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  • 1998-01-01T00:00:00Z
  • 25m
  • 25m (1 episode)
  • Documentary, History
The Twentieth Century is the only Century which has been able to capture Man’s great exploits on film. Running on a parallel course, events have occurred which cannot possibly be described as successes. In many cases, the camera has recorded the most heroic failures, but, towering above these, the Century has produced on rare archive film, the most enormous blunders. These have varied from the most basic errors of human judgement to massive miscalculations involving people, machines, buildings and relatively small events which have gone on to produce the most catastrophic and sometimes humorous consequences.

53 episodes

Series Premiere

1998-01-01T00:00:00Z

1x01 Titanic - An Accident Waiting to Happen

Series Premiere

1x01 Titanic - An Accident Waiting to Happen

  • 1998-01-01T00:00:00Z25m

Somehow a fire broke out in the capsule containing three of America's top astronauts whilst on the Saturn Rocket launch pad. The fire nearly wrecked the US space programme and killed three very brave men.

When Winston Churchill was First Sea Lord he thought that the deadlock on the Western Front in World War I could be broken by an attack on Turkey. What followed was the worst planned operation of World War I and the Anzac losses were immortalised in the Mel Gibson movie ‘Gallipoli’.

As the third year of the war in Europe began, President Roosevelt struggled to convince the American people that soon or later they must confront the dictatorships of Hitler, Mussolini and Tojo. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor solved part of his problem, but there was still widespread resistance to the idea of joining the fight against Germany and Italy. Out of the blue, Hitler provided the solution by declaring the war on the United States. It was a critical strategic blunder which made Germany’s defeat inevitable.

1x12 Death at Stalingrad

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As the German armies thrust toward Stalingrad in 1942 it seemed possible that they could finally defeat the Soviet Union. But Hitler’s insistence that they must take the city led to the loss of an entire army and was the turning point of the war on the Eastern Front.

1x14 The DeLorean Car

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How the British government lost some £60 million when it backed an American businessman to set up a factory in violence-stricken Northern Ireland to produce a revolutionary new sports car.

1x18 The Bay of Pigs

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The disastrous ‘Bay of Pigs’ invasion and the subsequent Cuban Missile crisis brought the world to the brink of Nuclear War. Was it necessary and how close did the world come to World War III?

On 16 April 1947, at the port of Texas City, failure to deal correctly with a small fire on board a vessel loaded with fertiliser led to the explosion of an ammunition ship. The resultant fires and devastation caused the deaths of 750 people and $100,000,000 worth of damage.

Probably the most graphic bridge failure ever recorded on film, this story explains how not all the world’s bridge structures have been safe.

1x22 Chernobyl

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Probably the greatest of all nuclear accidents yet. Its poisonous legacy still threatens hundreds of thousands of Russian children. How did it happen and is it safe now?

As he watched the second of his Battle Cruisers explode during WWI’s greatest naval battle, Admiral Beatty remarked: “There seems to be something wrong with my ships today.” What was wrong was inherent design faults which made them totally vulnerable to enemy fire.

1x25 A Bridge too Far

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When Field Marshal Montgomery was racing General Patton into the German Reich he deployed the British Airborne brigades one bridge too far in an attempt to cross the Rhine, and brought lightly armed paratroops up against two crack SS Panzer divisions.

One of the worst blunders in World War II was the failure of German opposition to Hitler to unite against him. Typical was the bomb plot of 1944 at the Wolf’s Lair in the Rastenberg forest in East Prussia. There, a young aristocratic officer called Von Stauffenberg had placed a briefcase bomb under Hitler’s map table. When this failed to kill the Fuehrer the disorganised conspirators were soon rounded up and hanged.

1x28 Flight of the Do-X

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Designed in 1929 as the giant flying boat which would finally bring Trans-Atlantic passenger flights, the Dornier Do-X proved disastrously underpowered and took nine months to reach New York.

Probably the Imperial Japanese Navy’s greatest blunder after Pearl Harbour itself. The wrong aircraft were armed first. The wrong torpedoes were set incorrectly. The wrong bombs and fuses were fitted and the wrong aircraft were sent up at the wrong time. America’s finest Admirals were to press home their advantage.

French commanders in Indo-China thought that they could entrap their Vietnamese enemy by setting up a killing ground at Dien Bien Phu. But their forces were swiftly besieged and outgunned. The fall of this base forced the French to surrender their Far East colonies.

Manned aircraft and torpedoes, speedboats packed with explosives and midget submarines were classic blunders, poorly designed and badly piloted. They failed to achieve any real success at all.

Did the Allies blunder by bombing a beautiful Franciscan monastery when they could have outflanked the crack German troops it contained?

The USAAF belief that its bombers could operate over Germany by day without escort fighters proved to be fatally flawed, as the two Schweinfurt-Regensburg raids in the late summer / autumn of 1943 starkly demonstrated.

During the winter of 1943-44 ‘Bomber’ Harris waged a grim campaign against the German capital, convinced that he could bomb the Third Reich into submission before the Normandy invasion took place. But as the bomber casualties mounted, it became clear that Berlin was too tough a nut to crack.

In the spring of 1942 the British constructed what they thought was an impregnable defence line in Libya. It proved to be fatally flawed and Rommel almost succeeded in driving them back across the other side of the Suez Canal.

By the winter of 1944, the war in Western Europe seemed over. The Germans had been pushed back to their last natural defence line on the Rhine. US troops in the Ardennes sector looked forward to a quiet Christmas. Then came a totally unexpected and massive German assault - but one which should have been anticipated had the Allies' High Command not blundered.

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