mark the 75th anniversary of his death. Les Knight was awarded the Distinguished Service Order for his bravery Flt Lt Knight was a member of 617 Squadron, based at RAF Scampton in Lincolnshire, and had been awarded the Distinguished Service Order for his bravery during raids on three German dams four months earlier. The 22-year-old Australian was taking part in another raid on 16 September 1943 when his low-flying aircraft hit a tree. He told his crew to bail out and flew his aircraft away from Den Ham, saving its inhabitants, said Melvin Chambers, who organised the memorial service. "We regard Les Knight as a saviour of our village," he said. "The local villagers actually hid five of Knight's crew and helped them get back safely to England. "We're very fortunate to have traced family members of some of the crew. They are in the village right now and it's the first time they've been together since Les Knight sacrificed his life." Fred Sutherland was one of the crew members saved by Knight during the Dambusters air raid 75 years ago.
@rollosnook
@rollosnook 6 жыл бұрын
Les Knight was also a Dambuster, that's how he got his DSO. Knight was killed later the same year while taking part in Operation Garlic, the Dortmund Ems Canal raid. His aircraft hit a tree and after ensuring the crew bailed out, he could not land the aircraft. It was Knight's bouncing bomb that finished off the Eder dam during Operation Chastise.
@yoohoo909
@yoohoo909 4 жыл бұрын
Last year in spring I cycled through France from Toulouse. My goal was the Normandy Beaches. It is one thing reading and dreaming about what it must have been like in my youth, and surreal to be in the very locations. At a campsite in Esnandes, I met an older couple scouting out their retirement in an RV. In a chat over beer and sodas, the burly Englishman told me his grandfather was a tailgunner on a Lancaster. He is buried somewhere in Germany. He passed along to me wisdom only realized and understood by survivors of those noble young men.
@paddykennedy3820
@paddykennedy3820 11 ай бұрын
I would love to hear
@patriciabracken7546
@patriciabracken7546 5 жыл бұрын
May all those brave men. Rest in peace. Their likes will never come again. Bless them all. Lest we forget.
@KB4th
@KB4th 7 жыл бұрын
That is an exceptional short film. The tension of the flight and the personal moments are amazing.....
@davidrelite6239
@davidrelite6239 4 жыл бұрын
My 6th class reacher was a Lancaster navigator. When I was a kid - 11 yrs old (am now 71)we went on a school excursion to the Australian War Memorial. My teacher just stood beside the Lanc on display for about 15 mins and did not speak or move. I can only imagine what was going through his mind.
@empriseinsights6462
@empriseinsights6462 7 жыл бұрын
There was an unusually large draw of young men from my high school who served as bomber crews in the Royal and Royal Canadian Air Force in WW2. A documentary entitled 'The Boys From Kelvin High' is heart breaking as mere teenagers and the senior 'old' guys of a mere 21 years-old went into the meat grinder night after night losing 50% of the crews during the course of WW2. Following in their footsteps two generations later, 30+ years of military service cannot measure up to their sacrifice. Proud Canadian veteran saluting those who served before us.
@elrjames7799
@elrjames7799 4 жыл бұрын
Which "high school" would that be then, eh?
@andrewcharles459
@andrewcharles459 3 жыл бұрын
@@elrjames7799 Kelvin High School. It's in Winnipeg.
@elrjames7799
@elrjames7799 3 жыл бұрын
@@andrewcharles459 "How far is Winnipeg from Montreal?"
@andrewcharles459
@andrewcharles459 3 жыл бұрын
@@elrjames7799 A little over 2,200 km.
@InsiderInciter
@InsiderInciter 6 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for making this film. My father joined the RCAF in Canada during the war and was trained as a navigator and I love keeping the memory of those planes and their service alive. During training he got very good marks, and they transferred him into the RAF 12th Squadron that flew out of Wickenby. He said a very similar thing about the casualties. "We treated it like a job. You went to school during the day, and flew the missions at night, and sometimes when you got up for breakfast the next morning, there just weren't as many guys there." He also flew the raid to Berchtesgaten, ferried prisoners of war out of Brussels, and then later the food drop to Holland. When the rest of the world celebrates the end of the war when the cease fire went into place, Holland celebrates it a few days earlier, when the Lancasters dropped food to their starving people before the cease fire was in place. You are probably familiar with the quote from the British Leadership ( I don't remember the source off hand.) that it is possible that the Lancaster Squadrons were perhaps the single most effective weapon in winning the war. When you consider a single Lanc could carry 22,000 pound bomb load capacity over the B-17's 4,800, and the B-24's 8,000, it is easy to see why it was the standard of "Heavy Bombers." I have done a fair amount of research as to the procedures and tools he used, and as a fellow film maker, love the authenticity of your dialogue (no comment on the bombardier thing.) My only comment is I think you may have mixed two periods of time here in your presentation. During the beginning of the war the squadrons went out in large groups, but when fighters found them as a group, casualties were very high, so they first went to night bombing and then adopted a strategy a mathematician came up with they refer to as "the bomber stream" My father flew the bomber stream, which involved each plane navigating their own course separately to the target. The advantage to this approach was based on the limited time enemy fighters could stay in the air. If a plane was discovered, it was almost certain death, but the planes in front could not be found, and the planes behind would alter course. the fighters only had so many minutes of time in the air, and then had to land and refuel, and the rest of the stream would get by. My father to told us that they were given a 3 minute window to be over the target, and it was imperative they be over the target during that window as group bombing sometimes resulted in bombs being dropped on other bombers. So I think the anachronism here is that when they were flying in a squadron formation as you show here, they had a master navigator that gave direction and heading for the entire group, as the Americans did with their "flying box" formation, and the adjustment in course would come from the wireless operator from the master. If they were flying bomber stream, course corrections would come from the nav. We can only assume that our heroes here had the master navigator, and we didn't here the wireless op relaying the order. One plane making course adjustments on its own in a squadron formation that tight at night would be disastrous. Please don't take this as a big criticism of the film, I love it, and I think for dramatic purposes, it doesn't diminish the story at all. Just adding some historic perspective. _ .... ._ _. _._ ... ..._._
@terryofford4977
@terryofford4977 6 жыл бұрын
Insiderinciter: Excellent information and write up. much logic applied here a great write up, Thank you. EX RAF.Terry Offord
@smidon
@smidon 4 жыл бұрын
InsiderInciter great comments/critique. I was disappointed by the formation flying and bombardier as these are USAAF aspects, but other than that a good sense of how it was. There were in a sense master navigators, Pathfinders marked turning points and the target for the bomber stream and a number of navigators throughout the stream were tasked with sending back (home) found winds, which were then broadcast to the stream. For the record my uncle lost his life in a Lancaster over Peenemunde, one of the many.
@ianbethune9235
@ianbethune9235 4 жыл бұрын
My granduncle was a tailgunner in a Lancaster. His crew flew a dozen missions, but all were K.I.A. after being shot down on Dec.31, 1944.
@janeh4664
@janeh4664 6 жыл бұрын
A powerful punch of a film. A tribute to those brave men. To put that much emotion in 12 minutes is a credit to the whole cast
@neildouglas2365
@neildouglas2365 6 жыл бұрын
My late grandfather, Stan Jones, was the radio operator on 101 Sqn RAF's 'Bad Penny', part of the two-ship Lancaster recce drop for Operation Manna in Holland. An amazing storyteller with many a tale from his time in the war. Miss him. This film does a good job of realizing the circumstances he'd share in those tales of boredom and terror. Pity about the use of the term 'bombardier' for that chap's role, as it is an Americanism. That man was called the 'bomb aimer' in commonwealth aircrews. Fantastic effort regardless. Well done!
@andrewmallory3854
@andrewmallory3854 4 жыл бұрын
I spotted that too. Glad they got the correct 'left-left' instruction though. Mostly well done. We cannot today speak for those who died. Why they fought and what they would think of the world since.
@andrewcharles459
@andrewcharles459 3 жыл бұрын
I have a DVD of some bomber command recordings made on actual missions and one of those also uses the term bombardier. I do know that some USAAF crew were seconded to the RAF for various reasons and I wonder if the bomb aimer on that aircraft was actually American. On the other hand, the recordings were made specifically for radio broadcast, so I wonder if the term was used deliberately for the benefit of American listeners.
@Buzzbox3rd
@Buzzbox3rd 7 жыл бұрын
RIP boys, Lest we forget. From Australia, with sincere love.
@terryofford4977
@terryofford4977 6 жыл бұрын
In Australia we DO NOT FORGET God Bless them all.
@cooldewd35
@cooldewd35 5 жыл бұрын
We never forget down here. Keith Miller was a Mosquito Bomber pilot before he was a test cricket hero. More heroism than I will ever possess. God Bless.
@davidjordan9759
@davidjordan9759 5 жыл бұрын
Thanks to the Aussies for all that they did.
@paddy.7784
@paddy.7784 4 жыл бұрын
Ditto for us Kiwi's.
@phantasyboy1031
@phantasyboy1031 4 жыл бұрын
@@terryofford4977 Not true we forget the Korean War servicemen and we have forgotten about the Boer War servicemen during ANZAC days
@msmirandagirl
@msmirandagirl 4 жыл бұрын
This is a marvelous short film. Very well done and very haunting. One of my relatives was a wireless operator/gunner on a Lancaster. His crew was flying on a mission when they was shot down over Holland. He did not survive the crash. I hope someday to visit his grave to pay my respects.
@richardglady3009
@richardglady3009 10 ай бұрын
Wow…thanks for the service and sacrifice of these men and their loved ones. Thank you for this video.
@ChattingwithMarkStise
@ChattingwithMarkStise 6 жыл бұрын
This was so absolutely amazing! I had a friend who was stationed in England during the war. What struck me the most was the very end scene where the elderly gentlemen spoke aboutWatching the planes coming back and finding out who made it and who didn't. It was exactly what my friend said It was the only time I got him to talk about the war and the only time I saw him cry He was part of the Mighty 8thThank you for making this film.
@stumac869
@stumac869 4 жыл бұрын
Some of the bravest men crewed those bombers and they are probably the least recognised, gratitude to all of them.
@chrisby777
@chrisby777 7 жыл бұрын
Amazing courage of all those brave men. Thank you for your service guys!
@nicholashodson6041
@nicholashodson6041 2 жыл бұрын
My history teacher at school had been a tail gunner in Lancaster. He was part of the Pathfinder squadron(s). They had a special insignia on their uniform but the Germans figured out what it meant and it resulted in much harsher interrogations for any aircrew captured. So they took off the insignia but then the Germans realized that if there were two holes in the uniform in just the right place that was where the pathfinder insignia had attached. So they had to get new uniforms. Amazingly, Mr Lewis said he never even saw a German 'plane, due -- in his telling -- to the excellence of their navigator who kept them right in the middle of the formation. He was a hero to us 10 year olds.
@sawfiler1958
@sawfiler1958 10 ай бұрын
My father in law flew 26 missions as a tail gunner in a Lancaster.
@sawfiler1958
@sawfiler1958 10 ай бұрын
I remember him telling me that his job when over the target was to watch for bombs from above. He had the pilot do a hard left one night and bombs from above fell through the gap between the right wing and the tail. He saved them all that night.
@geoffbarr7559
@geoffbarr7559 6 жыл бұрын
Heart wrenching, this should be shown in schools so the few little thugs can see what real men only a few years older did so they could have their today.
@wrengaming1519
@wrengaming1519 3 жыл бұрын
If I know the kids from my school theyd make fun of their accent and masks
@wrengaming1519
@wrengaming1519 3 жыл бұрын
@@Use-or-Lose how so? it seemed pc to me
@wrengaming1519
@wrengaming1519 3 жыл бұрын
@@Use-or-Lose still what would stop them from showing it in school?
@wrengaming1519
@wrengaming1519 3 жыл бұрын
@@Use-or-Lose nah, they'd still show us the movie even if they thought it was a warcrime
@wrengaming1519
@wrengaming1519 3 жыл бұрын
@@Use-or-Lose but the germans were also bombing the heck out of Brittan as well
@bangersnmash4856
@bangersnmash4856 3 жыл бұрын
My mates dad was a tail gunner in a Wellington in a pathfinder squadron, took some guts for these young men, bally heroes all of them
@Altondigitalimage
@Altondigitalimage 7 жыл бұрын
Absolutely Stunning, bought a tear to my eyes. True Hero's should never be forgotten. Well done
@hawkeye4162
@hawkeye4162 6 жыл бұрын
should be a short in before every movie shown in the theater for a least a yr.
@Bruce-1956
@Bruce-1956 6 жыл бұрын
55.573 killed, including my uncle April 1943 (my mother still talks about the last time she saw him). Their graves are scattered throughout Europe, please take the time to pay your respects. We will remember them. 'Enemy Coast Ahead' by Guy Gibson is an excellent source if you really want to understand the RAF (and Bomber Command) during the first years of war.
@idleonlooker1078
@idleonlooker1078 5 жыл бұрын
There are 3 outstanding books - generally considered as classics - written about Bomber Command in WWII. They are essential reading on the subject: 1) "Enemy coast ahead" - Guy Gibson. 2) "No moon tonight" - Don Charlwood 3) "Lancaster Target" - Jack Currie
@alexanderludvigsen1893
@alexanderludvigsen1893 10 ай бұрын
yep, we got one close by me in denmark. every year we get a scotsman out that stands in the bell tower playing his bagpipe for the crews that were shot down and killed over the area. and im pretty sure the homefront fly a missing man formation as well to honour them
@lastactionmedic5677
@lastactionmedic5677 7 жыл бұрын
Being on any bomber crew is WW2 would have been balls to the wall, my hats off to these men. I'll take my chances on the ground boys 🇺🇸🇬🇧
@djones9122
@djones9122 6 жыл бұрын
Medic Randy until the 88mm mg34 and fighters open up on your ass
@charlesmayer497
@charlesmayer497 5 жыл бұрын
Thank you gang for making this film. My grandfather was KIA Stirling over Frankfurt 1942. The most terrifying place requires the greatest courage. Big hearts, big balls, the lot of em. RIP
@wolfeyes9357
@wolfeyes9357 2 жыл бұрын
Great Men and the Greatest Generation!
@johneveridge3714
@johneveridge3714 7 жыл бұрын
Skipper looks old. My Mums cousin was 24 and a Lancaster Squadron Leader shot down over Holland by German night fighter. A group we should never forget.
@brucetucker4847
@brucetucker4847 6 жыл бұрын
Being in that cockpit probably adds about 10 years to you. Ever notice how in old war photos all the boys going off to fight look like teenagers but all the ones just coming out of combat look 40?
@yourievers4859
@yourievers4859 6 жыл бұрын
John Everidge what village did the plane crash?
@elrjames7799
@elrjames7799 4 жыл бұрын
Rather suspect a "my mum's cousin" assertion because that would be your cousin also, if true.
@britishrailways4810
@britishrailways4810 6 жыл бұрын
The Courage these chaps had is just mind boggling. There is an airfield near East Kirkby that was set up by two brothers in memory if their older brother who was killed on a raid to nuremberg in 1943. It is an amazing place and I recommend going especially to the airshow there. It is the ultimate memorial to these brace men.
@ernestsutton25
@ernestsutton25 5 жыл бұрын
This. Is the same. Airfield. My. Uncle flew out of 630sq 5 group. East Kirby.
@steveosborne4699
@steveosborne4699 4 жыл бұрын
18 months ago I had a taxi run in the lanc at East kirkby it was a wonderful experience. They are tiny inside, the crew where heroes for what they did. I thank them all
@rogerbayford8323
@rogerbayford8323 4 жыл бұрын
It is called The Lincolnshire Aviation Heritage Center . It was home base to 57 and 630 Squadrons. On the first Sunday In July each year, there is a Remembrance Ceremony held for the 57 /630 Sqrdn Association. I attended many to pay tribute to all the crews, The first time I attended I stood transfixed thinking about my dads Lancaster DX-H taking off at 540 PM on November 11, 1944, to bomb the oil refineries at Harburg, Hit by flak it crashed at Beckdorf, about 25 miles south east. My dad never came back. He is buried in Ohlsdorf cemetery. Hamburg along with his other crew members. I have visited the grave 4 times and its still hard to do,
@andremcburney6969
@andremcburney6969 7 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this. My great uncle was a Navi in the Lancaster. Said he was part of the day raids... Said he wished he died with his mates... He passed on at 95 years old. I am grateful for this snippet because I often wonder how it must have been...
@christopherclarke5254
@christopherclarke5254 7 жыл бұрын
Andre McBurney I know exactly what you mean! My father survived 50 missions as the tailgunner in B24 (U.S. 8th Army Air Corps). It has always been hard for me to grasp the reality.
@stephendenison6984
@stephendenison6984 7 жыл бұрын
Andre McBurney I
@jacktattis
@jacktattis 11 ай бұрын
Our Accountant at the Tenterfield Shire council NSW did 70+ missions as a Pilot Officer. I only found out when he marched on Anzac Day one year and saw his medals . He was so unassuming I even was in his daughters class at school
@raymondallo9947
@raymondallo9947 11 ай бұрын
The courage of these men is incredible. We own our freedom to these brave men. Thank you for your service and we will never forget.
@aces-ww8zl
@aces-ww8zl 6 жыл бұрын
Why would anyone give this a thumb down? Brave young men, all of them heroes. Gone but never forgotten.
@jacktattis
@jacktattis 11 ай бұрын
Germanphiles
@importantname
@importantname 7 жыл бұрын
Winning a world war is not done by the feint hearted, not without great sacrifice. Lest we forget - all of them!
@stephenbarry3201
@stephenbarry3201 7 жыл бұрын
Well done. Made my eyes damp. Grandfather was a FE at Bardney. Survived the war and died in 1980. Never forgotten.
@misterspitfire6564
@misterspitfire6564 6 жыл бұрын
God Bless each and every one of you that served, fought, died, or survived - your efforts, your sacrifices, your duty well done, will never be forgotten. This nation owes you a debt of gratitude.
@katherinebottingcouturekat5287
@katherinebottingcouturekat5287 2 жыл бұрын
Certainly makes you think watching this. And fathers day of all days i watch this. Hearts go out to the thousands of children who last their fathers due to ww2. Xxx
@batshit_for_ACME
@batshit_for_ACME 7 жыл бұрын
This is effective- and moving- as a short film. The restraint and the quiet add to the tension, and the result is a great story. That said, I would love to see this as part of a full-length film. Excellent work. Top-notch stuff!
@jacktattis
@jacktattis 11 ай бұрын
I think it is hardto do a full length film without falling into the Hollywood trap of over playing the patriotism. We were not that way.
@petehall889
@petehall889 7 жыл бұрын
Mmm, quite moving. My dad was a young pilot In 61 Sqn during the war. His second tour of ops was on Lancasters. He was a lucky chap and never lost any crew, though his aircraft often came home slightly ventilated. The letters he sent to his father are fascinating and full of detail of his experiences. So many young men were, sadly, not so lucky...
@sugarcookie2262
@sugarcookie2262 6 жыл бұрын
My dad became a POW but lived to father me post war. Horrible horrible waste the war was
@RickyJr46
@RickyJr46 4 жыл бұрын
This film induces a suffocating feeling of terror in me. Though I've seen it before and know the ending, watching it again is a form of paying respects to these lads. Well done guys, well done. And thank you, from the USA.
@JohnSmith-fc1yj
@JohnSmith-fc1yj 7 жыл бұрын
Thanks Reg, Stan, Tony and John ... best of the best.
@nick7602
@nick7602 10 ай бұрын
Ex Military myself, my Ex Fiance her grandfather was a navigator he was lost on a raid on konigsberg- 50 Sqn, Skellingsthorpe - lancaster NF921 - VN-Q 30.08.1944 - Even after all these years I have never forgotten him……they say to remember means they will live forever
@rockinbillyboy
@rockinbillyboy 6 жыл бұрын
Respect to those who volunteered for bomber command.....I had an Uncle who's Lancaster was shot down over Bremen 1943...he didn't survive, he was only 21. God bless bomber command.
@Horsti2307
@Horsti2307 5 жыл бұрын
Why should god bless somebody dropping bombs on a city?
@thierryruellan6581
@thierryruellan6581 4 жыл бұрын
@@Horsti2307 You stupid asshole
@phantasyboy1031
@phantasyboy1031 4 жыл бұрын
@@Horsti2307 You can thank the arsehole Churchill for that. They should have concentrated on German airfields.
@Horsti2307
@Horsti2307 4 жыл бұрын
@@thierryruellan6581 :*
@elrjames7799
@elrjames7799 4 жыл бұрын
"I had an uncle", presumably your mothers brother since you didn't mention what your dad did. Do you expect us to believe that simple assertion just on your say so?
@johnfleming1828
@johnfleming1828 7 жыл бұрын
The free people of America don't forget that you Brits fought the Nazis alone and that many of you died for the freedom of the world when it looked like you had no chance of victory and could have cut a deal with that evil that would have allowed your empire to survive. Thank you
@paulpaterson1661
@paulpaterson1661 7 жыл бұрын
just a shame a lot of them try to overlook our accomplishments and efforts which is a bit offensive. But nice to meet a nice American Mr Fleming.
@gmansid3576
@gmansid3576 6 жыл бұрын
john fleming Unfortunately many of your countrymen, brought up on Hollywood propaganda aren't aware of that. Some even think you 'liberated' us, and D Day was an American show only. We couldn't have won it without you though - and Hitler's lunacy in invading the USSR.
@jerzywaszczuk7932
@jerzywaszczuk7932 6 жыл бұрын
They didn’t fought the Nazi, they fought GERMAN...
@matthewoksztul3805
@matthewoksztul3805 6 жыл бұрын
dont forget the canadians, poles, south africans, irish, french, czechs, jamaicans and many more foreigners who were by englands side since the battle of britain, many of those men made huge sacrifices for a country that they didnt even call home.
@duvrek
@duvrek 6 жыл бұрын
...for the freedom of the world under the control of the Rothschilds and illuminati?
@robharding1957
@robharding1957 6 жыл бұрын
That is some stat ! 55 000 never came home, Respect to these brave chaps, true heroes one and all.
@davidpaterson1207
@davidpaterson1207 11 ай бұрын
Brave lads.Forever remembered.
@slikster86
@slikster86 6 жыл бұрын
What a Great short film. These young gentlemen flew countless missions with the odds greatly stacked against them . Still they stepped up with conviction and without question. Truly admirable, totally devotional and beyond heroic. The generations that you fought and died for owe you a huge unrepayable debt of gratitude. We are left to pay our respect by keeping your valiant efforts alive in our hearts and minds, which seems such a small effort for such great loss.
@pyremus
@pyremus 7 жыл бұрын
Wow Tom You and your crew did a fantastic job on this short film. An excellent story, well told.
@GORYOUN
@GORYOUN 4 жыл бұрын
76 years ago tonight, 27th April 1944, my father piloted LL903,166 sqd, on a mission to Friedrichshafen. His plane was shot down by an ME110. He and the Bomb Aimer were the only ones that managed to get out. I suspect this film is the closest I’ll ever get to understanding what it must have felt like that night. He never talked about it and I never asked.
@indyjones1970
@indyjones1970 4 жыл бұрын
Great uncle was tail gunner in Lanc. Never came back. The greatest generation, turning in their graves in 2020.
@jamesestrada2716
@jamesestrada2716 4 жыл бұрын
brave men looked death in the eye while people now will beat you to a bloody pulp for not wearing a mask/being submissive.
@paulgoodsort1824
@paulgoodsort1824 4 жыл бұрын
Storm the beaches in 2020?! Like fuck. Storm the pubs and KFC after lock-down more like.
@FallNorth
@FallNorth 4 жыл бұрын
Lancaster Crew of 2020. "John Lad, reports of a 110 hanging back low stalking our stream, keep a close eye out for him" "I'm sorry, but did you just ASSUME my gender. When we get back I'm filing for a hate crime. You're worse than the nazis."
@jamesestrada2716
@jamesestrada2716 4 жыл бұрын
@@paulgoodsort1824 lol! people of today would only storm Omaha Beach if there was fast food joints behind the seawall.
@Horsti2307
@Horsti2307 4 жыл бұрын
What is so great in killing people and then get killed? It is stupid.
@philip167
@philip167 Жыл бұрын
to the brave young men that gave there live so we can live on we will remember them god bless them all and R.I.P you done a great job
@aussiedownunder4186
@aussiedownunder4186 Жыл бұрын
Excellent! This Director and production crew should make a full length film. WELL DONE!!!!!!
@timorvet1
@timorvet1 7 жыл бұрын
With the benefit of hindsight one can look back and judge the bombing campaign from the comfort of their own lounge chair. These fellow's didn't have that luxury they were fighting for survival and the freedom they knew, that which could be taken from them at any time, and replaced with a new dark age. For that we should be truly thankful.
@alanjones6359
@alanjones6359 7 жыл бұрын
My dad served in bomber command , over the years I have been to various renunions of aircrew association with him , their all very cool guys and a bit crazy !!, getting thin on the ground now but tales they told , fascinating , so glad dad was one of them , would love to have flown with him , camaraderie was fantastic , we owe them
@AdrianMelia-0
@AdrianMelia-0 7 жыл бұрын
Proud that my dad was a navigator on Wellingtons. Very moving and gripping little film. Thank you.
@ltcajh
@ltcajh 6 жыл бұрын
My Dutch friend showed me the prop of a Wellington, I think it was, in one of the Dutch towns. They still remember the plane that got shot down there.
@chrisramm1
@chrisramm1 4 жыл бұрын
my neibour was a Lancaster Pilot and then flew for BOAC, he had nerves of steel, and would help Dad with the bees without veil or gloves, totally rock solid.
@samuelli-a-sam
@samuelli-a-sam 9 ай бұрын
Brilliant short film. We really do owe our lives to the brave men who served in the RAF
@b3j8
@b3j8 5 жыл бұрын
So, so many people post negative judgemental comments about these brave young men. All I can say is if YOU were not there, you have no right whatsoever to judge anyone!
@terryofford4977
@terryofford4977 5 жыл бұрын
I would add too that, the critics and other left wing idiots who criticise the RAF Crew and their amazing courage appear not realise nor appreciate that THEY, (the warped critics of our Bombers crews) wouldn't be alive today to make such inane comments. AS Ex RAF myself, I have always been proud and will remain proud of what the RAF (and Army and Naval allies of many nations) achieved against an insane, heroin addled Nazi Leader.Those who comment against the Bomber crews are oblivious to the atrocities of the Nazis with their DEATH CAMPS,Organised to kill, in a factory style purge MILLIONS of Jews, Poles,Gypsies and indeed, ANYONE not of Aryan descent. I suggest to such individuals that they read up (assuming they are capable) the history of WW2.
@krashd
@krashd 3 жыл бұрын
The right wing twats who feel a need to bash today's generation for no reason are no better in my opinion. Seemingly the greatest generation didn't fight for us to be free after all according to them, they fought so that we should live exactly as they want us to lest we get called snowflakes, cowards and whatnot.
@markcoombe6489
@markcoombe6489 6 жыл бұрын
My grandad flew lancasters in the war! Im very proud of him and his friends! And the guys who did not come back! Heros all! and i thank you.
@bonchance9241
@bonchance9241 7 жыл бұрын
the steadfast Bravery of these young men cannot be described adequately..... there resolve to do there Duty for the good of all beyond words of gratitude..... GOD BLESS ALL THE BOYS ALWAYS & FOREVER THANKYOU
@tonywood6163
@tonywood6163 Жыл бұрын
My dad was a Lancaster pilot. Did 40 missions. Never really talked about it
@Neils.smith1996
@Neils.smith1996 4 жыл бұрын
How can you disrespectfully put a thumbs down to this you should be ashamed of yourself
@christophercoverdale5076
@christophercoverdale5076 7 жыл бұрын
Well Done Tom to you and your team, Great idea, your mini film had me gripped, very interesting, you should look at filming a bigger production it is so needed, not enough people around the world really understand what those brave aircrews of Bomber Command went through day after day, night after night. My heart goes out to them all. We must never stop flying the flag for them and doing what we can to remember them. We must also never forget or lose sight of the massive death toll all over the world during the Second World War. Air Vice Marshal Donald Tyndall Clifford Bennett CB,CBE,DSO wrote this message when he was chairmen of the United Nations Association, of which he was the founder. During WWII AVM Bennett was the leader of 8 Group Path Finder Force, I can tell you that he really did understood the heartache and stresses of the war so much so that all he ever wanted was to find peace around the world. He wrote this message which bring home his feeling about WWII. In time of war, men strive and men die for the protection of their country and their loved ones and for the ideals in which they believe. No sacrifice is too great and no ordeal too bitter to deter the tide of human effort towards victory. Indeed, in the agony and squalor of war, man reaches his true greatness - but it is only when peace comes that there exist the conditions in which the ideals for which we fought can be achieved. I have seen two great wars in my lifetime and after each I have seen the political leaders of almost every country in the world fritter away the opportunities which their warriors have created for them. After each war, I have seen the return of pessimism and of distrust - and the vitiation of human relations by intrigue, fear, greed and dishonesty. Moral standards in matters great and small have sunk appallingly to impossible levels. In short, man in peace has proved unworthy of the dead of two world wars. This need not be. We are the same men and women who fought beside those who died. We are made of the same stuff which achieved greatness in time of war. Therefore in peace, let us pray and - and act as aggressively and courageously as we did in war, so that we may achieve freedom, fair play, decency and integrity internationally, nationally and personally - which the sacrifices of two world wars so nobly earned.
@rodneymackrill
@rodneymackrill 7 жыл бұрын
Wow - thanks for sharing that Christopher.
@RickB50SS
@RickB50SS 2 жыл бұрын
It was kill or be killed worker against worker. Dad did 2 tours of ops. Looked for a better way to arrange things for the world post war. He died at 65yrs in 1990, disillusioned with society, still largely at war. Ashes scattered from the Southern Cross replica aircraft, over the ocean, off Kapiti Is, to join his comrades, no marker a requirement of his will. Mission accomplished.
@studioROT
@studioROT 6 жыл бұрын
I probably owe the very possibility of my existence to the true bravery of those who were fighting the Germans. But that probability contains a painful irony as my parents’ home was in Rotterdam; a city bombed by both the oppressor as well as the liberator. My mother served in a Red Cross squad which recovered bodies of men, women and children from buildings that were hit during the raids. The emotional scars of her experience did never heal. Indeed, the NAZIs were hated in our home, but the deep drone of the British night bombers had caused too much pain for celebration. War has nothing glorious about it; it is cold and miserable.
@francogasperotti9883
@francogasperotti9883 5 жыл бұрын
Yes, there absolutely nothing glorious in killing other human being. Largest percentage of comments is about being thankful, about bravery and freedom. The smallest of the smallest condemn war. War itself is what has to be avoided. How? Education, love....
@susanwaugh9711
@susanwaugh9711 Жыл бұрын
This broke my heart. My great uncle was killed over Sterkrade in Germany. He flew in a Lancaster with the 576 squadron and was an Air gunner. He was killed on his 21st birthday. He was originally from Dunfermline and flew from Elsham Wolds on that fateful night of 13th June 1944. 2 members survived and were taken as POW.
@stephenpage-murray7226
@stephenpage-murray7226 Жыл бұрын
My father piloted a Lancaster from Elsham Wolds. His name was Kenneth Charles Murray and survived.
@susanwaugh9711
@susanwaugh9711 Жыл бұрын
@@stephenpage-murray7226 Hi Stephen, your dad and my great uncle were great friends! My great uncle Charles was part of Alec Puttocks crew. I read that Ken Murray and Alec Puttocks crew were really close. In fact when the Murray crew came back off their end of tour leave to find the Puttock crew had gone missing, it was a quite a blow for them! I’ve seen a pic of your dad and his crew.
@stephenpage-murray7226
@stephenpage-murray7226 Жыл бұрын
@@susanwaugh9711 Wow I had no idea. Is this on a forum or FB group or something?
@susanwaugh9711
@susanwaugh9711 Жыл бұрын
Please let me know if you received my reply. 😊
@amarendranath2954
@amarendranath2954 5 жыл бұрын
Every Veteran and Active Duty Personnel deserve respect and compassion for their invaluable and selfless heroics, bravery and patriotism. Their stories must live on generation after generation to remind us about the true meaning and embodiment of Honor, Service and Leadership.
@mgytitanic1912
@mgytitanic1912 7 жыл бұрын
There is an excellent radio play done by the BBC which is a narration of Len Deighton's book Bomber. It is excellently done. Well worth a listen.
@yaknbo
@yaknbo 7 жыл бұрын
PLEASE post the link!!!
@funkyalfonso
@funkyalfonso 7 жыл бұрын
I was just about to recommend that remarkable book.
@johnr6292
@johnr6292 7 жыл бұрын
Have a recording of that a brilliant drama.
@martinmilton-white5172
@martinmilton-white5172 6 жыл бұрын
Read it decades ago but the imagary it generated is still with me. A very powerfull book.
@karenshortland6238
@karenshortland6238 6 жыл бұрын
You can find it on youtube by searching. Someone has posted it in four parts. I only recently found it myself and now have it saved in a 'playlist' so I can listen again
@gordonfrickers5592
@gordonfrickers5592 7 жыл бұрын
An interesting contrast with American 'bomber' films, congratulations to those who made this. My mother's first husband flew over 30 missions with Bomber Command. One morning his plane did not returned; no survivors. That left her a wartime widow, very poor, with a baby. Although she eventually married my Father i don't think she ever really got over the trauma. The baby became my step brother and eventually a 'right bastard' who even stole from his own Mother, like that maybe as the result of the death of his real father and from jealousy caused by my birth. That despite my father being very generous and kind to him. Years later I was privileged to be asked to paint "Lost, Halifax heavy bomber" for sgt J. Loban, the sole survivor. I built a model and Mr. Loban provided technical detail even down to the number of rounds fired by the Me 110 that shot them down on their very first mission, killing all except Mr. Loban. You can read Flight Sargent J Loban’s very remarkable story…on my web site, page 'Lost, Halifax heavy bomber', url: www.frickers.co.uk/art/home-page2/gordon-frickers-art-information/archive/aviation/the-loss-of-a-new-handley-page-Halifax/
@sugarcookie2262
@sugarcookie2262 6 жыл бұрын
War destroys normal human behaviours... since I read "hidden History" by Docherty and have a better understanding of how western society has been semi-deliberatly horribly malformed and damaged by the last hundred years my heart has been saddened
@benjaminholmes2318
@benjaminholmes2318 6 жыл бұрын
Oh my. Thanks for sharing this story.
@kevinyang1554
@kevinyang1554 6 жыл бұрын
Gordon Frickers poor Jewish cannon fodder
@rustykilt
@rustykilt 6 жыл бұрын
beats the American films
@rustykilt
@rustykilt 6 жыл бұрын
...ps... this is not to denigrate the courage of the American aircrews.. The films are too overblown and badly portrayed. 12 o clock high was the exception. great movie.
@keithnaylor1981
@keithnaylor1981 4 жыл бұрын
My Father's brother was one of the 55,573. AVRO Lancaster rear gunner killed by a ME109 in 1944. Still very upsetting.
@chadlowe4441
@chadlowe4441 7 жыл бұрын
what an absolute legend that man is. sir i salute you and every RAF and allied pilots and crewmen who had to go through ww2. God bless you and all the fallen soldiers.
@lesleywood2949
@lesleywood2949 2 ай бұрын
My Dad was a pilot/navigator in RAF during WW II. He trained in Canada under the BCATP. He knew more about the Avro Lancaster than aviation historians or plane guides flying the planes to WW II air shows. He passed away in January 2015 at age 91. Part of the Greatest Generation, he is forever loved and missed.
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