German invasion of Crete
Creator(s)
- Hauptfilmstelle des Reichsluftfahrtministeriums (Producer)
- Eberhard von der Heyden (Camera Operator)
- Ludwig Bayer (Camera Operator)
- Fritz Hick (Camera Operator)
- Hans Jacoby (Camera Operator)
- Franz Thomale (Camera Operator)
- Walter Winnig (Camera Operator)
- Imperial War Museums
- Georg Pfandke (Camera Operator)
Scope and Content
This is an excerpt from the six reel film about the German invasion of Crete from 21-27 May 1941, the first mainly airborne invasion in history. This clip is from reel 2 of 6. German soldiers in battle. Sound of bombing and shooting, Stukas drop bombs, sinking ship. British POWs raising their hands, marching past a harbor. Pile of seized weapons. Cheerful music over POWs sitting in a group. The narrator alludes to the British and their traitorous helpers. POWs in a gated compound. A pair of hands pages through a folder marked “Secret.” POWs receive rations out of the back of a truck while the narrator says that while the Jews are talking nonsense in London, these soldiers are receiving aid. A man identified as the mayor of Crete makes an announcement about the German victory from a balcony while a crowd of people listen below. The narrator says that the Greeks follow orders for calm and order because "what else can they do?" Greece is in German hands and the Nazi flag flies over the Acropolis. German soldiers on watch and ships sinking below the waterline.
Subjects
- PRISONERS
- CROWDS
- GREECE
- CIVILIANS
- POWS (BRITISH)
- MILITARY ADVANCES
- FLAGS
- SOLDIERS/MILITARY (GERMAN)
- BOMBINGS
- GERMAN OCCUPATION
- INVASIONS
- SHIPS
Places
- Crete, Greece
Genre
- Documentary.
- Film