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File:A Dangerous Profession poster.jpg; File:A Date With Judy film poster.jpg; File:A Desperate Chance for Ellery Queen poster.jpg; File:A Dispatch from Reuters 1940 poster.jpg; File:A Double Life poster.jpg; File:A Gentleman at Heart poster.jpg; File:A Girl, a Guy and a Gob.jpg; File:A good time for a dime poster.jpg; File:A Guy Could Change ...
[16] American posters rarely used images of war casualties, and even battlefield scenes became less popular, and were replaced by commercial images to satisfy the "consumer" need for the war. [17] The war posters were not designed by the government, but by artists who received no compensation for their work. [16]
Original 1939 poster. Keep Calm and Carry On was a motivational poster produced by the Government of the United Kingdom in 1939 in preparation for World War II.The poster was intended to raise the morale of the British public, threatened with widely predicted mass air attacks on major cities.
World War II political slogans (7 P) Pages in category "1940s quotations" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
Uncle Sam did not get a standard appearance, even with the effective abandonment of Brother Jonathan near the end of the American Civil War, until the well-known recruitment image of Uncle Sam was first created by James Montgomery Flagg during World War I. The image was inspired by a British recruitment poster showing Lord Kitchener in a ...
James Stewart in Winning Your Wings (1942). During World War II and immediately after it, in addition to the many private films created to help the war effort, many Allied countries had governmental or semi-governmental agencies commission propaganda and training films for home and foreign consumption.
In a contemporary review for the Liverpool Evening Express, critic Cedric Fraser called 49th Parallel "[o]ne of the finest pictures ever made in this country" and wrote: "This is a magnificent film, fair to the point of scrupulousness, and revealing in all its ruthlessness the savagery of the typical Nazi."
J. Howard Miller's "We Can Do It!" poster from 1943 "We Can Do It!" is an American World War II wartime poster produced by J. Howard Miller in 1943 for Westinghouse Electric as an inspirational image to boost female worker morale. The poster was little seen during World War II.