List_of_World_War_II_films

List of World War II films

List of World War II films

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This is a list of fictional feature films or miniseries which feature events of World War II in the narrative.

There is a separate list of World War II TV series.

Criteria

Fictional feature films specifically pertaining to the Holocaust appear in the List of Holocaust films#Narrative films.

Common topics

Many aspects of this conflict have repeatedly been the subject of drama. These common subjects will not be linked when they appear in the film descriptions below:

Europe
Asia–Pacific
Non-geographical

Films made during the War of Ethiopia and the Sino-Japanese War

Before the Second World War explicitly began with the Nazi German, then later Soviet (Russian) invasions of Poland in September 1939, Germany had already absorbed Austria in the Anschluß of 1938, then the Czechoslovakian lands of Bohemia and Moravia. Meanwhile, Italy, Germany, and the Soviet Union were involved in the Spanish Civil War,[1] (1936–1939), and Italy had conquered Ethiopia (1935–1936) and Albania (1939). China had been fighting against Japan since the 1931 invasion of their northeastern province of Manchuria in a war that completely opened in 1937, called the Second Sino-Japanese War, until Japan attacked the U.S.A. at Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, then the British Empire and the Dutch East Indies colonial possessions also in December 1941.

1936

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1937

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1938

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Films made during the Second World War

Note: Soviet films are in Russian and originate in the Russian SFSR, unless otherwise noted.

1939

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1940

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1941

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1942

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1943

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1944

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1945

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Late 1940s

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Films made during the Cold War

Early 1950s

Late 1950s

Early 1960s

Late 1960s

Early 1970s

Late 1970s

Early 1980s

Late 1980s

Films made since the Cold War

Early 1990s

Late 1990s

Early 2000s

Late 2000s

Early 2010s

Late 2010s

Early 2020s

In development

Science fiction, fantasy and horror

TV series

Dramatised documentaries

A dramatised documentary is a documentary film which includes dramatised scenes using actors in costume.
This format is distinct from a docudrama, which is a fully dramatised fact-based fictional work in a documentary style.

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Spanish Civil War

In the Spanish Civil War, the Nationalists (the rebel side) are supported by Mussolini's Italy, Hitler's Germany, and a small number of international rightist volunteers. The Republicans (government side) are supported by Stalin's Soviet Union and a large number of leftist volunteers, the International Brigades.

The Nationalists under Francisco Franco win.

During World War II, Franco remains neutral – so Gibraltar is never overrun – but nevertheless he sends the Blue Division to fight for Germany on the Eastern Front.

For films about the Blue Division, see the List of World War II films since 1950.

See also

Of related interest

Notes

  • ^† This English language title is a literal translation from its original foreign language title.
    This title should always be replaced by an English language release title when that information becomes available.
    1. For movies set during the Spanish Civil War please refer to List of Spanish Civil War films
    2. This is the first World War II British propaganda film.[citation needed]
    3. This film is available at the Internet Archive. Refer to the film's main page for the link.
    4. Released on 17 May 1940, this is arguably the first Hollywood film set during the war.
    5. The IMDb, on the other hand, identifies the villainous Yugoslavs in Menschen im Sturm as Slovenians rather than Serbs.
    6. The IMDb lists In the Rear of the Enemy as V tylu vraga (1942) based on its 1942 release date in New York City.
    7. Available for viewing is this public domain World War II film[dead link] at Google Videos. Refer to the film's main page for the link.
    8. New edition of the movie, released in theaters in 1955, with the addition of scenes before and after the original Bengasi, which now becomes a long flash-back recalled by an Italian woman visiting the cemetery of El-Alamein with a British officer ten years after the end of the war.
    9. Canadian World War I flying ace Billy Bishop appears as himself.
    10. A Triumph of Wings (1942) was co-written by Akira Kurosawa.
    11. Fires Were Started is often regarded as a documentary film.
    12. Available for viewing – from British libraries and universities only – are clips from this British World War II film at the BFI's Screenonline. Refer to the film's main page for the link.
    13. Actresses Betty Grable, Carole Landis and others play themselves.
    14. Released only to Italian fascist military units and maybe a few theaters around Genoa in the last months of the war
    15. Never released in theaters.
    16. The first feature-length anime film.
    17. Filmed in 1943, before the Italian Armistice, but released in theaters in 1945 after a relevant editing, which changed the nationality of the enemies.
    18. The first post-war Polish film.
    19. Filmed in 1943, but released in cinemas in 1947 after a slight editing
    20. This film is currently considered to be lost.
    21. Italian remake of Wielka droga
    22. First German film to show a concentration camp.
    23. This film is an international co-production shot in English.
    24. Filmed in 1943, but released in cinemas in 1949 after a slight editing

    References

    Sources
    • Leyda, Jay. Kino: A History of the Russian and Soviet Film – A study of the development of Russian cinema, from 1896 to the present. London: George Allen & Unwin, 1960. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 3rd edition, 1983. 513 pp. ISBN 0-691-00346-7

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