World War Weird
The secret Nazi program that sounds like a Marvel movie The Mongol curse unleashed on Stalin's Russia Exploding cities that don't exist and nuclear landmines stuffed with chickens.
The secret Nazi program that sounds like a Marvel movie The Mongol curse unleashed on Stalin's Russia Exploding cities that don't exist and nuclear landmines stuffed with chickens.
The Japanese League of Blood that wants Chaplin dead A barking mad plan to create the Woofwaffe The one-man army with bazookas on his plane and beware Russian boy scouts bearing gifts.
The secret Nazi program that sounds like a Marvel movie The Mongol curse unleashed on Stalin's Russia Exploding cities that don't exist and nuclear landmines stuffed with chickens.
The incredible true story of the Concentration Camp that fought back The fog of war that blights a whole generation and a Close Encounter in the Canadian wilderness that feels like something straight out of a Spielberg movie.
The superpowered spear that seduced Adolf Hitler The battling beams that beat the Blitz How Herman Göring's name saved hundreds of Jews and top secret tests that go too far.
The Nazi quest to bring back extinct monsters – and shoot them Hitler goes ballistic to beat the Brits The Russian tanks that glide over the frontlines and the Cold War race to build an army of Darth Vaders.
The enemy pilot who saved a bomb crew's lives Adolf Hitler's secret drug habit The WW1 rumour that may have saved Paris and nuclear bombs that can be hidden in a suitcase.
During his time in charge, Himmler made the study of runes, letters of ancient Germanic writing, obligatory for SS officers in the belief they held powers.
Tasked with guarding concentration camps, this unit's actions knew no bounds, and, despite their heinous acts, still attended social gatherings.
Masqueraded as military excellence, the reality was very different. Recruits were poorly trained and remorse was nonexistent, as SS troops killed mercilessly.
The SS and Its Myth After 1945: Drawing a line to the present, the atrocities of the SS are beyond all doubt, yet, there is a cult surrounding 'old comrades' today.
An agriculturalist by trade, he went on to lead the SS and tried to escape responsibility at the end of the war. Who was Heinrich Himmler?
Trace the rise to power of the SS as we examine several perpetrators. Who was recruited? And why was the SS attractive to men?
During his time in charge, Himmler made the study of runes, letters of ancient Germanic writing, obligatory for SS officers in the belief they held powers.
There is power in the debate of the true origins of humanity and it becomes the fixation of a nefarious power as Heinrich Himmler, leader of the Nazi's SS, turns his attention to proving the Paleolithic past of Germany's Aryan race.
Masqueraded as military excellence, the reality was very different. Recruits were poorly trained and remorse was nonexistent, as SS troops killed mercilessly.
The SS and Its Myth After 1945: Drawing a line to the present, the atrocities of the SS are beyond all doubt, yet, there is a cult surrounding 'old comrades' today.
An agriculturalist by trade, he went on to lead the SS and tried to escape responsibility at the end of the war. Who was Heinrich Himmler?
Trace the rise to power of the SS as we examine several perpetrators. Who was recruited? And why was the SS attractive to men?
As the Nazis rose to power, Himmler and the SS were convinced Atlantis could be found, and instigated a series of archeological expeditions determined to uncover and exploit its secrets.