The screen magazine was a biweekly news and information film that was shown before the featured film in all military motion picture theaters during World War II. Most of the shows consisted of five minute segments featuring human interest stories about the home front updates from the defense industry news about major combat events of the war and sometimes a variety show featuring some of the top entertainers of the day. The most popular feature of the screen magazine was the Private Snafu segments written by Theodore ""Dr. Seuss"" Geisel and animated by Warner Brothers.... Snafu was lazy stubborn unpatriotic and insisted on doing everything wrong. In the end Snafu learned the hard way but not before supplying his audience with five minute of laughter and a painlessly administered object lesson. The depictions of Japanese and Germans are quite racist by today's standards but were par-for-the-course in wartime United States. By the end of the war the Army-Navy Screen Magazine reached a weekly audience of over 4 million men and women. Although the magazine was an instrument of official policy its honest no-nonsense approach won the respect and affection of G.I. audiences everywhere. Disc 1: General Alexander Vandegrift's report on the campaign to secure Guadalcanal First person accounts from the Philippines the Doolittle Raid and Tarawa Reports from Eastern Front Burma The Marshall Islands and Italy Back Home - stories on New York City Detroit and Cos Cob Connecticut Disc 2: The rescue of American prisoners from Cabanatuan in the Philippines A report on the Battle of the Bulge from a member of the 101st Airborne Coverage of the funeral procession for President Franklin D. Roosevelt Activities of the Army of occupation in post war Germany [show more]
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The Army Navy Screen Magazine was a biweekly news and information film that was shown before the featured movie in all US military motion picture theatres during World War II. Most of the shows consisted of five-minute segments featuring human interest stories about the home front, updates from the defence industry, news about major combat events of the war and sometimes a variety show featuring some of the top entertainers of the day. The most popular feature of the screen magazine was the Private Snafu segments, written by Theodore 'Dr. Seuss' Geisel and animated by Warner Brothers. The depictions of Japanese and Germans are racist by today's standards, but were par-for-the-course in wartime America. This two-volume set collects some of the most memorable moments from the screen magazine archives.
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