San Pietro


32m 1945

Film Details

Also Known As
The Battle of San Pietro
Genre
Documentary
Release Date
Jan 1945
Premiere Information
New York opening: 12 Jul 1945
Production Company
The Army Historical Service
Distribution Company
U.S. War Department
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
32m
Film Length
3 reels

Synopsis

This film documents the 5th Army's December 1943 attack on the town of San Pietro, Italy, in the agricultural Liri Valley. There are two ways into the valley from the south--a narrow pass and a high scenic road over the mountains. Both roads converge near the village of San Pietro, a farming community with a population of 1,412. From the end of October to the middle of December 1943, San Pietro and the surrounding country is the scene of intense fighting that starts after heavy fall rains. Swollen rivers and steep mountains bar the Army's advance. The German soldiers are well-fortified and camouflaged, and the surrounding area is heavily mined and booby-trapped. The day before d-day, the artillery maintains intense fire all night long. Despite heavy rain during the night and at daybreak, the enemy attacks from a high vantage point, and many American infantry men are killed. Only the attack on hill 1205 is successful. The first battalion of the 36th Texas Infantry Division sustains especially heavy losses, and it appears doubtful that the battalion can continue fighting. The second and third battalions are kept from their goals by heavy enemy activity. Volunteer patrols attempt to reach enemy positions, but none return alive. Occasionally, the soldiers are strafed by enemy aircraft. On 15 December 1943, the 141st Infantry advances slightly, as do the second and third battalions. U.S. tanks are ordered to enter San Pietro and destroy the heavy weapons. Sixteen tanks begin the advance under direct enemy observation. Only three reach the outskirts of the town, then two of them are destroyed. Four tanks return from the mission. After dark, two companies penetrate enemy positions, but are forced to retire. In company E, only eight riflemen survive. In the attack on Mt. Lungo, one man per yard gained is killed. On 16 December, foot soldiers gain the summit of Mt. Lungo, a key position. The enemy begins to withdraw, and as officers are killed, enlisted men take their places as leaders. Five hours later, enemy counterattacks cease, and San Pietro is taken. Greatly reduced, the second and third battalions push after the enemy in its new position, five kilometers away. Over 1,000 replacements are needed in the 143rd regiment. Many more men die as the Italian campaign continues. After the enemy is driven from the city, the residents of San Pietro, mainly old people and children, emerge from hiding. The earth, "where so many have died," is planted and sown.

Film Details

Also Known As
The Battle of San Pietro
Genre
Documentary
Release Date
Jan 1945
Premiere Information
New York opening: 12 Jul 1945
Production Company
The Army Historical Service
Distribution Company
U.S. War Department
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
32m
Film Length
3 reels

Articles

San Pietro


It may surprise some viewers to know this, but what is considered the best documentary to come out of World War II, "as good a war film as any that has been made," according to James Agee, was largely a reenactment. Just how much was staged and whether that makes a great deal of difference to the film's undeniable impact has been a matter of some debate.

In Five Came Back: A Story of Hollywood and the Second World War, his 2014 book on the Hollywood directors who filmed documentaries for the War Department, Mark Harris notes that John Huston, then a captain in the Signal Corps, was told by his commander, Colonel Frank Capra, to go to San Pietro Infine, about 50 miles north of Naples. The small town was the site of a major and bloody December 1943 engagement between Allied troops and the German forces that had established a heavily fortified position there. The Allies eventually succeeded in taking the stronghold after ten days of brutal fighting that destroyed the town, a victory crucial to the drive north to liberate Rome. Capra, an Italian immigrant eager to show the war in his native land, wanted a film of this key event.

When Huston and his crew arrived there, however, the battle was nearly over, although according to accounts by English author Eric Ambler, who was with Huston, they did come under artillery fire. But the filming didn't actually begin until the fighting was done, a logical enough decision considering the near impossibility of a film crew trying to capture it live. The resulting half-hour, black-and-white documentary, San Pietro, bears an end title that acknowledges: "All scenes in this picture were photographed within range of enemy small arms or artillery fire. For purposes of continuity a few of these scenes were shot before and after the actual battle of San Pietro."

Harris and others, thanks to research in the years since, suggest that more than just a few scenes were staged. In the book, Harris describes seeing outtake footage in the National Archives in which soldiers generally behave like actors, falling dead on cue. Does it matter?

It's important to remember that the films produced for the government by directors Capra, Huston, John Ford, William Wyler, and George Stevens were not meant to be merely journalistic documents of actual events. Real-life moments were captured, of course, but these were primarily propaganda pictures designed to stir morale and give the homefront a sense of what our troops experienced on the front lines. What is remarkable about this film, chosen for preservation in the Library of Congress National Film Registry in 1991, is best summed up by critic-historian David Thomson in a New Republic article on Harris' book: "It is that rare work, made by the military but regarding war with horror."

What Huston shows here, beyond the battle, are the immediate outcomes of war, the actions that follow: enemy mines being cleared, graves being dug and shrouded corpses laid into them, soldiers nailing dog tags onto rudimentary grave markers, and just as heartbreaking, the people of the village emerging from the caves where they hid during the fighting--old people, women, and children, some of them breaking down on discovering loved ones buried in the rubble of ruined homes.

Like his earlier Report from the Aleutians (1943), in which he showed the daily drudgery of military life, Huston had to fight to include scenes that didn't fit the heroic and triumphant image the War Department wanted to put before the American public. He didn't get all the footage he wanted into the final version, and the film wasn't released until almost the end of the war. When the original cut was shown to his superiors, Huston later recalled, irate viewers walked out according to rank. One story has it that a general told the director, "This picture is pacifistic. It's against war. Against the war." Huston is said to have replied, "Well, sir, whenever I make a film that's for war, you can take me out and shoot me."

The groundbreaking documentary filmmaker D.A. Pennebaker (Don't Look Back, 1967; Monterey Pop, 1968) claimed San Pietro as an influence, saying he viewed it many times "because it has a lot of vitality to it, a lot of excitement.... That's as up-to-date a film as is being shot now. There's nothing around now that's as well done as that."

The music in the film was performed by the Army Air Force Orchestra, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, and St. Brendan's Boys Choir. General Mark Clark delivers an on-camera introduction and dedication at the beginning.

Director: John Huston
Producers: John Huston, Frank Capra
Writing: John Huston
Cinematography: Jules Buck, John Huston
Editing: Gene Fowler, Jr.
Cast: Mark Clark (Introduction), John Huston (Narration)

By Rob Nixon
San Pietro

San Pietro

It may surprise some viewers to know this, but what is considered the best documentary to come out of World War II, "as good a war film as any that has been made," according to James Agee, was largely a reenactment. Just how much was staged and whether that makes a great deal of difference to the film's undeniable impact has been a matter of some debate. In Five Came Back: A Story of Hollywood and the Second World War, his 2014 book on the Hollywood directors who filmed documentaries for the War Department, Mark Harris notes that John Huston, then a captain in the Signal Corps, was told by his commander, Colonel Frank Capra, to go to San Pietro Infine, about 50 miles north of Naples. The small town was the site of a major and bloody December 1943 engagement between Allied troops and the German forces that had established a heavily fortified position there. The Allies eventually succeeded in taking the stronghold after ten days of brutal fighting that destroyed the town, a victory crucial to the drive north to liberate Rome. Capra, an Italian immigrant eager to show the war in his native land, wanted a film of this key event. When Huston and his crew arrived there, however, the battle was nearly over, although according to accounts by English author Eric Ambler, who was with Huston, they did come under artillery fire. But the filming didn't actually begin until the fighting was done, a logical enough decision considering the near impossibility of a film crew trying to capture it live. The resulting half-hour, black-and-white documentary, San Pietro, bears an end title that acknowledges: "All scenes in this picture were photographed within range of enemy small arms or artillery fire. For purposes of continuity a few of these scenes were shot before and after the actual battle of San Pietro." Harris and others, thanks to research in the years since, suggest that more than just a few scenes were staged. In the book, Harris describes seeing outtake footage in the National Archives in which soldiers generally behave like actors, falling dead on cue. Does it matter? It's important to remember that the films produced for the government by directors Capra, Huston, John Ford, William Wyler, and George Stevens were not meant to be merely journalistic documents of actual events. Real-life moments were captured, of course, but these were primarily propaganda pictures designed to stir morale and give the homefront a sense of what our troops experienced on the front lines. What is remarkable about this film, chosen for preservation in the Library of Congress National Film Registry in 1991, is best summed up by critic-historian David Thomson in a New Republic article on Harris' book: "It is that rare work, made by the military but regarding war with horror." What Huston shows here, beyond the battle, are the immediate outcomes of war, the actions that follow: enemy mines being cleared, graves being dug and shrouded corpses laid into them, soldiers nailing dog tags onto rudimentary grave markers, and just as heartbreaking, the people of the village emerging from the caves where they hid during the fighting--old people, women, and children, some of them breaking down on discovering loved ones buried in the rubble of ruined homes. Like his earlier Report from the Aleutians (1943), in which he showed the daily drudgery of military life, Huston had to fight to include scenes that didn't fit the heroic and triumphant image the War Department wanted to put before the American public. He didn't get all the footage he wanted into the final version, and the film wasn't released until almost the end of the war. When the original cut was shown to his superiors, Huston later recalled, irate viewers walked out according to rank. One story has it that a general told the director, "This picture is pacifistic. It's against war. Against the war." Huston is said to have replied, "Well, sir, whenever I make a film that's for war, you can take me out and shoot me." The groundbreaking documentary filmmaker D.A. Pennebaker (Don't Look Back, 1967; Monterey Pop, 1968) claimed San Pietro as an influence, saying he viewed it many times "because it has a lot of vitality to it, a lot of excitement.... That's as up-to-date a film as is being shot now. There's nothing around now that's as well done as that." The music in the film was performed by the Army Air Force Orchestra, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, and St. Brendan's Boys Choir. General Mark Clark delivers an on-camera introduction and dedication at the beginning. Director: John Huston Producers: John Huston, Frank Capra Writing: John Huston Cinematography: Jules Buck, John Huston Editing: Gene Fowler, Jr. Cast: Mark Clark (Introduction), John Huston (Narration) By Rob Nixon

The Battle of San Pietro


During World War II, such influential American directors as Frank Capra, John Ford, John Huston, William Wyler, and George Stevens put themselves in harm's way to film battlefield documentaries for the U.S. government. Though all of these men did exemplary work, many critics believe that the most powerful picture they produced was Huston's The Battle of San Pietro (1945), a stark piece of anti-propaganda that managed to make the War Department very nervous.

This was a down-and-dirty expose on the rigors of warfare, something on the order of All Quiet on the Western Front (1930), but with real men dying in the mud. The Battle of San Pietro wouldn't be released until near the end of the war, after Huston was forced to submit it to a round of official censorship that somewhat blunted, but certainly didn't eliminate, its impact. Even with the extra cuts, Huston's weary narration accentuates the despair, even though the grim footage speaks for itself.

The film opens with a short speech by General Mark Clark, who explains that San Pietro is a 700-year-old town in Italy's Liri River Valley. The valley is a wide, flat pass that's surrounded by high mountains. The fighting took place in late 1943, as U.S. forces tried to wrench control of the area from the Germans. Unfortunately, the enemy had the advantage, with machine guns and mortars situated in the mountains. Flooding rivers also made movement exceedingly difficult for American troops.

Huston doesn't scrimp on the grinding horror of war: Groups of men are constantly being sent on patrol, and they sometimes don't return...when exhausted troops are finally ready to move again, a bombardment of shells and gunfire cuts many of them down...sixteen tanks head into the mountains searching for the enemy, but only three make it to the outskirts of town; two are then destroyed. There's no particular political stance, just brutality and survival, with great sympathy shown toward the men who are trapped in the skirmish.

Major John Huston was among those men. He and his camera crew would often enter enemy territory ahead of the troops, then wait under cover for the battle to begin. They were the first Americans to enter San Pietro. During the battle, Huston ran between camera positions, shouting directions while shells rained down and planes dive-bombed. Some crew members lost up to 30 pounds negotiating the terrain.

Huston didn't sugarcoat it. His superiors were most disturbed by a sequence at the end of the film in which dead soldiers were placed in body bags while, on the soundtrack, the same men could be heard from earlier interviews, telling jokes and relaying anecdotes. After viewing Huston's original cut of the film - during which, Huston recalled, irate viewers walked out according to rank -- one general told the director, "This picture is pacifistic. It's against war. Against the war." Huston replied, "Well, sir, whenever I make a film that's for war, you can take me out and shoot me."

The film has lost none of its impact in the ensuing years. The groundbreaking documentary filmmaker D.A. Pennebaker once said, "San Pietro I looked at a lot because it has a lot of vitality to it, a lot of excitement, and (Huston) throws away a lot of form -- and that passes for excitement too....That's as up-to-date a film as is being shot now. There's nothing around now that's as well done as that." Written, Directed and Narrated by: John Huston
Prologue appearance: Gen. Mark Clark
Producer: Army Pictorial Services, Signal Corps, U.S. War Department
Production Supervisor: Frank Capra
Cameramen: Robert Swink and Edward Biery, Jr.
Music: Dimitri Tiomkin
BW-33m.

by Paul Tatara

The Battle of San Pietro

During World War II, such influential American directors as Frank Capra, John Ford, John Huston, William Wyler, and George Stevens put themselves in harm's way to film battlefield documentaries for the U.S. government. Though all of these men did exemplary work, many critics believe that the most powerful picture they produced was Huston's The Battle of San Pietro (1945), a stark piece of anti-propaganda that managed to make the War Department very nervous. This was a down-and-dirty expose on the rigors of warfare, something on the order of All Quiet on the Western Front (1930), but with real men dying in the mud. The Battle of San Pietro wouldn't be released until near the end of the war, after Huston was forced to submit it to a round of official censorship that somewhat blunted, but certainly didn't eliminate, its impact. Even with the extra cuts, Huston's weary narration accentuates the despair, even though the grim footage speaks for itself. The film opens with a short speech by General Mark Clark, who explains that San Pietro is a 700-year-old town in Italy's Liri River Valley. The valley is a wide, flat pass that's surrounded by high mountains. The fighting took place in late 1943, as U.S. forces tried to wrench control of the area from the Germans. Unfortunately, the enemy had the advantage, with machine guns and mortars situated in the mountains. Flooding rivers also made movement exceedingly difficult for American troops. Huston doesn't scrimp on the grinding horror of war: Groups of men are constantly being sent on patrol, and they sometimes don't return...when exhausted troops are finally ready to move again, a bombardment of shells and gunfire cuts many of them down...sixteen tanks head into the mountains searching for the enemy, but only three make it to the outskirts of town; two are then destroyed. There's no particular political stance, just brutality and survival, with great sympathy shown toward the men who are trapped in the skirmish. Major John Huston was among those men. He and his camera crew would often enter enemy territory ahead of the troops, then wait under cover for the battle to begin. They were the first Americans to enter San Pietro. During the battle, Huston ran between camera positions, shouting directions while shells rained down and planes dive-bombed. Some crew members lost up to 30 pounds negotiating the terrain. Huston didn't sugarcoat it. His superiors were most disturbed by a sequence at the end of the film in which dead soldiers were placed in body bags while, on the soundtrack, the same men could be heard from earlier interviews, telling jokes and relaying anecdotes. After viewing Huston's original cut of the film - during which, Huston recalled, irate viewers walked out according to rank -- one general told the director, "This picture is pacifistic. It's against war. Against the war." Huston replied, "Well, sir, whenever I make a film that's for war, you can take me out and shoot me." The film has lost none of its impact in the ensuing years. The groundbreaking documentary filmmaker D.A. Pennebaker once said, "San Pietro I looked at a lot because it has a lot of vitality to it, a lot of excitement, and (Huston) throws away a lot of form -- and that passes for excitement too....That's as up-to-date a film as is being shot now. There's nothing around now that's as well done as that." Written, Directed and Narrated by: John Huston Prologue appearance: Gen. Mark Clark Producer: Army Pictorial Services, Signal Corps, U.S. War Department Production Supervisor: Frank Capra Cameramen: Robert Swink and Edward Biery, Jr. Music: Dimitri Tiomkin BW-33m. by Paul Tatara

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

This film is also known as The Battle of San Pietro and The Battle for San Pietro. Onscreen credits include the following designation: "Official Historical Film HR 2, War Department." Two members of John Huston's crew were killed while making the film, according to an September 11, 1985 Los Angeles Times article. Huston originally edited the footage into a five-reel film but, modern sources state, exhibitors were reluctant to book such a long documentary. In a memo to the Chief of the Army Pictorial Services, reprinted in a modern source, Colonel Curtis Mitchell, Chief of the Pictorial Branch, states that the War Department would not release the film unless its running time was cut to thirty minutes. The three-reel version of the film was approved for unrestricted release on February 23, 1945, according to an March 8, 1945 memo reproduced in a modern source, and when the film opened in New York, it had a thirty-minute running time, according to the New York Times review. On the recommendation of Frank Capra, the production supervisor, an introduction by General Mark Clark was added to the thirty-minute version, in which he states that losses during the battle were "not excessive" and stresses the importance of destroying "San Pietro, the key to the [Liri] Valley."
       Modern sources add the following information about the film: Some battle scenes included in the film were re-enacted for the camera. Jules Buck, Wilbur Bradley, Roland Mead, Sam Tischler, A. I. Moroshaile, Gordon Frye, Leonard Ryan and Huston shot the film, along with cameramen from the Signal Corps. Others who worked on the film include Edward Mann, Editor and Dimitri Tiomkin, Music. Huston had originally intended to have journalist Quentin Reynolds narrate the film. Huston returned for Italy to edit the film in February 1944, and editing was finished in late summer 1944. In an interview, Huston remembered his arrival in San Pietro. "We were in the town before anybody-my camera crew...There'd been an attack and a counterattack in the night, and there were just hundreds and hundreds of dead." Huston stated that this was the "first time real Infantry combat conditions, involving Americans, had ever been seen on the screen...Later there was a controversy about whether troops should see it." The War Department eventually decided to show the film to troops who had never been under fire to prepare them for combat conditions.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1945

Selected in 1991 for inclusion in the Library of Congress' National Film Registry.

Released in United States 1945