The Bethke brothers tape (partially found footage of flying rescue; 1989): Difference between revisions

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{{InfoboxLost
{{InfoboxLost
|title=<center>Creating Bethke brothers' incredible flying rescue over the Berlin Wall - original footage</center>
|title=<center>The Bethke brothers tape</center>
|image=Flugzeug.jpg
|image=Flugzeug.jpg
|imagecaption=A screenshot of the partially found footage.
|imagecaption=A screenshot of the partially found footage.
|status=<span style="color:orange">'''Partially Lost'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:orange">'''Partially Found'''</span>
}}
}}


In 1989, two siblings Ingo and Holger Bethke organized a rescue mission to help their younger brother Egbert escape from East Germany. The three brothers grew up in southeast Berlin, and Ingo and Holger had previously escaped from the Communist country on their own before deciding to come back for their brother.


'''''Creating Bethke brothers' incredible flying rescue over the Berlin Wall - original footage''''' is the real 1989 footage of the successful Egbert Bethke flying rescue from East Germany that was organised and shot by his two older brothers - Ingo and Holger Bethke. The video features two lightweight airplanes (a camera is attached to one of them) flying over the Berlin wall, landing of one of the planes on a park in East Berlin and the successful fly-away . According to History Channel, the camera was switched on at 4:22 AM and switched off at at 4:38 AM.
The brothers' plan was to fly two ultralight planes over the Berlin Wall and quickly retrieve Egbert from a predetermined hiding place. After four years of preparation of intensive preparation, the rescue was set in motion in the early hours of May 25, and after a rushed pick-up, the three brothers successfully flew away back over the wall. Despite the fall of the Berlin Wall later that same year, the Bethke brothers had no regrets about their extravagant rescue.<ref>[http://www.readersdigest.ca/features/heart/escape-east-germany/ "Escape From East Germany." ''Reader's Digest''.] Retrieved 8 Apr '17.</ref>


During the flight, one of the planes had a camera attached to it which recorded the entire event. According to History Channel, the camera was switched on at 4:22 AM and switched off at at 4:38 AM. However, while clips of the tape were shown in various TV shows and documentaries, '''the full 16 minutes of footage''' have not been released.


== Presence in media and online ==
The chances of a future release are not impossible, as the full tape seems to still exist, but for the time being, all that can be seen is roughly 5-6 minutes of footage pieced together from various sources.


The footage was partially shown on many different TV shows and documentary films, however, the full video of the flight is unable to be found
== Gallery ==
 
<div style="margin:0 auto; text-align: center;">
 
<div style="width:320px; display:inline-block; margin-right:25px; margin-bottom:0px;">
{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KiSfHuiHQJQ|320x240|center|Description of the escape and partially shown footage by History channel (starts at 1:17:04)|frame|start=4623}}</div>​


<div style="width:320px; display:inline-block; margin-right:25px; margin-bottom:0px;">
{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8pktA6B5EU|320x240|center|Unknown documentary featuring some of the footage (starts at 0:01:57)|frame|start=117}}</div>​


== Gallery ==
<div style="width:320px; display:inline-block; margin-right:25px; margin-bottom:0px;">
{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bjCIvVbbMYI|320x240|center|Germany TV-Show 'Na siehste' showcasing this escape to the general public|frame}}</div>​
 
</div>​
 
== References ==
 
<references />


{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KiSfHuiHQJQ?t=4623|640x480|center|Description of the escape and partially shown footage by History channel (starts at 1:17:04 )|frame}}
[[Category:Lost recordings of real incidents]]
{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8pktA6B5EU?t=117|640x480|center|Unknown documentary featuring some of the footage (starts at 0:01:57 )|frame}}
[[Category:Partially found media]]
{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bjCIvVbbMYI|640x480|center|Germany TV-Show 'Na siehste' showcasing this escape to the general public|frame}}
[[Category: Lost recordings of real incidents]]

Revision as of 03:46, 9 April 2017

Flugzeug.jpg

A screenshot of the partially found footage.

Status: Partially Found


In 1989, two siblings Ingo and Holger Bethke organized a rescue mission to help their younger brother Egbert escape from East Germany. The three brothers grew up in southeast Berlin, and Ingo and Holger had previously escaped from the Communist country on their own before deciding to come back for their brother.

The brothers' plan was to fly two ultralight planes over the Berlin Wall and quickly retrieve Egbert from a predetermined hiding place. After four years of preparation of intensive preparation, the rescue was set in motion in the early hours of May 25, and after a rushed pick-up, the three brothers successfully flew away back over the wall. Despite the fall of the Berlin Wall later that same year, the Bethke brothers had no regrets about their extravagant rescue.[1]

During the flight, one of the planes had a camera attached to it which recorded the entire event. According to History Channel, the camera was switched on at 4:22 AM and switched off at at 4:38 AM. However, while clips of the tape were shown in various TV shows and documentaries, the full 16 minutes of footage have not been released.

The chances of a future release are not impossible, as the full tape seems to still exist, but for the time being, all that can be seen is roughly 5-6 minutes of footage pieced together from various sources.

Gallery

Description of the escape and partially shown footage by History channel (starts at 1:17:04)

Unknown documentary featuring some of the footage (starts at 0:01:57)

Germany TV-Show 'Na siehste' showcasing this escape to the general public

References