Tag: documentary

  • Award-winning wreck-dives captured

    Award-winning wreck-dives captured

    Southsea Sub-Aqua Club members have won the Nautical Archaeology Society (NAS) 2019 Adopt a Wreck Award, and their search for a landing-craft sunk during the D-Day landings has been captured in a documentary called No Roses on a Sailor’s Grave.

    In 1944 young sailor Patrick Thomas narrowly survived the sinking of HMS LCH185 during the Normandy invasion. He had never spoken of the incident until, years later on a trip to Normndy, he met archaeologist John Henry Philips, who told him that he would to try to find LCH185.

    In August 2017 hydrographer Chris Howlett introduced Southsea SAC members to a documentary team from Go Button Media.

    “Chris believed he may have found Patrick’s wreck and recommended us as a dive-team who were capable of undertaking a survey of the wreck-site to confirm its identity,” said club-member Martin Davies.

    “When we heard about Patrick’s wish to commemorate his lost shipmates, we were very keen to support the endeavour so that he could honour his friends after more than 70 years, and support John in his promise to find his ship.”

    Most of the 7000 vessels involved in the Operation Neptune landings in June 1944 were lost, and many of those who died on them were never found. The divers surveyed the target wreck and created a report, as reflected in the documentary.

    “The wreck is just one of at least 150 wrecks in the Baie de Seine believed to be associated with the Allied forces invasion,” said the club’s Alison Mayor. “Our report has been submitted to the French Maritime Cultural Department and will form part of the documentation supporting the application for UNESCO World Heritage Site designation.

    “We hope that our work will help to keep the memory of these events alive and properly recorded within history.”

    For what the NAS describes as their “exceptional work” on the project, Mayor and Davies were awarded the Adopt a Wreck Award at the NAS Conference in Portsmouth.

    The feature-length documentary will be screened at film festivals from early 2020. “It’s rare you get a chance to change history, and in a small way we felt that following Patrick and John’s adventure achieves just that,” said director Daniel Oron.

    “Stories like these are important for current and future generations. Sadly, we lose more veterans each year and with so few still among us, the memories are fading and the world will move on. Yet events like those Patrick took part in are critical if we are to learn from history.”

    Read the article on diver.net

  • Yesterday: Four ‘Secret’ Bases You Can Still Visit Today.

    Yesterday: Four ‘Secret’ Bases You Can Still Visit Today.

    Yesterday’s exclusive series “Secret Nazi Bases” takes us into some of the most striking strongholds created by Hitler’s regime – here are just four you can still visit today.

    Read more on Yesterday Channel

  • DCD sells factual titles worldwide

    DCD sells factual titles worldwide

    UK distributor DCD Rights has completed several sales of new factual programs ahead of their MIPCOM launch next month.

    Titles already sold include Secret Nazi Bases (6 x 60 minutes), a Go Button Media production for UKTV, Discovery Science and Discovery, which has sold to Foxtel in Australia, A&E in CEE and Scandinavia, Prima Group in the Czech Republic, Emirates Cable TV E-Vision in the Middle East, True Visions in Thailand, ProSiebenSat.1 in German-speaking Europe and Discovery Communications in Spain.

    Read More on Realscreen.com

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  • Fox News: Hitler’s secret Nazi war machine revealed in hidden bases

    Fox News: Hitler’s secret Nazi war machine revealed in hidden bases

    Experts are looking to unlock the sinister secrets of hidden Nazi bases dotted across Europe.

    The covert sites will be explored in the new Science Channel series “Secret Nazi Ruins,” which premieres at 10 p.m. ET Thursday.

    “To this day, the remains of Nazi Bases lie waiting to reveal their truth about Hitler’s tactics and dreams,” explained Science Channel, in a statement. Sites examined in the series include the Maisy Batteries, a huge group of artillery batteries built in Northern France by the German military. The site has been recently excavated and investigated with the help of newly revealed documents, according to Science Channel.

    Other sites featured in the series include the vast base of Dag Bromberg, which is hidden in a Polish forest, and the V-2 rocket base Kraftwerk Nord West in France. Experts will also explore Bergkristal, a bunker and tunnel complex in Austria, which is described as possessing a “mysterious level of radiation.” An unusual mansion on a beach in the Canary Islands “with design elements that defy its stated residential purpose” will also be examined.

    “It seems as though every year that passes since the events of WWII we discover new sites, new plots and new terrors the Nazi war machine was behind,” said Daniel Oron, the show’s executive producer, in a statement emailed to Fox News. “Secret Nazi Ruins’ aims to uncover the mysteries and buried plots through investigating the remnants of known and recently excavated Nazi projects.”

    Read More on Fox News