- Freedom Comes High
"Freedom Comes High" is a 1943 dramatic short film commissioned by the
United States Government duringWorld War II .ynopsis
The playlet involves a young woman coming home, tired, after a busy day at a war plant. Each time she comes in there is a letter from her husband overseas, and she remembers their conversations before he went off to war. She was concerned about him, because she felt it was a "young mans war" and he should stay home with her and the baby. However he was insistent that his country needed him. The plot then turns to the husband trying to manage his ship while it is being attacked by a submarine. The next day, the woman receives another letter from her husband, who is shown in double exposure, reminds her that freedom comes high, often at the price of human lives. The door bell rings, and it is a Western Union telegram, saying that her husband died.
The point of the film was to communicate to the American people that many of their sons and husbands who were going overseas, would not be coming back, and that they would have to understand they would be sacrificing their loved ones to secure freedom. Given the extraordinary sensitivity of the subject matter, the governments short is notable both as propaganda and as a meditation on what has to be sacrificed for the maintenance of freedom.
See also
*
List of Allied propaganda films of World War II External links
* [http://www.archive.org/details/FreedomC1944 Complete film at archive.org]
*imdb title|id=0126311|title=Freedom Comes High
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