8/10
Alaskan attack
3 April 2024
World War II was a conflict big enough to have some of its theaters forgotten, even among those who like learning about the subject. When I first heard about the Aleutian Islands campaign, it surprised even me. This was a series of battles fought on and nearby the aleutian islands, which is the island chain stretching away from Alaska into the Bering Sea and towards the far eastern part of Soviet Russia. This place was so remote and isolated from basically every other theater of the war that it's hard to believe its occupation posed a real threat to the United States, but Japan knew that whoever controlled these islands controlled Pacific transport routes. Additionally, having airbases on these islands would possibly allow for bombing raids on cities like Anchorage and various places in California. This documentary, directed by John Huston, forgoes a lot of emphasis on actual combat and instead focuses on what the lives of the men fighting in the aleutians were like. More specifically, it shows soldiers on Adak, an island in the aleutians which is relatively close to another island named Kiska. Kiska had been occupied by japanese forces and US forces on adak needed to build up a sizable number of planes and other materials needed to dislodge the invaders. We get to see how in this bleak environment, adjustments need to be made to the methods by which runways are built. It's infeasible to build them with concrete on a muddy island, so infantry are brought in to build runways with prefabricated steel planks that interlock with each other. Although the total area exceeds a million square feet, the men get it done in a day and a half. After this, footage is shown of American planes, both bombers and fighters, making landings on adak island. The large bombers, like B-24s and 17s, can absorb (as well as deal) a lot of damage, and are likely to bring their crews safely back to base no matter how many times they are hit, unless an explosive shell impacts a gas tank. One of the planes, a P-38 Lightning, makes a wheels up landing and slides into the runway, badly scraping the undercarriage. The pilot is killed and his funeral is then shown. We're told how nobody hates war more than a soldier, and any pilot on adak will gladly risk getting shot down over kiska if it means getting another letter from back home sent their way. Towards the end of the film, we see how officers plan a bombing attack on kiska. American bomber pilots are to proceed at a certain altitude to the japanese held island and rain explosive hell on them from the air. About a dozen Curtiss P-40 fighter planes are sent as escorts. The flight to kiska, a little under two hours, is apparently really boring as some members of the bomber crews play cards on the way there. Meanwhile, the guns on the planes are tested. Once over kiska, the bombers start dropping ordinance on enemy positions and blowing up hangars. Japanese resistance is not as bad as it could be, since they use no planes of their own to attack the bombers. America sends out 9 planes, and 9 planes get back to base. The rest of adak is happy and the mission is accomplished. Although this film has to do with ww2, I would think only those truly interested in the subject will be able to get the full use out of it. There's not much going on until the last 10 minutes or so (when the bombing attack starts), and Huston wanted to portray war for what it is 90% of the time: boring. Army officials actually fought Huston's decision to include scenes such as GI's standing around having cigarettes or opening letters, but he wanted to show the truth about what was going on in the north Pacific. What the film makes no mention of is the rather embarrassing event that followed around 2 weeks after it was released. American and Canadian forces eventually assaulted kiska with actual soldiers in order to completely eliminate the japanese presence on it; something that can't be accomplished from the sky. Unbeknownst to the two allies, japanese forces had deserted the island altogether days earlier, and there was no enemy to fight at all. Despite this, american and canadian forces repeatedly shot at (and in some cases accidentally killed) each other due to confusion and bad visibility on the foggy island. As a result, the two nations lost around 90 men while japan lost none. Overall, Report from the Aleutians is a mostly slow moving but important look into world war 2's only north american campaign.
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