B-17 Bombing Missions in Color: "The Memphis Belle" 1944 US Army Air Forces in World War II
NEW VERSION with improved video & sound: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2vOG2JWhmZs
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http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLE644A4A2C089142F
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"MEMPHIS BELLETHIS IS THE STORY OF THE B-17 FLYING FORTRESS "MEMPHIS BELLE," HER
CREW AND THEIR 25 SUCCESSFUL
WW II MISSIONS, FROM 17 MAY
1942 TO 7
NOV 1943."
also see: Restoring the
Memphis Belle
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-ocKioTbg8
Public domain film from the
National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memphis_Belle_(aircraft)
The Memphis Belle:
A Story of a
Flying Fortress is a
1944 documentary film which ostensibly provides an account of the final mission of the crew of the Memphis Belle, a
Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress. In May 1943 it became the first
U.S. Army Air Forces heavy bomber to complete 25 missions over
Europe and return to the
United States.
The dramatic
16 mm color film of actual battles was made by cinematographer
First Lieutenant Harold J. Tannenbaum. The film was directed by
Major William Wyler, narrated by
Eugene Kern, and had scenes at its Bassingbourn base photographed by
Hollywood cinematographer
Captain William H. Clothier. It was made under the auspices of the
First Motion Picture Unit, a branch of the
United States Army Air Forces. The film actually depicted the next to last mission of the crew (see below) on May 15, 1943, and was made as a morale-building inspiration for the
Home Front by showing the everyday courage of the men who manned these bombers
...
Production
Morgan's crew had not flown all of its missions together. Captain Verinis had originally been Morgan's co-pilot at the beginning of their combat tour but had become a "first pilot" (aircraft commander) in his own right on
December 30, 1942, after which he flew 16 missions as commander of a replacement B-17 he named
Connecticut Yankee after his home state. Verinis finished his tour two days before the rest of Morgan's crew.
Nor was Morgan's crew the one originally selected by Wyler for filming. He had been following Captain
Oscar O'Neill (whose bomber was named
Invasion 2nd) of the 401st
Bomb Squadron until O'Neill's B-17 and five others were shot down over
Bremen, Germany, on April 17, 1943. Morgan was then selected and his crew re-united by the
Eighth Air Force to complete its tour together and to return to the United States for a war bond drive. Wyler also informed Morgan when asked that had the Memphis Belle been shot down on the crew's final mission, Wyler had a backup crew working with another B-17 about to finish its 25 missions,
Hell's Angels of the nearby
303d Bombardment Group. Ironically, Hell's Angels actually completed 25 missions first, on May 13 (the date of the
21st for the Memphis Belle).
Morgan states in his memoirs that he was approached by Wyler in late
January 1943 after his crew's eighth mission. Wyler told Morgan he wanted to film the Memphis Belle and her crew because of "a certain mystique" to the aircraft's nickname, and that Morgan's reputation as a pilot meant that Wyler would be "in the center of the action...(with) a pretty good chance of coming back." Morgan agreed after assurances from Wyler that the film crew would not interfere with operation of the airplane in combat in any way.
The first mission flown in filming, ironically, was not aboard the Memphis Belle, but aboard the B-17
Jersey Bounce on a
February 26, 1943, mission to
Wilhelmshaven, Germany. (The Memphis Belle was being repaired after severe battle damage incurred on
February 16.) The mission experienced heavy
German fighter attacks and two of the 91st group's B-17s were shot down.
Despite the hazards, Wyler filmed at least six more combat missions with Morgan's crew, not all of them aboard the Memphis Belle, using a set-up that placed mounted cameras in the nose, tail, right waist, and radio hatch positions. The camera setup is documented in the photograph of the
Bad Penny, which Morgan and Wyler flew on a mission to
Antwerp on April 5, 1943.
The 16 mm color film used did not include sound, and this was added later in Hollywood. The original crew, during their war bonds drive in the United States, made typical appropriate comments to each other while watching the silent movie in a studio. The result was difficult to distinguish from real combat recordings.
King George VI (wearing a
Marshal of the
Royal Air Force uniform) and his consort
Queen Elizabeth are seen congratulating the crew on
May 18, after Morgan's final mission but the day before that of the B-17...