World War II coincided with cinema's golden age. Movies now
considered classics were created at a time when all sides in the
war were coming to realize the great power of popular films to
motivate the masses. Through multinational research,
One World,
Big Screen reveals how the Grand Alliance--Britain, China, the
Soviet Union, and the United States--tapped Hollywood's impressive
power to shrink the distance and bridge the differences that
separated them. The Allies, M. Todd Bennett shows, strategically
manipulated cinema in an effort to promote the idea that the United
Nations was a family of nations joined by blood and affection.
Bennett revisits
Casablanca,
Mrs. Miniver,
Flying
Tigers, and other familiar movies that, he argues, helped win
the war and the peace by improving Allied solidarity and
transforming the American worldview. Closely analyzing film,
diplomatic correspondence, propagandists' logs, and movie studio
records found in the United States, the United Kingdom, and the
former Soviet Union, Bennett rethinks traditional scholarship on
World War II diplomacy by examining the ways that Hollywood and the
Allies worked together to prepare for and enact the war effort.