![]() We are told that he was kept alive in what was essentially a penicillin bath, and that doctors persisted with their efforts despite the boy’s pleas that he be allowed to die. Perhaps the most gut-wrenching scene is that of a teenage boy who is lying on his stomach, every bit of skin peeled off his back so that his muscles are fully exposed. There is much in “Atomic Cover-Up” that’s difficult to look at. Thus, in Mitchell’s view, we all bear moral responsibility for what happened to the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Dwight Eisenhower himself believed that the Japanese would have surrendered in a matter of months even if atomic bombs hadn’t been used. Mitchell, who has long argued that the bombings were unnecessary, tells us toward the end of the film that U.S. And - let us hope - we learned that humankind can never use such weapons again. We learned about the horrors of radiation poisoning. More than 100,000 people were killed immediately in the two bombings, and nearly as many were injured. At the time, dropping atomic bombs on Japan must have seemed like just another ratcheting-up of the war effort. The conventional bombing of Dresden, Germany, in February 1945 had claimed 25,000 lives. would hold back from unleashing a powerful new weapon in what was total war. There’s crucial context that must be considered - atomic bombs had never been used before, so it was hard to imagine that the U.S. And so began the long process of bringing these unsettling truths before the public.įor more than three-quarters of a century, we have debated whether it was necessary to use atomic weapons in order to bring about an end to the war in Japan. ![]() In 1967, Japanese films seized by the U.S. Over time, though, the footage was declassified. He even tried to enlist the help of the president who ordered the bombings, Harry Truman. Murrow, Chet Huntley and David Brinkley to help him get the footage released. Sussan later worked for CBS and NBC, where he implored the likes of Edward R. military had classified it, preferring to show images that depicted the destruction of buildings but leaving out the price paid by the people on the ground - the overwhelming majority of them civilians, many of them women and children. McGovern and Sussan, meanwhile, were blocked from releasing their footage because the U.S. military prison,” says one of the filmmakers, Ito Sueo. “We knew that we risked a long sentence in a U.S. ![]() Douglas MacArthur, the leader of the American occupation, ordered the Japanese footage confiscated, the Japanese made a copy and hid it in a ceiling. They as well as Japanese filmmakers set about documenting the human suffering caused by the bombs only to have their work censored and suppressed. Herbert Sussan, who died in 1985, possibly from exposure to radiation, and to whom the film is dedicated. ![]() The story is told mainly by McGovern and Lt. It is the visual equivalent of John Hersey's classic 1946 New Yorker article and book "Hiroshima." (The 52-minute documentary can be seen online through Tuesday, March 30. Well, now it’s been made, and the terrible images captured after the bombings - including color film seen for the first time - are a testament to the lives lost and ruined. Mitchell himself put years into the effort, writing a book about it in 2011 whose subtitle refers to “the greatest movie never made.” Written and directed by the journalist Greg Mitchell, the recently released “Atomic Cover-Up” is the culmination of a decades-long quest to release footage of the human suffering caused by the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945. “And hear the voices.” The singing continues as the camera pans across the ruins of a city that had been utterly destroyed by the second of two atomic bombs dropped by U.S. “And I look out and see complete devastation,” McGovern says. He and the crew set up their equipment inside the cathedral where the voices were coming from and began filming. “I heard voices singing,” he says, adding that at first he thought he was imagining it. Daniel McGovern was leading a film crew through the rubble when he picked up the strains of “Silent Night.” In December 1945, four months after the bombing of Nagasaki, Lt. The documentary “Atomic Cover-Up” begins on an oddly hopeful note.
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