| The Unknown War | |
|---|---|
| Screenplay by | John Lord |
| Directed by | Isaac Kleinerman,Roman Karmen |
| Narrated by | Burt Lancaster |
| Country of origin | Soviet Union United Kingdom United States |
| No. of episodes | 20 |
| Production | |
| Producer | Fred Weiner |
| Running time | 1040 min |
| Original release | |
| Release | 1 January (1978-01-01) – 22 June 1978 (1978-06-22) |
The Unknown War (Russian: "Великая Отечественная" (TheGreat Patriotic War) or "Неизвестная война" (The Unknown War) is an Americandocumentary television series. The 20-part series documents theWorld War II conflict betweenNazi Germany and theSoviet Union. The show was produced and syndicated for international distribution by Air Time International, and the executive producer was Fred Weiner. Each episode is about 48 minutes long, similar in format toThe World at War documentary series. The footage was edited from over 3.5 million feet of film taken by Soviet camera crews from the first day of the war duringOperation Barbarossa on 22 June 1941 through theSoviet invasion of Manchuria in August 1945. Most of these films have never been seen outside this documentary series.
The series is hosted byAcademy Award winnerBurt Lancaster, who spent three weeks in eight cities in the USSR for location filming. Film footage from Soviet archives comprises a major portion of the series, supplemented by film from both the United States and British archives. Appearing in exclusive interviews would be Russian Commanders likeGeorgi Zhukov andVasily Chuikov. Other interviews shot for the series included Soviet general secretaryLeonid Brezhnev andAverell Harriman, who was U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union during World War II.
The series was produced with Soviet cooperation after the release ofThe World at War. Fred Weiner believed that a TV series featuring never before seen footage of the battles on the Eastern front would be of great interest to viewers and worldwide TV stations. Released in 1978,The Unknown War promoted the scope of the Soviet participation against Nazi Germany. The program was purchased first by German TV and quickly thereafter by TV stations in New York and Boston. Eventually the program was purchased by approximately 75 American TV stations and over 50 foreign broadcasters. After the Soviet Union'sinvasion of Afghanistan in 1979, several American TV stations, responding to public outcry, temporarily halted airings. Later it returned to additional airings on cable, includingA&E, theHistory Channel, andHulu.[1] The series was released on a 5-disc DVD set in 2011.[2]
The documentary series was banned inMalaysia in August 1979 after a few episodes.[3]
The series has a recurrent theme song " Toward the Unknown " written byRod McKuen and "Birch-tree's dreams" ("Берёзовые сны") by G. Fere (Г. Фере) and V. Geviksman (В. Гевиксман).