Victory at Sea Episodes 1-9 (1952-53).nfo
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| M O V I E information |
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Title................................: Victory at Sea Episodes 1-9
International title(s)...............: N/A
Director.............................: N/A
Release year.........................: 1952-53
Language.............................: English
Runtime..............................: 25 min
Genre................................: WWII Documentary
Color................................: B&W
IMDb rating..........................: N/A
Link 1...............................: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0046658/
Link 2...............................: N/A
Studio...............................: NBC
Subtitles............................: N/A
Source (DVD/DVDR 5,9)..................: DVD 5
Total movie's files size...............: N/A
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| Video Attribute |
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Video compression mode...............: DivX
TV system (NTSC/PAL).................: NTSC
Aspect ratio.........................: 1.33:1
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Number of subtitles..................: N/A
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| RIP Information |
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Video (Untouched/Re-encoded-%).......: Untouched
Audio (Untouched/Stripped)...........: Untouched
Menus (Untouched/Stripped)...........: Stripped
Extras (Untouched/Stripped/N/A)......: Stripped
Subtitles (Untouched/Stripped/Added).: Stripped
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| Post Information |
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Posted by............................: GTD
Compression method (RAR/ZIP).........: DivX
File validation......................: Yes
Part size............................: N/A
Name of the part files...............: N/A
Number of files......................: N/A
Total files size.....................: N/A
Burn tested..........................: N/A
Date of post (d.m.y).................: 25.7.2014
Posted to............................: N/A
Re-posting policy....................: N/A
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| Plot summary |
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Victory at Sea is a documentary television series about warfare in general during World War II, and naval warfare in particular, as well as the use of industry in warfare. It was originally broadcast by NBC in the USA in 1952–1953. It was condensed into a film in 1954. Excerpts from the music soundtrack, by Richard Rodgers and Robert Russell Bennett, were re-recorded and sold as record albums. The original TV broadcasts comprised 26 half-hour segments—Sunday afternoons at 3pm (EST) in most markets—starting on October 26, 1952 and ending on May 3, 1953. The series, which won an Emmy award in 1954 as "best public affairs program", played an important part in establishing historic "compilation" documentaries as a viable television genre
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| Release note |
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The project was conceived by Henry Salomon, who, while a U.S. Navy Lieutenant Commander during World War II, was a research assistant to historian Samuel Eliot Morison. Morison was then writing the 15-volume History of United States Naval Operations in World War II. During this period, Salomon learned of the large amounts of film that the warring navies had compiled. Salomon left the Navy in 1948 and eventually discussed his idea of a documentary series with one of his Harvard classmates, Robert Sarnoff, a rising executive at NBC television and the son of David Sarnoff, the chairman of RCA (then the owner of NBC).
NBC approved the project in 1951, with Salomon as producer and a budget of $500,000 (large for that era). His team, composed largely of newsreel veterans, searched naval archives around the world, and received complete cooperation from the U.S. Navy, which recognized the publicity value. Salomon's team compiled 60 million feet (18,300 km) of film, which was edited to about 61,000 feet for broadcast.
After the original run, NBC syndicated it to local stations, where it proved successful financially through the mid-1960s. NBC also marketed the series overseas; by 1964, it had been broadcast in 40 foreign markets. NBC created a feature-length (89-minute) motion picture condensation. The feature-length version was narrated by Alexander Scourby who replaced Leonard Graves, the narrator of the 26-part series. NBC made a distribution deal with United Artists and the film debuted in mid-1954. NBC also prepared another, 79-minute, condensation for broadcast, and it debuted on 29 December 1960 in a 90-minute evening slot as part of NBC's "Project Twenty" ("Project XX") series, which itself was established in 1955 as an offshoot of original "Victory at Sea" production unit.
The TV series won many honors including the Emmy and Peabody Award. For most modern viewers the score, script, and narration retain their appeal, but some knowledgeable viewers criticize the editing for anachronistic sequences—for example, ships and aircraft of 1943–45 vintage in 1941–42 segments.
Salomon also signed Richard Rodgers, fresh off several successful Broadway musicals, to compose the musical score. Rodgers contributed 12 "themes"—short piano compositions a minute or two in length; these may be examined in the Rodgers Collection at the Library of Congress.[3] Robert Russell Bennett did the scoring, transforming Rodgers's themes for a variety of moods, and composing much more original material than Rodgers, as may be observed in Bennett's holograph scores, archived with his papers at Northwestern University and microfilmed at the Library of Congress.[4] Episode No. 18, for example, is entirely of Bennett's creation, and uses none of Rodgers's twelve themes. Bennett nonetheless received credit only for arranging the score and conducting NBC Symphony Orchestra members on the soundtrack recording sessions, and many writers still refer erroneously to "Rodgers's thirteen-hour score".[1] In 1954 Rodgers recorded the VAS "Symphonic Scenario" medley (scored by Bennett) with the New York Philharmonic for Columbia Records, but it was Bennett who made the more familiar RCA Victor recordings—the first (1953) with NBC Symphony Orchestra musicians who played for the soundtrack sessions, and later with members of the Symphony of the Air, an orchestra created in the autumn of 1954 from former NBC Symphony members, identified on the albums as the RCA Victor Symphony Orchestra.
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| Ripper note |
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I first saw this series when it premiered in 1952. I was 8 or 9, and every Sunday afternoon, I would have to fight my sister over watching Victory at Sea or Lassie. Over the years, I showed the 16 mm films in school, then later at a TV station I was managing. I probably know the narration by heart now, but still watch with the same awe that I felt all those years ago.
YES, there are better versions out there than this one. But this is the one I have and am sharing it as if you were sitting in front of a 9" screen of a RCA TV in 1952, Please get over the fact that it hasn't been restored and isn't in stereo. I have no doubt that someone will rush to post that version. Meanwhile, enjoy a masterpiece from the early years of television.
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