You've created yet another masterpiece of a video about a tragic sinking. Sir Mike, thank you so much and team for telling us this story. 👍🏽😁
@kennyderoian890410 ай бұрын
Agreed, this episode is awesome! Learned so much today. Thanks OD team!!
@shawnkennedy85510 ай бұрын
Tragic?
@SolidAvenger129010 ай бұрын
Ever since I read about Operation Cerberus - "Unternehmen Zerberus", I became very interested in the Scharnhorst class battleships. This was a great episode by Mike.
@stargazer578410 ай бұрын
@@shawnkennedy855 The term is used in reference to the lives lost...
@OldShippinglines10 ай бұрын
@@SolidAvenger1290 indeed it was 😁 👍🏽
@KPen375010 ай бұрын
the sheer amount of German archive footage in this video is what blows my mind away. I have never seen so much film and video of the Scharnhorst class and it is wonderful. Well done Mike and the team!
@Patrick-pm1sn10 ай бұрын
Look up for the movie „Schlachtschiff in Fahrt“ here on KZbin. There you will find those and more images of Scharnhorst, Gneisenau and Hipper.
@More_Row10 ай бұрын
They're all from getty images. But I agree, great archive footage.
@KPW213710 ай бұрын
Yep, it's not seen that often.
@usaturnuranus10 ай бұрын
And the sequence and editing is really well done.
@Craig-xb2eh10 ай бұрын
Some of the German archive footage are from the propaganda film, Schlachtschiff in Fahrt (Battleships on Patrol). You can find that here on KZbin.
@hawkmoon33128 ай бұрын
This story will always have some significance for me. Years ago I found a book about a destroyer from WW1 at a used book sale. Turned out it was signed. From the captain of one of the destroyers accompanying Scharnhorst on that day. And to top it all.. it was dated, as a christmas present from the captain to one of his machinists. Signed Christmas Eve 1943. The day before they went out and Scharnhorst was sunk. So that book had been there that fateful day. Eerie.
@DexSilver4 ай бұрын
I kinda wanna see that, not because I don't believe you, but because that's legitimately cool
@hawkmoon33124 ай бұрын
@@DexSilver That wouldnt be a problem. I think I know where I put the book. If you have a throwaway-email you can post here, id be happy to send you a photo.
@Dakiraun10 ай бұрын
What an incredible amount of work you and your team are doing on these. This is _movie_ length, and while a lot of KZbin content struggles to hold people's attention for more than 10 minutes, this was just amazing from start to finish. A riveting true tale, and a stark reminder of the horrors of war.
@wowplayer1609 ай бұрын
Lol not many people watched this all the way through.
@twatwho7 ай бұрын
I Totally Agree!! I have literally just found this channel and this was the 1st of their postings i watched. Amazing footage, the amount of info is impressive and his facts all correct. This was the 1st of his content i watched and i subscribed straight away. I can not wait to watch the rest of his postings. My only criticism wound be that the narrator kept Pronouncing the Tirpitz as the Tierpitz and calling the Kriegsmarine the Kriegsmariner.... I know this may sound a little petty to to point out,. but seeing all the effort and hard work has been put in to create such an entertaining, factually correct and professionally produced video/Channel. I just found myself continually loudly correcting the narrator every time he said each..... ..... Ha Ha Ha!!!
@derekduxbury11225 ай бұрын
You summed it up brilliantly, Dakiraun. Respect!
@Dave5843-d9mАй бұрын
His pronunciations are close to correct for German names. Every letter is used so enunciating “e” on the end of Kriegsmarine is correct.
@DLT-po6to8 ай бұрын
The brother of my grandfather went down with the Scharnhorst. Obergefreiter Anton Hofmann. He was a young man of 19 years. I still have photos and letters from him and the last package with american cigarettes and british chocolate that arrived 4 months after Scharnhorst went down. Sailors of the Kriegsmarine traded stuff like that among each other. He was immensely proud to sail on her and wrote about his time and duties on board. She was very modern and such a sleak and beautiful ship. This documentary of yours is wonderful. There aren't many quality documentaries about Scharnhorst around. Not even in german. So thank you very much. Just know that this really means something to a random westphalian on the internet.
@reallythough39987 ай бұрын
Fascinating. I can imagine it being a bittersweet experience to receive the package, especially after hearing the news. Man served with dignity, but people seem to still want to take another bite out of you, especially if you don't seem guilty as they think you should. No surprise, all the vitriol and condemnation of these men, they wouldn't dare say that of your family to your face. It is too real, far easier to speak that way when you're detached.
@DLT-po6to7 ай бұрын
@@reallythough3998 The story goes that my great grandmother fainted when she received the package. It was like a message from the dead. That's why they kept the package as it was. Exactly, in most cases german soldiers and sailors were just young boys conscripted by the system to fight for their country just like the british or american boys. But the whole topic is very complex. This becomes apparent in my own family. His brother, my grandfather, was SS Untersturmführer and actually took part in the "cleansing" of poland and the baltics. So you have an innocent soldier and an actual war criminal in the same family. He was forced by his superiors and didn't talk about it with anyone. It traumatized him and he only spoke about it in the last years of his life. But in the eyes of the world he is just as bad of a person as Joseph Mengele. I just knew him as "Opa". An average, very polite but somewhat emotionally detached old man.
@fionaparkinson38216 ай бұрын
I think it’s surprising how little animosity there was between the actual sailors. My great uncle was in the navy as a bosun and they rescued German sailors who had been on the Anton Schmitt, as far as I know. He was always a bit testy about taking about it but I know it was off the coast of Norway and they pulled as many sailors out as they could but it was very cold and not very easy to save people. He would just clam up and say that they tried. I think it didn’t matter to them who was supposedly running your country, you were just a fellow sailor in trouble.
@Dra7416 ай бұрын
Even though the terrorists as they call them at the time the troops and the Navy went down the sea and we always have respect for them
@DLT-po6to6 ай бұрын
@@fionaparkinson3821 That's true for both sides. Sailors are united in their suffering on the seas. They know how unforgiving the ocean is, so they help if they can.
@Alex-cw3rz10 ай бұрын
It's amazing how in the middle of a storm Duke of York was able to hit Sharnhorst on her first salvo. That was excellent gunnery, some of the best in the war and that's being modest.
@Alex-cw3rz10 ай бұрын
@@marckyle5895 those are very different scenario that was a clear night, in a narrow straight against a enemy going in a straight line, that had already been greatly diminished by torpedo boat and Destroyer attacks.
@wellwell795010 ай бұрын
@@marckyle5895 oh of course some American has to come along and go look at us we did something too, even when it is totally incomparable.
@Dave5843-d9m10 ай бұрын
The initial salvo from DoY was all the more remarkable, because the heavy swells of arctic seas demand careful gunnery timing. The ship has to be level or the shells will fall long or short.
@jec661310 ай бұрын
Duke of York was firing using an improved gunnery computer including Coriolis calculation, with stable vertical, very similar to what Washington used to put down Kirishima in November of '42, which also hit on the first salvo - wreck analysis shows at least 24 16" hits of 72 shells fired, and part of the ship is metal confetti after the magazine detonated on the way down. The US and UK worked very closely on this when Willis Lee was still based ashore, and the biggest difference between the two was that the US Mk 8, "Super-heavy," shell would have indeed penetrated the armor of Scharnhorst (and if the fuse failed, penetrated in one belt and out the other belt on Kirishima, penetration figures were very close to the Japanese 18.1" rifles), and the 16" 45 caliber weapon had tighter dispersion, with the British 14" still having teething issues, leading to Kirishima going down in 7 minutes, including a pause for Lee to assess the damage. To use a very British way of putting it, Duke of York performed as expected. :)
@mbryson289910 ай бұрын
@@marckyle5895Not so much "like," given the facts. The WeeVee's targets had little maneuvering room, and they had been attacked by PT boats and destroyers long before they wandered into gunnery range of the cruisers and battleships...not to mention they were _far_ outnumbered.
@lloydknighten507110 ай бұрын
Mike, today was my 60th birthday. I have always been fascinated by the stories of the SCHARNHORST and BISMARCK. So this a perfect birthday gift.
@kevinc.357910 ай бұрын
Mike, in your ceaseless quest to bring us more naval related content, I do believe you’ve hit the jackpot. I am an avid fan of many of the WW 1 and 2 naval and ground combat channels, as well as everything combat related. Your delve into the combat aspect with this video is absolutely fantastic, and I am convinced that you could bring to life pretty much any topic of your choosing in a top flight manner. Thank you much 🍻!
@TheCynicalOptimist889 ай бұрын
I second what you said everything I listened to from this channel has been absolutely Stellar! I think one of the biggest things I've come to realize from this story is how incredibly resilient some of these battleships are It's insane It's like a final boss in a video game .... I can't imagine the resiliency of some of the large ships in the US Navy for example now that would have learned lots from this kind of warfare... It would be interesting to see what modern weapons can do to modern ships though !
@Neneset6 ай бұрын
@@TheCynicalOptimist88 The punishment Musashi took before she went down was frightful.
@StaffanSwede10 ай бұрын
Mike and the team: My God, you have taken things not only to the next level - you are on your way to the stars! The video was long, but you kept me on my toes during the entire length of it. It could just as well be a aired on television or shown for educational purposes. Congratulations to an excellent job!
@rockymountainlifeprospecti44237 ай бұрын
Incredible job with this Mike, you did a honor to those involved. Incredible amount of research is apparent! Keep up the great work, all the best today!
@philipfrancis27289 ай бұрын
I could listen to Mike Brady’s beautiful voice for hours and hours…it’s like “story time” when I was little! Except I’m a 60 yo man and the stories are about ships! Pure heaven!
@chrisvickers792810 ай бұрын
The Duke of York had it's radar restored when a lieutenant who was an electrician climbed her mast in the howling gale and ice and repaired it.
@Phaaschh10 ай бұрын
With the ship rolling up to 40° below him. One account has him holding the 2 ends of the broken cable together in his gloved hand, in order to keep the connection, although that may be an exaggeration.
@RenegadeSound10 ай бұрын
Astonishing , shame that herculean feat wasn't included in the video .
@bennewnham44979 ай бұрын
Balls of steel.
@jasonsweet18689 ай бұрын
Just another day for us sparks
@Phaaschh9 ай бұрын
@@bennewnham4497 Blue steel, at that- pretty brass monkeys up there!
@brendanrobertson5519 ай бұрын
I very rarely coment on KZbin but your remarkable telling of this story deeply moved me. My Uncle served in the Atlantic convoys and growing up he would at times tell me of his experiences on those journeys taking vital supplies. I grew up knowing him as my hero. He has sadly been past over 30 years now but watching this brought him back and for the first time I truly felt I understood the true heroics those servingbmen did every second on both sides in conflicts created outwith their control. I give my respect and thanks to you for such a wonderful journey and my thanks and respect to all that serve then and now to keep us safe. In memory of my Uncle Frank my hero
@mikethompson265010 ай бұрын
When I was a kid back in the 60s we were watching that old movie Sink the Bismark. Mom, who was from England, casually remarked during one scene that her uncle and cousin were trapped below decks when their ship sunk. Now I asked her about this but she never talked about it again. Since then each time I see a video such as this one I think about her comment and I get rather depressed. The horror and fear of knowing you have no hope in survival. Sorry just had to vent a bit.
@TheSaneHatter10 ай бұрын
I forgive you: it's a horrifying prospect under any circumstances, and the elephant in the room in every tale of a ship's sinking.
@Dave5843-d9m10 ай бұрын
HMS Hood exploded when a shell from Bismarck punched under her belt armour and both halves sank within minutes. Just four men survived.
@mikethompson265010 ай бұрын
@@Dave5843-d9m actually three, in fact mom said that a friend of hers was the daughter of one of those men.
@williamzk908310 ай бұрын
@@Dave5843-d9m In my studied opinion the Bismark's 15 inch guns punched straight through Hood's belt. The range was 16000 yards and the Bismark penetration tables show sh could do it. British claims that it was penetrated elsewhere (deck of under the hull) rest on estimate that Hoods belt arm was oblique at the time due to a turn.
@pashvonderc3819 ай бұрын
@@mikethompson2650 Your mum weren’t from the Portsmouth area ?
@CliveN-yr1gv8 ай бұрын
My uncle was on BELFAST and would never talk about this action. Thank you for filling in some gaps in our family history.
@grendelgrendelsson54936 ай бұрын
My great uncle was a gunner on the Belfast. The stories he told were always about funny things that happened and never about combat either.
@ianprince16983 ай бұрын
my father was on the Virago in this area arctic convoys, finished the war near Japan, he said very little about this but said he would wake up for his watch years later
@ronbowser44292 ай бұрын
@@ianprince1698111q1111❤❤ x
@jpinckster2 ай бұрын
Must have been a horrendous thing to witness.
@pagodebregaeforro280324 күн бұрын
Military ppl arent the only ones to see bodies torn apart. Coroners and ppl in prison, or first attenders see all the time, unlike military personnel on those cases its not always dead men but women and children, and its not from a shrspnel but sometimes by the human hands of a monster. So yea, thats ugly stuff in the world, those guys werent the only ones nor are special, but we all know that most military afficionados love to praise men they didnt even met, pretty imature and naive imo
@kurtveldeman92918 ай бұрын
I had an old handmade 1:100 scale RC Scharnhorst at home, it weighed over 70 kilograms, it was such a beautiful ship, I needed money and regret selling it. I hope I can buy it back one day. An old man took years to build it, I bought it after he passed away. If I'm not able to buy it back I might try and build a replica Scharnhorst myself. I could watch that ship for hours. I didn't realize around 2 thousand souls were lost in the sinking of the Scharnhorst, at least those that were trapped inside had a very beautiful grave, the Scharnhorst was such a beautiful ship. Thanks for telling the story, the quality of this documentary is exceptionally good!
@cameronsienkiewicz63646 ай бұрын
I doubt any of them had that thought as the ship was burning and exploding out from under them, with icy water was rushing in lol
@KaidhicksiiАй бұрын
@@cameronsienkiewicz6364 Yeah me neither lol
@Dave5843-d9mАй бұрын
The form of naval ships should follow function. Maybe Scharnhorst designers put too much effort into her appearance. She certainly failed where it mattered.
@doomhippie66739 ай бұрын
I can't help it - these two ships are some of the most beautiful battleships ever built. They look so elegant.
@jimtrack3786Ай бұрын
More ominous I think. They were designed to deny you birth. Remember that much.
@DullerCrab10 ай бұрын
Mike, I love that you’re delving more into naval combat! Absolutely awesome work, keep it up
@Booze_Rooster9 ай бұрын
you can only talk about lavishly appointed interior spaces and how air travel killed liners for so long...
@monikatoth56979 ай бұрын
I'm absolutely fascinated about WW2. I like watching documentaries about battle ships and tanks. Recently , I visited HMS Belfast on the Temze. It was amazing walking through the ship from top to the bottom, visiting the boyler room, and the engine room. ❤
@nyccoyax38318 ай бұрын
I would really not want to be aboard ships like HMS Hood or Tirpitz..
@namazlur786 ай бұрын
There’s nothing fascinating about war. War is bad for everyone
@lachlanchester81424 ай бұрын
Is that a translation of Thames or is that just how you thought it was spelt?
@Dave5843-d9mАй бұрын
It’s the Hungarian spelling.
@noahmead4652Ай бұрын
Hungarian@@lachlanchester8142
@Depressed_Nightfury10 ай бұрын
You've outdone yourself again Mike. As someone who's a massive need when it comes to WW2 Naval combat, and the Kreigsmarine in particular, this was a very captivating hour+, well done.
@corycollier9 ай бұрын
Your story telling is as always MIke, absolutely amazing. I truly love the way you tell this, without taking sides (which a true historian would do). The respect you show those who perished (on both sides) is absolutely above reproach. Well done.
@bobcornwell4039 ай бұрын
This was s very moving story. I like how you treated the Germans with such sympathy and regard.
@rebeccanisley87099 ай бұрын
My parents had a German friend who was a sailor on the Scharnhorst. He was home on leave.
@farmerned68 ай бұрын
"O hear us when we cry to Thee, For those in peril on the sea."
@Dave5843-d9m4 ай бұрын
When your ship sinks in Arctic waters, you have about 10 minutes to live.
@studiohost2 ай бұрын
Sympathy?
@PeterLorimer-ji5ut2 ай бұрын
Allied escort crews and especially the merchant sailors went to terrible deaths on the Murmansk run. I would hope that the German public had similar sympathy for their fate.
@IronMaiden75610 ай бұрын
I started this video in my car to listen to it while driving to the grocery store. I realized quickly that it’s over an hour long (YAY!) and now I’m home I’m watching it with my cat in my lap and a cup of tea. Let’s go!
@stevk51819 ай бұрын
I do the same in the shower and while making/drinking coffee. Then, I switch to German lessons in the car on the way to work 😂
@justmenb33797 ай бұрын
i cant get my cat to watch any history documentaries. lucky you
@seattleboy5719 ай бұрын
This is extremely well done sir. You definitely made Drachinifel proud. This is better work than anything Hollywood comes up with.
@stargazer578410 ай бұрын
Speaking as a member of a family with some background in advertising and broadcasting, you've done a great job with this one. Presenting the human side of such affairs is a nice touch as well. It's important for people to realize that the grunts who fight and die are usually just ordinary folks caught up in a conflict that they didn't ask for.
@jamesdeen30119 ай бұрын
This is the most detailed documentary on the Scharnhors that I've seen. Thank for all of your hard work. Enjoyed 👍🏻👍🏻💯
@hwirtwirt45009 ай бұрын
Excellent video production with superb narration, this story had me on the edge of my seat for an hour and 18 minutes. I've read of this encounter before but this was by far the best version. Even though the Allied forces won this battle, the loss of so many young sailors on the Scharnhorst is still palpable and causes me to feel sadness so many years later. Thank you!
@watchyc61227 ай бұрын
This is by far the best war documentary on war ships i have ever watched, well explained to every detail i was truly focused. Well done and u have another subscriber for sure.
@Riccardo_Silva10 ай бұрын
I think that this, along with Ludovic Kennedy's BBC documentary back in the seventies, is the most respectful and precise rendering of that fateful battle. Not a mean achievement! Thank you Mike, another great vid!
@panther77489 ай бұрын
Kennedy was surprisingly objective considering the fact that the Scharnhorst had sunk his father with the Rawalpindi.
@bonetiredtoo9 ай бұрын
He was the son of Rawalpindi's captain, Edward Kennedy.
@Riccardo_Silva9 ай бұрын
@@bonetiredtoo Yes, as he told me in that very good documentary😉!
@jooei28109 ай бұрын
This is really a documentary worthy of a television, salute!🫡
@AugmentedGravity9 ай бұрын
I don’t care what people say, the Scharnhorst is and always has been such a beautiful looking ship. I will visit one of the memorials dedicated to the battle where she sunk when i go to the north cape soon.
@forevermorbid89497 ай бұрын
I have binged your whole channel after finding it recently. The best channel on the subject out there. Love your videos, keep it up.
@itzfreya559 ай бұрын
What a masterpiece of a film. So happy to witness the development from your brilliant 20 minute documentaries to something with a magnitude such as this one, and executed phenomenally like always, Mike!! What an interesting story! Can’t wait to see the next one!!
@ammoalamo64859 ай бұрын
I've read about this battle in detail, and seen other videos too, but this is by far the best description of the events that I have encountered yet.
@markplane45819 ай бұрын
That was truly gripping, well done! Fantastic narration, excellent recreations, cool archival images, thank you for the brilliant dissection of a naval battle I never knew I needed to know about!
@Goat-us8bm10 ай бұрын
Ok, whoever the editor(s) are who are working with Oceanliner Designs are amazing ... these are spectacular. Well done!
@leonardhirtle36459 ай бұрын
Yet another masterfully produced historical documentary. Mike,you deserve an award for your work.
@lukethomas.12510 ай бұрын
Rest In Peace to all the crew who went down with Scharnhorst. Also the playing of "Eternal Father, Strong To Save" is very touching and appropriate
@lukethomas.1259 ай бұрын
@@haerfgvbag7050 Read the description of the video. The sailors who died on the Scharnhorst were part of the Kriegsmarine (The German Navy), not the Nazi party, which was a political party. Please stop getting your facts messed up.
@ijnfleetadmiral9 ай бұрын
@@lukethomas.125 Agreed. Of all the German armed forces, the Kriegsmarine was probably the most lenient when it came to the anti-Semitic policies. In fact, when Kristallnacht occurred in November 1938, three Admirals - two of which were Personnel Director Gunther Lutjens (the same Lutjens who was KIA on Bismarck) and Commander Submarines Karl Donitz - protested in writing to Raeder about the anti-Jewish pogroms. During Lutjens' time as Personnel Director for the Kriegsmarine, he did absolutely NOTHING to make sure the Kriegsmarine was following the protocols of the Nuremberg Laws; several mid-grade officers (Captains and Commanders) were part-Jewish and fell under the anti-Semitic policies. Instead, Raeder and the Kriegsmarine went to bat for them and they were allowed to stay in.
@lukethomas.1259 ай бұрын
@@ijnfleetadmiral Very well said. An amazing story in itself
@babalonkie9 ай бұрын
A lovely Hymn. Just found out something a little disturbing... A traditional Royal Navy Hymn for over 150 years written by an Englishman... Now Copyrighted by "The American Navy Band"... if they dare enforce that copyright...
@lukethomas.1259 ай бұрын
@@babalonkie that’s treachery. They have no right to claim ownership or copyright music that’s clearly not theirs
@GM-fh5jp9 ай бұрын
What a splendid episode. The Battle of the North Cape was a harrowing one indeed and I think you told the tale with style. Subscribed to see what comes next. I'd like to know more about Renown's running fight with the heavy German units earlier that year. Thanks for posting!
@Rockhound09810 ай бұрын
It's a great sunday when you kick in youtube, and My friend Mike Brady is top of the list with a kickass video!
@joshuarisker552510 ай бұрын
I love how you capture the soul of the ship an not just her tragic end in all of your videos 👏👏👏bravo good sir bravo 👏👏👏
@oliviacastilo9779 ай бұрын
This is such a great video! Not only are the narration & visuals fantastic, but there's also the perfect amount of backstory on the people & events - i.e. not SO waffly that you lose interest but enough that you feel you've had all the word nourishment that you need!
@OceanlinerDesigns9 ай бұрын
Great thanks! Just the balance I was aiming for 😅
@michaelimbesi23149 ай бұрын
Mike, this was some masterful cinematography. The way you blended the last note of the Navy Hymn into the groan as Scharnhorst went down was particularly good.
@marctardif97565 ай бұрын
That ending got me.
@ericinthebush196110 ай бұрын
Another longform video well researched, and very well presented. A story of brave men on both sides in what must have been frightening conditions for all. Thank you Mike, and your team. Your efforts are appreciated, educational, and also very entertaining.
@ReasonQuest7 ай бұрын
EXCELLENT video! Thank you for this in-depth recounting. Outstanding!
@Vault_101warden9 ай бұрын
The fact that 20 year olds were the ones operating these absolutely insane machines is honestly unbelievable, I mean, most 20 year olds now are playing cod or something else, possibly in college, but these guys were blasting shells nearly, a ton in weight, at another ship
@iwaswrongabouteveryhthing8 ай бұрын
my brother in law plays video games, still has Lego on display, thin fella, strong wind might blow him away, mid 20's I'm guessing... he's also 3rd in command (I'm guessing) of a major Australian warship some things change, many stay the same
@binky16125 ай бұрын
Yes, I agree. Incredible how these young people performed. Today, they can just about make it to the shopping centre.
@charlieduke032 ай бұрын
@@iwaswrongabouteveryhthingwas that a mw2 reference? XD
@iwaswrongabouteveryhthing2 ай бұрын
@@charlieduke03 no
@rayofhope111410 ай бұрын
This is probably the best You Tube video ever made on the full battle history of a warship . Furthermore it is also beats any "professional " TV programme ever produced for national TV broadcast on a similar subject. Excellent work all round.
@EnzedderEntertainment10 ай бұрын
It’s been fantastic to watch you go from a video on a side profile animation to a full blown documentary that easily bests films you have to pay for! Having you tell myself and your other patrons about the journey has been an incredible experience and I cannot wait to see what you and your team produce next!
@OceanlinerDesigns10 ай бұрын
Thanks for that and I’m glad you’re enjoying the ride 😎
@royexcellentalexander83089 ай бұрын
Me too l'm hooked to WW2 documentaries.. since I was 12... and now in my 70ties...l still love to see New archives..
@richsuykerbuyk79839 ай бұрын
Brilliantly researched, narrated, visually presented and most notably, with great honor. So well done!
@ericcriteser400110 ай бұрын
Well, wasn't this just a treat this morning. Brilliant. Thank you again for all your hard work. Brilliantly produced, written and narrated.
@ruskyrosco10549 ай бұрын
This is a terrific documentary. You should be proud of such exceptional work, thank you.
@joenonymous582010 ай бұрын
Topic covered in a most masterful detail. Has not been nearly enough attention devoted to this sad battle. Thank you !! Love your work.
@Ron-u1z8 ай бұрын
I'm ex Royal Navy and this was one of the best and most informed videos of this sea battle and history I have seen. Subbed and liked.
@OceanlinerDesigns8 ай бұрын
Thanks very much and welcome!
@mbryson289910 ай бұрын
Perfectly related, Mr. Brady, you made this action truly come to life. My hat is off to you, sir. 😯 The _HMS Saumarez,_ who closed to a ridiculously short range alongside her peers against the _Scharnhorst_ also did the same against _Haguro_ a bit later in the war...but that time without allied heavy units. The encounter was once again pygmies versus a giant, and once again the much larger opponent was laid to rest.
@moreheff9 ай бұрын
By far the most complete and informative account of this episode I have seen. I congratulate you on an epic piece of work
@7346ful7 ай бұрын
Brilliant documentary, many thanks
@Anglo_Saxon19 ай бұрын
Absolutely excellent programme Mike.There's something special about battleship engagements that you don't quite experience with aircraft-to-ship engagements. Cheers mate.
@oobihdahboobeeboppah9 ай бұрын
You're right, I wasn't aware of this epic battle or its players. Thank you. Very good graphics for not being a Lucas or Spielberg production. Your narration was spot on.
@saturnwav10 ай бұрын
It would be really cool to see more warship related videos! Excited to see what you will make next mike!
@DeaconBlu10 ай бұрын
I agree 100%. This cat makes really good stuff on this subject. Imho, far better than most that are Devoted to warship vids. Mike!? Bring it on! 😆😎
@randallreed90485 ай бұрын
Another fine presentation Mike! The narrative script was crisp and factual and the animation and graphics were easily up to your very high standards. Thank you!
@firstnamelastname62169 ай бұрын
Another outstanding example of top tier content!!! Thank you Mike Brady!!! 👍✌️ from the U.S.A.!!! 🇺🇸 🇦🇺
@ezequielortiz41888 ай бұрын
I'm binging on your videos this couple of days, I love these naval stories & the way you narate them, you make youtube better with this excellent content, kudos to you, cheers!
@dhmacher10 ай бұрын
I can't even imagine the days, weeks, even months of work in creating this video. Grand! Well done, sir!
@ShaunHopkinsAVFC9 ай бұрын
This is the best channel on KZbin, bar none. Great work by everyone involved
@bozenacechalova654710 ай бұрын
OMG I've been thinking of asking you to cover Scharnhorst because it was such a fascinating ship and story, and here you are, reading my thoughts across spacetime! Thank you for this amazing video!
@slypear9 ай бұрын
Well done, Mr Brady et al! Truly stunning work on this. Gripping narration and visual effects until the very end - kudos!
@alexw.709710 ай бұрын
Hey Mike! As someone fairly new to Maritime history in general, I'd really love to see a video on the Scrapping of ships. I understand it's probably kind of a sad topic for those of you who feel special connections with these ships, but I suppose it's sort of part of the circle of life for most ships, and I'd really like to know more. For instance, when a ship is sold for scrap: -Who buys them? -Where are they taken for scrapping? -What does it really entail/how exactly do you scrap something as large as say, a four stacker ocean liner?? (Especially given that many shipyards had to create expanded areas to build ships that big in the first place.) -And maybe a pick me up for the end of the video, what gets done with the materials after a ship is scrapped? Thank you so much, have a lovely rest of your day, and I am off to enjoy yet another excellently produced, *documentary length* ship story you and your crew have created for us! Cheers!
@eyerollthereforeiam170910 ай бұрын
Good questions, I'd also like to see that.
@boldlybenign10 ай бұрын
Yes!! That's a wonderful suggestion 🙂
@BrianMitchell-z7w9 ай бұрын
This is one of the best videos I've seen on KZbin for a while. I love the depth of the analysis, the 3D models, and that you're covering a lesser-known but incredibly intense battle. There's far too many cheap Battle of Midway analysis videos and not enough masterpieces like this. You've earned my sub. Keep up the fantastic work!
@CarMake10 ай бұрын
You've really outdone yourself with this one Mike! Absolutely amazing!
@alexvisser59136 ай бұрын
The most beautiful battleships ever build. Gallantly and elegant lines with wonderful gun arrangement
@neilboulter807110 ай бұрын
My Grandad served on The Duke of York as an Anti Aircraft gunner . He sadly died more than thirty years ago whilst I was living with him. Never forgotten him . Always in my thoughts. Always wore a shirt and Tie. When I'm freezing my ass off at Work. I always think of him in the freezing cold and it gives me the strength to do my duty! They make few men like this anymore! Rest in peace all those that served 🙏
@kevindavenport97663 ай бұрын
So did my step dad's dad he would always talk about it bless him
@The_KnY9 ай бұрын
Incredible video, well done Mike! This is by far the best play by play retelling of the Scharnhorst story I've ever seen. Great footage, animation and perfect pacing. Looking forward to the next one!
@LFC4LIFEJEDI10 ай бұрын
Mike, you and your continue to absolutely it smash it home with each and every video. Huge thanks to yourself and your team in keeping these stories alive
@hollymartins691310 ай бұрын
I stayed riveted the whole episode. Your work just gets better and better! Thank you for the excellent, informative, entertainment!
@kennyderoian890410 ай бұрын
Fritz Hintze sounds like my kinda guy! Love that he slept in regularly and took a nap only hours later!!
@emilyz41048 ай бұрын
He also aided and abetted the largest genocide in human history! Real swell guy! Hope he gets plenty of naps in Hell. Also, Hitler was rather famous for sleeping late, guess you're a big fan of him too?
@marklease971710 ай бұрын
Mike, what can I say, mate........your best video yet. Outstanding! A pace leader on youtube. Absolutely wonderful!
@Marko-ol4yi10 ай бұрын
Another marvellous video, Mike! Grand! Well done! One of the survivors claimed that as the order was given to abandon ship, he heard someone singing amongst detonations and the wind song called "Auf einem Seemansgrab, da blühen keine Rosen" (There are no roses blooming on a sailor's grave)...
@sarahhearn-vonfoerster74018 ай бұрын
Such a poignant framework around this memory of one more wartime tragedy. Here we have evidence of mankind's talents, ingenuity, and cleverness; all for nothing. To see the power, glory, and dedication of so any human souls sink beneath the waves. Yes, there should be music....something beautiful and permanent.
@fredleong39869 күн бұрын
A poignant note indeed.
@wb6cbj9 ай бұрын
Wonderfully told story Mike.... Thanks much for the effort and yet another great story. I know a lot of work goes in to properly discovering and events and chronology. Well done!
@gadjoswing197010 ай бұрын
Another masterpiece. Exellent narration. Beautiful graphics. Thx.
@scottlewisparsons95519 ай бұрын
Hi Mike, thank you once again for another wonderful video. All the best from Sydney
@Th.G.M.10 ай бұрын
Very well done and narrated video! The loss of each one, on all fronts and nations, is such an awful waste of life.
@richardpatton250210 ай бұрын
This is a great channel. And you are a great speaker. You keep us engaged at all times All the best to everyone
@jamespurs10 ай бұрын
My Grandad served on Belfast during the war, and Belfast was in its own during this battle. After engaging with Norfolk and Sheffield, she stalked the Scharnhorst, using radar (where my Grandad was stationed) to keep track and relay the information to Scapa Flow. During the last fight, she and Jamaica fired and launched torpedoes to finish the Scharnhorst off (one was claimed to hit). HMS Belfast had a very interesting war which involved the arctic convoys and firing bombardment shells on D-Day (what were intended to be the first shells fired by the bombardment group but a trigger-happy ship beat them to it). I am very lucky to have HMS Belfast available to see as a museum ship, and I have her tattooed on me in honour of my Grandad.
@ih3029 ай бұрын
Wasn't it Warspite that was the first to open up?
@miskatonic62109 ай бұрын
That's pathetic.
@jamesgraham61229 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation. A very moving finish, a reminder that war is more than just tactics and statistics.
@mineown186110 ай бұрын
The sinking of HMS Glorious was an inglorious loss. Not only did they not have a combat air patrol up , but all aircraft were stowed below decks , like a boxer in the ring with both hands shoved down his shorts . Apparently, somebody didn't know there was a war going on . Schanhorst proved her reputation as a lucky ship in that final voyage, escaping three engagements intact . But luck is a harsh master and those two shells from Duke of York at a receding target was a true hail mary play , damaging schanhorst just enough to seal her fate . Great video , thank you .
@shaunmcclory811710 ай бұрын
Yes you can't be lucky every time we all know luck runs out eventually
@jacksprat91729 ай бұрын
The captain of HMS Glorious was too busy trying to settle his personal vendetta to bother about the war. His conduct was unforgivable and cost the lives of hundreds of young men from Glorious as well as the crews of Ardent and Acasta. It annoys me that one man's utter incompetence can lead to the deaths of so many.
@empirestate879110 ай бұрын
Wow, this documentary is a true masterpiece! This is television-quality content.
@hyperballadbradx648610 ай бұрын
Better than TV 👌🏻
@KenGibson-i1q9 ай бұрын
This documentary was well worth waiting for Mike well done also Jack for the amazing animation
@gordonhardwick51515 ай бұрын
A brilliant video, combining deep research, amazing graphics and archive footage, and very clear delivery. Surely one of the best ever videos produced for KZbin. But what a shame it has to be spoiled by so many disruptive ads.
@NorwayT9 ай бұрын
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ No one makes History Come To Life better than Oceanliner Designs! This is - no doubt - by far the BEST Documentary about the Battle of the North Cape both in terms of After Action Reports Accuracy and LAVISH Animations! I am left speechless! KUDOS Oceanliner Designs! You, Sir, are the Master and Commander of the Animated Oceans! I love these World War 2 stories brought to life, and I am hoping for many more!
@Commander-McBragg9 ай бұрын
Unbelievably fantastic! I can’t find the words to describe how great your presentations are, Mike. Thank you.
@glennmcnaughton232910 ай бұрын
Really appreciate the research that went into this. One of the best, if not the best I have seen on this ship. I would like to see your take on a few more WW2 ships. Keep up the good work!
@StephanieElizabethMann9 ай бұрын
Well narrated with historic accuracy. Excellent graphics were given depth by your well spoken narrative. I also liked the music and vocals included in this epic story. Thank you.
@RMS_CT-150910 ай бұрын
Amazing I love all of your long form video like this so this makes no exception
@paullewis2413Күн бұрын
Excellent work and once again highlighting the sheer futility and madness of warfare between human beings.
@OCEANLINER10110 ай бұрын
I got to say your warship video are some of my favourite
@AlextheDutchDairyfarmer9 ай бұрын
Thank you Mike. A true masterpiece. It helps us to understand more about WW2 and the horrors that happened
@Harlandwolf10 ай бұрын
Terrific presentation! Both entertaining as well as informative. Extremely well done! For the lives lost...R.I.P.🌹
@johngdoty10 ай бұрын
Brilliant! I've never seen a more masterful presentation of a sea battle. Congratulations on a great video! Well done!
@Spinatvogel10 ай бұрын
Greetings from Wilhelmshaven. You used really great footage!
@Patrick-pm1sn10 ай бұрын
Schlachtschiff in Fahrt heißt der original Film aus dem viele Sequenzen stammen.
@jafo4u5088 ай бұрын
This has to be absolutely my favorite documentary I have ever seen in my life! If these videos could be given an Oscar, Sir, you deserve all of them! ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤