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U.S. Army soldiers; surgery; hospital; Gen. Patton; liberated villagers

Film | Digitized | Accession Number: 2002.312.1 | RG Number: RG-60.3669 | Film ID: 2611

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    U.S. Army soldiers; surgery; hospital; Gen. Patton; liberated villagers

    Overview

    Description
    CU of an open wound, the camera pulls back and pans the body, the wound is on a man's inner thigh, it is a large, open wound that penetrates several layers of muscle. The doctor lifts up the man's penis and cleans around the wound, prepping for surgery. The man is covered by a blanket from the waist up. CU of another wounded man with a small bandage on his head. He takes the bandage off and blood begins to stream down his forehead. The top of the man's head is out of frame, he continues to look directly at the camera, he is wearing a torn T-shirt. He reaches to put the bandage back on his head as the blood begins to trickle down to his nose. The soldier holds his helmet with a bullet hole in front of him, he illustrates how and where the bullet hit him. He smiles. MCU, a man and a woman smile as they fold and sort laundry: sheets, blankets, and hospital gowns. MCU, woman at a sewing machine. CU, another woman, wearing a scarf on her head, folds laundry and sorts surgical instruments. Table of surgical instruments. CU of another wounded body part, tendons and ligaments are exposed, more CUs. END

    MCU, doctor performs field surgery, stitches a patient. VS, surgery, the doctor seems to be tying off intestines, but it is very difficult to discern since the patient is completely covered in a sheet. Reel ends and another reel begins, continuing where the first left off in surgery. CU, Dr. Zabin holds a piece of the organ in clamps. END

    MLS, buildings (barracks?) in unidentified location, they are damaged, only wooden beams remain for the roof. Soldiers mill about in BG, some hold rifles. MCU, an American soldier frisking an enemy soldier who has surrendered. Several U.S. soldiers and military vehicles milling about in BG. END

    MLS, several U.S. Army medics with white armbands and a red cross set up a field hospital. They are driving in stakes for tents, putting up large white tents, etc. CU three officers, they smile for the camera. END

    Color footage. Liberation of an unidentified town. U.S. soldiers and locals who seem to be soldiers carry fur coats and animal hides (mostly shearlings) from a building. They wear the coats and carry others on their backs. Local with a large base drum. Soldiers take out more and more coats, some stop to look at the camera. Large building in BG, parts are damaged. More soldiers emerge from the storehouse, carrying brass instruments, one pretends to play a French horn, they laugh, some also carry suitcases. One local with fur coat and trombone smiles for the camera, another man with a tuba over his arm poses for the camera. Women appear in the fur coat, join the U.S. soldiers and local men, and 'loot' the storehouse. A woman in a bright red shirt and a long blue apron, smiles for the camera as she rushes into the building. MS, a U.S. soldier and another man on horseback. VS, U.S. soldiers and Russian(?) soldiers getting water from a well in a liberated town. Many men mill about, some look awkwardly at the camera. They may be soldiers, or they may be locals who have confiscated uniforms. END

    Color footage. Field Hospital, MCU, two soldiers lying on stretchers in a grassy clearing. CU, one soldier lying on a stretcher. MCU, several soldiers in blue uniforms (Russian?). A group of U.S. and Russian soldiers recline on the grass. In BG, a woman in unidentified uniform takes still photos of the group of men in the FG. A U.S. Army medic examines wounded soldiers in the field, one man pulls down his pants so the medic can look at his bandaged leg. The camera pans the group, focuses on a few other wounded soldiers. MCU, Col. Zabin with a wounded soldier with his arm in a cast, both smile awkwardly for the camera. MS white army medical trucks. MCU, wounded Russian(?) soldiers climbing into the back of a truck. More CUs of wounded men on stretchers. CU, American soldier holding up a swastika from the central portion of a Nazi flag, the camera pans to rows and rows of wounded men on stretchers lying in the field. END

    Black and white footage. MS General Patton talking to someone off camera. Various angles and pans of Patton, he walks back to his trailer and goes inside. CU, man's forearm with a swastika tattoo. Camera pans up to his face, the young man looks at the camera, talks to the cameraman, and smiles. EXT MLS, camera pans a long line of people, a mix of men and women, soldiers and civilians, they are most likely liberated villagers. U.S. Army medical unit truck in BG, U.S. Army men are interviewing people. END

    Color footage. MLS large building, ground and the rooftop covered with snow. Camera pans a row of U.S. Army medical trucks parked outside the building. VS, bombed out buildings and rubble, snow covered buildings and ruins. Pan of more destroyed buildings, signs in French indicate a bakery was once housed in one of these buildings. U.S. Army convoy moves through the town. END
    Duration
    00:15:27
    Date
    Event:  1944-1945
    Locale
    France
    Unknown
    Credit
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, gift of Steven Zabin
    Contributor
    Camera Operator: Alexander Zabin M.D.
    Biography
    Colonel Alexander Zabin, MD was an American soldier from Malverne, Long Island, New York. As part of General Patton's 3rd Army, he served with the 4th Auxiliary Surgical Group. He landed on Normandy Beach on D-Day plus 1 and worked in the first US Army field hospital set up in France. He was with the 3rd Army through the campaigns in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany and Czechoslovakia. Dr. Zabin returned to New York in October 1945.

    Physical Details

    Language
    Silent
    Genre/Form
    Amateur.
    B&W / Color
    Color
    Image Quality
    Good
    Time Code
    01:00:00:00 to 01:15:27:00
    Film Format
    • Master
    • Master 2611 Film: positive - 16 mm - color - reversal original
      Master 2611 Video: Betacam SP - color - PAL - small
      Master 2611 Film: positive - 16 mm - color - reversal original
      Master 2611 Video: Betacam SP - color - PAL - small
      Master 2611 Film: positive - 16 mm - color - reversal original
      Master 2611 Video: Betacam SP - color - PAL - small
      Master 2611 Film: positive - 16 mm - color - reversal original
      Master 2611 Video: Betacam SP - color - PAL - small
    • Preservation
    • Preservation 2611 Film: negative - 16 mm - polyester - color - internegative - A-wind - Kodak - 3272
      Preservation 2611 Video: Betacam SP - color - NTSC - small
      Preservation 2611 Film: negative - 16 mm - polyester - color - internegative - A-wind - Kodak - 3272
      Preservation 2611 Video: Betacam SP - color - NTSC - small
      Preservation 2611 Film: negative - 16 mm - polyester - color - internegative - A-wind - Kodak - 3272
      Preservation 2611 Video: Betacam SP - color - NTSC - small
      Preservation 2611 Film: negative - 16 mm - polyester - color - internegative - A-wind - Kodak - 3272
      Preservation 2611 Video: Betacam SP - color - NTSC - small

    Rights & Restrictions

    Conditions on Access
    You do not require further permission from the Museum to access this archival media.
    Copyright
    Dr. Steven Zabin
    Conditions on Use
    The Museum does not own the copyright for this material and does not have authority to authorize third party use. For permission, please contact the rights holder, Dr. Steven Zabin.

    Keywords & Subjects

    Administrative Notes

    Film Provenance
    Colonel Alexander Zabin, MD shot these 16mm color films as a U.S. Army surgeon in Europe during World War II. Col. Zabin's son Steven Zabin donated them to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in November 2002.
    Film Source
    Dr. Steven Zabin
    File Number
    Legacy Database File: 3838
    Record last modified:
    2024-02-21 07:55:58
    This page:
    https:​/​/collections.ushmm.org​/search​/catalog​/irn1002689

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