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The War
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Share Your Story
Ken Burns's THE WAR explores the history and horror of WWII from an American perspective. The film focuses on a handful of men and women from four American towns, but could have aimed cameras at any town in America for deeply personal stories about WWII. KPBS is collecting stories from our community about the war. You can search these local stories as well as similar ones from across the country.
Share your story or explore others' stories»
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Watch a preview (approx. 26 minutes)
THE WAR, a co-production of Florentine Films and WETA Washington, DC, is a seven-part, 14-hour film directed and produced by Burns and his longtime co-producer, Lynn Novick.
Six years in the making, this epic 14-hour film, reminiscent in scope and power of Burns’ landmark series The Civil War, focuses on the stories of citizens from four geographically distributed American towns — Waterbury, Connecticut; Mobile, Alabama; Sacramento, California; and the tiny farming town of Luverne, Minnesota.
These four communities stand in for — and could represent — any town in the United States that went through the war’s four devastating years. Individuals from each community take the viewer through their own personal and quite often harrowing journeys into war, painting vivid portraits of how the war dramatically altered their lives and those of their neighbors, as well as the country they helped to save for generations to come.
Florentine Films, the production company of Mr. Burns, will create additional content that focuses on stories of Latino and Native American veterans of the Second World War.
“The Second World War was so massive, catastrophic and complex, it is almost beyond the mind’s and the heart’s capacity to process everything that happened and, more important, what it meant on a human level,” said Burns.
By focusing on the personal stories of ordinary Americans who had extraordinary experiences, the film tries to bring one of the biggest events in the history of the world down to a very intimate scale. And in the end, we all begin to see that there are no “ordinary lives.”
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Waterbury, Connecticut Mobile, Alabama Sacramento, California Luverne, Minnesota |
Funding for KPBS' Outreach for The War is brought to you by:
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