A short film which documents the siege of Warsaw at the beginning of World War II.A short film which documents the siege of Warsaw at the beginning of World War II.A short film which documents the siege of Warsaw at the beginning of World War II.
- Director
- Writer
- Star
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
Julien Bryan
- Self
- (voice)
- …
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
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"Siege" is a 1940 documentary short about the Siege of Warsaw by the Wehrmacht at the start of World War II. It was shot by Julien Bryan, a Pennsylvanian photographer and cameraman who later established the International Film Foundation.
This is a crucial piece of film, because although the United States was not directly involved in WWII until 1941 (and not in Europe until 1944), we ere clearly aware of what was going on, and not just through second-hand reports.
"Siege" was nominated for an Oscar for Best One-reel Short at the 13th Academy Awards in 1941. Somehow it lost to "Quicker'n a Wink", a short film about strobe lights... not sure what the voters were thinking.
This is a crucial piece of film, because although the United States was not directly involved in WWII until 1941 (and not in Europe until 1944), we ere clearly aware of what was going on, and not just through second-hand reports.
"Siege" was nominated for an Oscar for Best One-reel Short at the 13th Academy Awards in 1941. Somehow it lost to "Quicker'n a Wink", a short film about strobe lights... not sure what the voters were thinking.
As American correspondent and filmmaker Julien Bryan was in Poland when Germany invaded in September 1939, he gave us some of the earliest World War II footage. This short film (10 min.), which focuses on the siege of Warsaw, illustrates the horrors of war from a perspective of terror-stricken civilians. Air raids, fire-bombing, and food shortages all demoralized the defenseless population. Relentless bombing by the German Luftwaffe left hundreds of thousands homeless. Churches and hospitals were not spared; four-day old babies were already exposed to the horrors of war. By the seventh day of hostilities, one-third of Warsaw was already wrecked. To raise morale, Polish radio and newspapers published false reports of victories, but retreating soldiers told a different tale. Civilians had to be impressed to help dig barricades around the beleaguered capital. One man was stopped six times on his way to a store to buy a loaf of bread. People fled on anything they had – horses, wagons, baby carriages, etc. In a poignant scene, six women, digging for potatoes, were machine-gunned from airplanes. They were caught between a rock and a hard place, for if they did not dig, their families would starve. See the confused child sitting next to his dead mother's body. See the tortured faces of the victims. Near the very end (9:33 ff.) a Polish teen-aged girl is crying helplessly after losing her sister. One wonders what ever happened to her. Just a few days after the film-shoot the Russians invaded from the east, and Warsaw fell. Poland, finished less than four weeks after the start of the war, was divided between the Germans and the Russians. World War II had begun in Europe.
Did you know
- Trivia"Narrated by Bryan, this historic film on the fall of Poland is a powerful and timely documentary. The US film production company Radio-Keith-Orpheum (RKO) released the footage in 1940 as a newsreel in its 'Realism Series.' It represented the first non-Nazi produced footage covering the start of World War II seen in theaters across the US." (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Holocaust Encyclopedia, Siege (1940))
- ConnectionsFeatured in ... gdziekolwiek jestes, panie prezydencie... (1978)
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- Oblężenie
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime10 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
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