The First World War - The Complete Series

The First World War - The Complete Series

The First World War - The Complete Series
Our Price: $109.99
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Buy Used: from $101.00 (click here)
Category: DVD
See more DVD releases


(Click here)
Buy this DVD movie at online store in your country
Canada

DVD Cover Information

Actor: Andrée Bernard, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, Erich Ludendorff, Jonathan Lewis, King Ferdinand of Bulgaria
Brand: Image Entertainment
Writer: Arthur Ransome
Writer: David Lloyd George
Writer: Douglas Haig
Writer: Edward Grey
Writer: Georges Clemenceau
Writer: Harold Macmillan
Writer: Karen Blixen
Writer: Raymond Poincaré
Writer: Rudolf Hess
Writer: Siegfried Sassoon
Writer: Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg
Writer: Vera Brittain
DVD: Region Code 1
Audio: English (Unknown), Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo; English (Original Language), Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo
Format: Black & White, Box set, Color, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC
Picture Format: 1.33:1
Running Time: 523 minutes
DVD Release Date: 2005-08-30
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Studio: Image Entertainment
Product features:
  • Condition: New
  • Format: DVD
  • Box set; Black & White; Color; DVD; Full Screen; NTSC

Movie Reviews of The First World War - The Complete Series

Movie Review: The First World War
Summary: 5 Stars

This show is, quite simply, the most extraordinary thing I've ever seen. I've always believed the First World War to be the most significant event in human history; nothing in this show has led me to believe otherwise. What it makes clear is how truly unnecessary the First World War was and how easily it could have been halted at almost any stage, if only the opposing sides had seen fit to communicate with one another - or simply to give one another the benefit of the doubt at crucial points. This was especially true of Germany, which based so much of its strategy on what it anticipated would happen eventually; and, of course, in doing so it made these eventualities self-fulfilling prophecies.

Besides being a masterful adaption of Professor Hew Strachan's three volume series, the show is superbly organized and presented, in ten parts, to give the viewer maximum exposure to the conditions, personages and events of "The Great War" without the necessity of watching the entire eight hour and twenty-three minute, four disc series in one sitting. Each of the ten parts focuses on one aspect of the War, rather than each picking up where the previous left off; so, in addition to carrying major themes along in the background, each presents a sub-theme devoted primarily to a particular phase of the War. So, even though this requires stepping out of the time line and then back into it, the process is achieved in such a way that the viewer is able to keep each separate aspect in perspective. And while, needless to say, there is enough material related to the First World War to fill a hundred volumes or a hundred hours of video, it is nevertheless quite a feat of editing to have included so much material and to have used it with such great economy and to such good effect. If what you get is primarily an overview, it is an unusually well fleshed-out overview.

One other thing the show accomplishes - almost as extraordinary as its presentation of the subject matter - is to highlight the enormous value of historians in the process of understanding human events, great and small. The archival material presented is astounding; but just as astounding is what it says about the great care with which historians preserved and collected as many details as they possibly could. Throughout the series, there are excerpts from letters written by ordinary soldiers to their families and friends back home as well as the much more easily preserved and obtainable writings and speeches of those whose task it was to oversee the War. As a result, the viewer gets a far more complete - and far more unbiased - picture of the actual conditions than he or she would if only the carefully chosen words and phrases of those intentionally writing for history had been presented.

To its credit also, as befits the highest uses of history, the show offers neither platitudes nor opinions about the human condition. It simply presents a wealth of accumulated information; and, in so doing, allows the events themselves to speak volumes about the arrogance, stupidity and cruelty of human interaction as well as the nobility and endurance of the human spirit. Not everything shown is unremittingly negative; some things are even light-hearted, as when, on certain portions of the Western Front, the French and British soldiers developed a rapport with the German soldiers - one of the German soldiers even warning when a shell would be fired at their trench; while others are poignant, as when Italian soldiers, unable to withstand the cold of the Alps or the dearth of rations, simply surrendered en masse to the Germans, or when Russian soldiers simply walked away from the Eastern Front, unwilling to fight any longer under impossible conditions. And while there were some overbearing officers, many of the officers, including generals, positioned themselves along the Front with their men - a large number of generals, on all sides, being killed during this "war to end all wars."

Of course, it didn't "end all wars"; if anything, it guaranteed a succession of great and small wars. Marshal Foch, the supreme French commander, commented after the War that the terms of the Treaty would lead to yet another war in twenty years. As Jonathan Lewis, the producer and narrator of the show, observed, Foch missed it by only sixty-five days.

Summary of The First World War - The Complete Series

FIRST WORLD WAR:COMPLETE SERIES - DVD Movie
Similar DVD Movies
A World Undone: The Story of the Great War, 1914 to 1918 ImageA World Undone: The Story of the Great War, 1914 to 1918
by G.J. Meyer
Delacorte Press; Published: 2007-05-29; Paperback; Book
Best price: $12.82
Price in other shops: $21.00
Battlefield Russia: The Eastern Front! 3 DVD Set! ImageBattlefield Russia: The Eastern Front! 3 DVD Set!
TIMELESS MEDIA GROUP; Release date: 2010-09-21; DVD
Best price: $12.90
Price in other shops: $24.98
The Nazis: A Warning From History ImageThe Nazis: A Warning From History
WEA; Release date: 2005-07-19; DVD
Best price: $16.95
Price in other shops: $29.98
The First World War ImageThe First World War
by Hew Strachan
Penguin (Non-Classics); Published: 2005-04-05; Paperback; Book
Best price: $10.22
Price in other shops: $18.00
Korea The Forgotten War - 4 DVD Set! ImageKorea The Forgotten War - 4 DVD Set!
Timeless Media Group; Release date: 2010-05-25; DVD
Best price: $4.79
Price in other shops: $9.98
Third Reich: Rise & Fall ImageThird Reich: Rise & Fall
A&E; Release date: 2011-04-12; DVD
Best price: $13.39
Price in other shops: $24.95
World War I in Color ImageWorld War I in Color
Acorn; Release date: 2010-07-13; DVD
Best price: $39.50
Price in other shops: $59.99
The World at War (30th Anniversary Edition) ImageThe World at War (30th Anniversary Edition)
A and E Home Video; Release date: 2004-08-24; DVD
Best price: $39.42
Price in other shops: $99.95
The Last Voices of WWI - A Generation Lost ImageThe Last Voices of WWI - A Generation Lost
Release date: 2011-03-22; DVD
Best price: $3.94
Price in other shops: $9.98
The Complete Story: World War I ImageThe Complete Story: World War I
Timeless Media Group; Release date: 2005-08-24; Published: 1963; DVD
Best price: $15.51
Price in other shops: $34.98
Compare prices and read customer reviews for more than one million DVD titles.
Oscar 2005 Winners