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“The Cold Blue,” 8th AF in WWII, Fathom Events movie on May 23: Login/Join 
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https://www.fathomevents.com/e...sonian+air+and+space

The Cold Blue
Premiere Event

THE COLD BLUE is a tribute to the men who won the ultimate victory - 75 years ago. Extraordinary, never before seen color footage shot by one of the world's greatest directors, William Wyler, puts you 30,000 feet over Nazi Germany, battling killer flak, enemy fighters and 60 below degree temperatures. All the odds were stacked against returning home alive - and men literally died to bring this harrowing footage into theaters today. Now, you can fly alongside the last surviving heroes who flew, who fought, who won - the men who just might have saved the world.

Multiple Academy Award® winning director William Wyler went to Europe in 1943 to document the Air War in progress. Wyler flew actual combat missions with B-17's - and one of his three cinematographers was killed during filming. Incredibly, all of the raw color footage Wyler shot for THE MEMPHIS BELLE was recently discovered deep in the vaults of the National Archives, and a new film has been constructed out of the material.

This event will include an exclusive behind the scenes look at the making of THE COLD BLUE.
 
Posts: 15898 | Location: Eastern Iowa | Registered: May 21, 2000Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Cool. Thanks for the head's up.



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Thanks for posting about this.
God Bless the Crews of the Mighty 8Th...




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Posts: 8318 | Location: 18 miles long, 6 Miles at Sea | Registered: January 22, 2012Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Speaking of the 8th Air Force, what's the latest on the Tom Hanks-produced HBO mini-series that's been in the works for a while? Not sure if the title is "The Mighty Eighth" or "Masters of the Air."

I did a search and there are no recent articles.
 
Posts: 15898 | Location: Eastern Iowa | Registered: May 21, 2000Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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https://www.airforcetimes.com/...bomber-crew-to-life/

‘Cold Blue’ brings the death-defying world of a World War II B-17 bomber crew to life

By: J.D. Simkins and Claire Barrett
9:06 PM

Cinematic masterpieces “The Best Years of Our Lives” (1946), “Roman Holiday” (1953) and “Ben-Hur” (1959) may have cemented William Wyler’s legacy as one of Hollywood’s most celebrated filmmakers, but it was a filming experience during 1943 that left the greatest impression on the Oscar-winning director.

That summer, Wyler and a film crew embedded with the U.S. Eighth Air Force to film air combat missions aboard Boeing B-17s, footage that would become the 1944 World War II documentary “The Memphis Belle: A story of a Flying Fortress.”

Three years (1942-1945) of daylight bombing runs by the Eighth’s Flying Fortresses over Nazi Germany unleashed 697,000 tons of bombs.

But the effort to pry the claws of the Third Reich’s from Europe was met with deadly resistance, prompting torturous contemplations of one’s own mortality in the face of casualty totals that exceeded 115,000 personnel from the U.S. Army Air Force.

Of that total, over 47,000 of were from the Eighth.

Despite these devastating odds, the men from the “Mighty Eighth” again and again climbed into cockpits and bombardier enclosures and took to the sky.

And Wyler’s camera crew kept rolling, even when one of its own, Harold Tannenbaum, was killed filming one such bombing mission.

It wouldn’t take long for, however, for “The Memphis Belle” to be overshadowed by Wyler’s future masterpieces, and the rolls of film compiled by his crew stashed away, like a history buff’s buried treasure, in the National Archives.

There the film sat, collecting dust, until director Erik Nelson resurrected the footage for his new documentary “The Cold Blue,” a film dedicated to the heroic actions of the men of the “Mighty Eighth” who faced almost certain death on a daily basis.

Nelson (“A Gray State,” “Grizzly Man”), who received backing from the late Paul Allen’s Vulcan Productions, discussed the significance of the film restoration project with Military Times and HistoryNet.

“The Cold Blue” will premiere in theaters via Fathom Events for one day only — Thursday, May 23 at 7:30 p.m., before debuting June 6, the 75th anniversary of D-Day, on HBO. Tickets can be purchased through Fathom.

Walk us through the film restoration process — was it at all similar to Peter Jackson’s restoration of World War I footage for “They Shall Not Grow Old”?

No, it could not have been more different. The World War I project was in essence an animated film over distinct footage. The color was put in, extra frames were added, so in some ways it was almost rotoscoping, using the film but then recreating it as full-color animation. It was a staggeringly ambitious and well-executed project.

In “The Cold Blue,” what you see on the screen is what you got on the film. The color was already there, the film was already there. We didn’t have to extrapolate what the colors were because they were there. But we did have to repair the film.

The interesting story is that Wyler and his guys risked — and in one case, lost — their lives gathering this footage before it was shipped back to the United States. In 1943, Wyler was screening it in London and inflicted scratches on the raw master footage. If you look at the “Memphis Belle,” you’ll see what we call “the blue lines of death.” There are two scratches in the original negative that have accompanied this footage for 75 years. The one thing we did as far as a restorer was to remove those blue scratches frame by frame digitally, so we’ve rectified a mistake that I’m sure drove William Wyler out of his mind for all of this time.

What was it that drew you to the story of the 8th Air Force?

I am something of an autodidact historian on World War II and always have been, so the story of the Memphis Belle was not unknown to me. But the actual film “The Memphis Belle” is in horrible shape. If you go to YouTube and go to the best available National Archives film, or you watch “Five Came Back,” where they talked about the Memphis Belle on Netflix, you’ll see the blue scratches, you’ll see the washed-out muddy color — it all looks orange.

It was a tragedy to me that it had faded so badly, so when we discovered all the raw footage that went into it, and we embarked on “The Cold Blue” project, in the back of mind was, well, maybe we could restore the “Memphis Belle,” too — and we did.

That kind of bonded us with the Wyler family, because that was their issue — and we got both projects out the door in time for the actual Memphis Belle that was unveiled at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base last May.

We had to rush to get “The Cold Blue” out because we wanted the [veterans] who were in the movie to see the film while they were around to see it. I’m happy to say that every one of the nine gentlemen we interviewed, the nine heroes, every single one of them is still with us today.

You mentioned bonding with the Wyler family. What did it mean to have William Wyler’s daughter, Katherine, noting how delighted her dad would be with the project? Wyler is obviously a demigod of film … what did it mean to get that approval and input?

It’s immensely gratifying that they’ve endorsed the vision and endorsed the film. I would often discuss with Katherine, “What would your father have thought?” And she would say, and has said, that he would have been thrilled.

I do think the idea that the footage that Wyler risked his life to make would be resurrected 75 years later, restored, put into wide-screen, and the sound effects designer who did the blockbuster “Black Panther” would supply the audio in surround-sound ... I like to think that would utterly have thrilled William Wyler.

That’s one of the reasons why we also restored the “Memphis Belle” — we wanted to create a level playing field. It wouldn’t have been fair for me to put “The Cold Blue” out with this diminished, crappy copy of “The Memphis Belle” in existence. Now people can enjoy “The Cold Blue,” as we hope they do on May 23rd, and “The Memphis Belle” is out there, too, if someone wants to see the original. That remains in three-by-four. And we did just create a 5.1 soundtrack for it, using the original soundtrack but just making it sound way better.

Those are giant shoes to try to fill. So that was in the back of my mind, you know, whether this film will live up to it.

On the note of sentimentality, Paul Allen’s Vulcan Productions had a significant role in this. Can you discuss what role his company played?

Paul Allen was a World War II nut, another armchair, autodidact historian. Except his resources were somewhat better than mine. (Laughs)

Vulcan basically funded the original research, and then when I stumbled on the Memphis Belle material, I came back to them and said, “I want to make a full film.” “The Cold Blue” concept crystallized fairly quickly.

Then, they co-funded the project with me, so we were funding partners with the project. Paul fortunately got to see the film before he passed away.

Historians have argued that late-war carpet bombing runs were an attempt by the U.S. Army Air Force to prove its effectiveness to justify being a separate military branch. In the documentary you mention that 28,000 lives were lost in this process. Do you think that the ends justified the means?

Well, we won, didn’t we? I would say that when you’ve assembled a force like that, you’re going to use it, and yes, by February or March, around the time of Dresden, we were pretty much just making a rubble bounce. But once the dogs of war are unleashed, it’s tough to get them back in the kennel. I’m sure there were a lot of agendas at the time, and one can’t isolate any single one of them.

Why was it important for you to tell this story?

These are the last of the best. In some ways I made it for them. We screened the film to the 8th Air Force reunion in Dayton last year, and I wanted them to see that their story is still being told, and I want to tell the story in a way that this really would impact young 20-year-olds today.

These guys were 19, 20, and 21, and they’re flying B-17s on these ridiculously complicated, hazardous missions. The idea that they’d be in these planes for 10 hours, round-trip, in temperatures equaling Mount Everest, with this sort of crude technology to drop bombs, and they’d head back and wake up and do it all over again ... people just can’t imagine now. War has become much more sanitized.

I’ve never seen anything on the 8th Air Force or on the strategic bombing exercises quite like “The Cold Blue," because it’s less about “On this date they did this, and then they did this, and then they came back did this.” It’s much more about what it was like. What did it feel like? I was very clear when I was interviewing the guys not to talk about the details of their missions in mission terms, but the experience. I knew what I wanted out of them, and I knew what footage I had to illustrate what they were saying.

They hadn’t really been asked questions like that before. Nobody would say, “How cold was it? Tell me stories about how cold," or, “What did flak sound like? Tell me what it sounded like in the plane.” Those aren’t the kind of questions they were used to being asked.

We were really trying to resurrect not only the footage but resurrect their stories as a legacy for future generations. And the fact that the guys are still with us to see their movie hit 750 American screens on the 75th anniversary of D-Day is a tribute to them. And they deserve it. They deserve the attention now and they deserve to be celebrated in a film that I hope endures for the next 75 years.

That was one of the things was most appreciated about Dunkirk, that it felt like more of an experience than an actual plot. In terms of bring their experience to life, was there anything you were unable to include in the film that you were hoping to get in there to enhance that?

It’s very gratifying that this film made you think of Dunkirk, because Dunkirk was a big inspiration. My argument at the time was, “This is better than Dunkirk because this is real.” But the care and precision of sound design was absolutely influenced by Dunkirk. We’re happy that Fathom is putting it in theaters because you need to see it in the dark with the sound up.

As far as things that I wished I could have put in; ironically, the only thing I wished I could have put in was more kickass B-17s being shot down footage. But Wyler didn’t get it. He got two death spirals and some fighters. But in the course of doing the Fathom film, we stumbled on Nazi newsreels, which show what it looked like from the other side — in some ways even better than “The Cold Blue” does.

We’re now exploring other things. My next film is going to be based in the Bundesarchiv. We’re going to basically do a film that tells the entire story of World War II from the German perspective — only using their newsreels and their narration. It’s called “Their Struggle.”

When you say, “What the hell were the Germans thinking they were doing?” Ok. Here it is. This is what they were thinking.

What impact do you hope “The Cold Blue” has on movie-goers?

We were pretty careful to get it right, and the best way to get it right is to show the imagery and have the guys who were there takes us through it.

There’s no editorializing or lead you by the nose story. Hopefully, laymen will watch the movie and say, “Oh my God, I never knew. I should read more. I need to find out more about this.”

If that’s where we lead an audience, I feel we’ve done our job.

Thank you, Erik Nelson, for taking the time to chat.
 
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Thanks for the reminder. Just bought my tickets.




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Does it explain how to buy eggs in Malta for seven cents and sell them to the mess hall for five cents and make a profit?




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May 23. Hmmm.
Anybody have an idea what I'm going to feel like the evening after my first bladder infusion of BCG?


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Thank you for the heads up on this. I just bought my ticket. I can't wait to see this.




Be on your guard; stand firm in the faith; be men of courage; be strong. Do everything in love.
- 1 Corinthians 16:13-14

 
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I got my ticket.



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It was pretty good. While I understand why, I do get slightly annoyed as the focus on one particular unit, with no mention of any others that did the same job.



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I thought it was okay. Some footage unfamiliar to me, some not. The remastering was nicely done, as was the sound. The 'chapters' seemed a little out of order as well. As for focusing on one unit, I think it was at best a very soft focus. I think the idea was to paint a picture of being on a B-17 crew in general, not an 8th USAAF B-17.

In the clip where the planes are taxiing, is that a YB-40 in the middle of the line? It definitely looked like a turret where the radio operator gun position is. And some of those dual M2 positions in the nose looked like a precursor to the Bendix chin turret.

Did anyone notice the cameo by a Vickers Wellington?


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Overall, I thought it was pretty decent. I've been into WWII aviation history since I was a kid and was really looking forward to seeing this. I kind of have to agree with Allen in that the flow of the thing didn't seem quite right at times. However, I appreciated seeing all of that footage and listening to all of the old Vets that they interviewed. I think what stayed with me the most what happened with Vince Losada in the P-51, "Pecos Bill".

If you want to read more about it you can check it out here.

http://www.kathrynsreport.com/...stang-fatal.html?m=1




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I enjoyed the movie and would love to get a copy of it.
Any ideas , how?


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Originally posted by downtownv:
I enjoyed the movie and would love to get a copy of it.
Any ideas , how?


It's going to be on HBO very soon, and I imagine it'll be on disc not long after that.


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Originally posted by AllenInWV:
quote:
Originally posted by downtownv:
I enjoyed the movie and would love to get a copy of it.
Any ideas , how?


It's going to be on HBO very soon, and I imagine it'll be on disc not long after that.


Thanks!


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Originally posted by sjtill:
May 23. Hmmm.
Anybody have an idea what I'm going to feel like the evening after my first bladder infusion of BCG?


Reading the interview above, I think it will be in some 700+ theaters on June 6th. Plus HBO soon.



I returned, and saw under the sun, that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither yet bread to the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding, nor yet favour to men of skill; but time and chance happeneth to them all. -Ecclesiastes 9:11
 
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The 'chapters' seemed a little out of order as well.

I think you're right. Something seemed off, couldn't figure out what it was. Hate to be a film critique about it, I'm glad they took on the project.



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quote:
Originally posted by SevenPlusOne:
quote:
The 'chapters' seemed a little out of order as well.

I think you're right. Something seemed off, couldn't figure out what it was. Hate to be a film critique about it, I'm glad they took on the project.


I agree. I was not super impressed with it. The remastered footage was the best part. It just wasn't a documentary that really captured my attention and I usually love this kind of stuff. Very basic and somewhat dry.
 
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Enjoyed. Especially the living 8th guys at the end. I’ll admit it seemed to follow Memphis Belle pretty close.
A winner.
Thank you to those men, almost 30k who gave their ultimate.


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