WAR AND WEAPONRY The rain's stopped, for the rest of the week at least, and now the temperature is just about right. Yet I'm still wasting time inside watching documentaries, what can you do? Well you can waste more time babbling about them to the internet of course... Following on from that excelling Irish series, Hands, detailing traditional craftsmen at work, I discovered that the BBC produced series called Handmade: https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=Handmade_%28BBC%29 It's not quite the same, more of an artistic thing without any narration and extremely high quality filming. I think it was probably part of that "slow TV" fad, but personally I miss learning about the details and history of the work like one can from Hands. Not all the work is particularly traditional in its execution either, leaning heavily on modern tools. However the BBC later made another series called Handmade in Japan, which actually not only addresses my concerns about the traditionality of the techniques being shown, but also put in interviews with craftsmen and historians. The Japanese culture is quite a novely too, and this is especially the case in the first, and I would say best, episode showing the forging of a japanese Samurai sword. In contrast to the knife maker shown in the first series, this is really a show of ancient craftwork. A pair of excellently co-ordinated men gradully belt together folds in a piece of steel heated in a coal forge connected to a hand-pumped bellows. The pumping itself being done from a kneeling position with an almost monastic precision of movement. All while watched over by the elderly father who had passed on the skills of this craft to his sons. https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=Handmade_in_Japan:_Series_1 Maybe I'm just too much of a bloke to be equally interested in the textiles and pottery shown in the other two, nevertheless facinating, episodes. Or maybe it's because, believe it or not, I did once get the chance to hold an old japanese sword, although I didn't have the guts to fully unsheath it. But that episode really stands out for me. But then again it could just be that I'm facinated by people killing each other, because besides that I've been digging into docos about yet more wars. Yet another 20th century war that one doesn't often stumble across is the Algerian War. A general, and accurate assessment, is that it was just another colonial war typical of the era. The details though, are rather more unique, with the politics really far more complicated and influential than the fighting itself, although the latter was nevertheless brutal. Somehow they went into great detail about the history of the french revolution in history class at school, yet I'm sure few students left even knowing about the Algerian war at all, and I myself only now appreciate the real influence it had on much more recent French politics. Even coming close to instigating a military coup back in Paris itself. https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=The_Algerian_War_1954-1962 Unlike so many British war documentaries, it was made by Channel 4 rather than the BBC. I guess Ch4 must have abandoned these more high-brow documentary subjects since it was produced back in the early 1980s. Finally I've started now on yet another series about the second world war. However this one is a bit different because it's actually about the Russian front, produced in the late 1970s, in collaboration with the Russian film agencies. The originall US broadcast of The Unknown War's formidable twenty parts was cut off in response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. There is a lot of propoganda-ish footage included from the original Soviet films that goes through without question, but it does expand greatly on the less often covered, if not really "unknown" (today, at least), eastern front of the second world war. I'll be taking my time getting through it, but already I've been most surprised by the scale of the manufacturing and population relocation to the east of Russia that happened after Germany's initial invasion captured or threatoned much of Soviet Russia's industrial heartland. In a few years, 2000 factories were built and 10 million people relocated away from Hitler's reach into the stark lands of Siberia and surrounds. I'm sure there were more troubles with that than the documentary shows, but it's a remarkable point of second world war history which I genuinely didn't know. https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=The_Unknown_War:_Set_1 https://docuwiki.net/index.php?title=The_Unknown_War:_Set_2 - The Free Thinker