AMG AllMovie Guide:

Tunisian Victory

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Plot

Like the military operation it celebrates, Tunisian Victory is a joint Anglo-American project. Produced by the British Film Unit and the U.S. Army Signal Corps, the film was supervised by England's Hugh Stewart and Hollywood's Frank Capra. Running 75 minutes -- unusually long for a documentary, even a wartime one -- the film covers the length and breadth of the allied North African campaign, from first landings to final triumph. The film is narrated by Bernard Miles and Burgess Meredith, respectively impersonating a British "Tommy" and an American GI. Tunisian Victory was distributed to civilian audiences by MGM. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Cast

Credit

Frank Capra - Director, Hugh Stewart - Director

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Tunisian Victory

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Tunisian Victory

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Tunisian Victory
Directed by Frank Capra
Hugh Stewart
John Huston
Starring Leo Genn (narrator)
Burgess Meredith
Bernard Miles
Music by William Alwyn
Dimitri Tiomkin
Distributed by Butchers Film Distributors (UK)
MGM (US)
Release date(s) March 16, 1944
Running time 75 min
Country UK / United States
Language English

Tunisian Victory is a 1944 Anglo-American propaganda film about the victories in the North Africa Campaign.

The film follows both armies from the planning of Operation Torch / Operation Acrobat to the liberation of Tunis. Interspersed in the pure documentary format are the narrative voices of supposed American and British soldiers (voiced by Burgess Meredith and Bernard Miles respectively), recounting their experience in the campaign. The British and American talk separately until the end of the film when they have a dialogue, agree to co-operate after the end of the war, with the other Allied nations to create a more just and peaceful post-war order.

The film was intended as a follow-up to the successful 1943 British documentary film Desert Victory. Frederic Krome's article from The Historian Tunisian Victory" and Anglo-American Film Propaganda in World War II details the acrimony between the British and US film makers on the project. Most of the actual American combat footage taken during Operation Torch was destroyed when the ship carrying it was sunk, requiring many "battle scenes" to be reshot in America by director John Huston.

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