'The battle of the Somme' film is a British documentary with supposedly 'real' footage of The Battle that took place in the Somme in 1914. It was made, produced and edited by the government. The film gave a very clear of trench warfare, showing dead and wounded German soldiers. The film was a great success. The film itself in the first six weeks of its release in Britain sold twenty million tickets. Overall, the movie was a complete success, but is there a reason behind this? Did the British see just what the government wanted them to see?
why did the french and british dug up trenches?To provide cover from view & fire of the enemy.
provide light in the trenches!
To establish positions and provide cover from machine gun fire
Mountains, Valleys, Sea Floor Spreading, Trenches in the Ocean!
Enough
Take new picture and upload this into the system you want to using the tools they provide to do this.
If the picture is visible on the web, right click on the picture and select properties. That will provide you the URL of the photo.
I believe the most recent is the Large Binocular Telescope (Tucson, Arizona).The link below will provide a picture
There are no such thing as flying dogs. Therefore I can not provide a picture. Thank you.
We can not provide you with a picture.
The goal of the personnel responsible for setting standard costs is to provide realistic standards. Only standards perceived to be reasonable are likely to motivate workers to adhere to what is prescribed.
It make the play more realistic to the listener. To provide context for the listener