The British fought the Second World War to defeat Hitler. This film asks why, then, did they spend so much of the conflict battling through North Africa and Italy? Historian David Reynolds reassesses Winston Churchill's conviction that the Mediterranean was the 'soft underbelly' of Hitler's Europe. Travelling to Egypt and Italian battlefields like Cassino, scene of some of the worst carnage in western Europe, he shows how, in reality, the 'soft underbelly' became a dark and dangerous obsession for Churchill. Reynolds reveals a prime minister very different from the jaw-jutting bulldog of Britain's 'finest hour' in 1940 - a leader who was politically vulnerable at home, desperate to shore up a crumbling British empire abroad, losing faith in his army and even ready to deceive his American allies if it might delay fighting head to head against the Germans in northern France. The film marks the seventieth anniversary of the Battle of El Alamein in 1942.
Release Date: October 15, 2012
December 08, 1966
July 15, 2007
March 22, 2007
September 07, 1980
March 04, 1955
January 21, 1976
September 16, 1998
February 08, 2008
November 14, 1990
November 15, 2006
March 10, 1952
January 01, 1963
October 27, 2017
November 29, 1969
March 25, 2008
March 05, 1942
September 16, 2004
September 22, 1977
October 08, 1945
September 17, 1981