My personal favorite WW2 movie is
They Were Expendable, which is set in the Philippines.
While the war in the Pacific was the US public's A-Number One priority in 1942, it was inevitably eclipsed by the European war to the point that most Americans today have little understanding of how that part of the war unfolded. Part of that was the Navy's fault, their leadership was temperamentally adverse to publicity in the first place, and concerns about maintaining the secrecy of codebreaking made them even more tight-lipped. Few Americans today, for example, know that what German submarines tried and failed to do to Britain, US submarines succeeded in doing to Japan. The "Silent Service, " not just because subs are quiet.
The war in Europe is basically more understandable and relatable for most Americans. We bomb the Germans every day, the Brits bomb them every night, the Russians slug it out with them in the East, we knock Germany out of Africa and come at them up through Italy, and finally send an army across the channel to drive to Berlin. The Pacific, on the other hand... Where is Guadalcanal? How far apart are the Gilberts and the Carolines? Why were the Army and the Navy/Marines fighting separately? Why are the Marianas so important? Why are any of these dots important? Why did Japan want to fight the US in the first place? These things are still pretty murky for most potential US viewers.
Off the top of my head I can't think of a US aircraft that was used in the Pacific only.
The B-29, of course, saw combat only in the Pacific. Likewise the SB2C, as neither the USAAF or the British had the patience to work out the bugs that the USN did. The Corsair saw some action in the Europe/Atlantic theater, but under British colors only. The F6F, I believe, made only one combat appearance in the ETO, Operation Anvil, as the Atlantic Fleet jeep carriers stuck with the F4F/FM. The C-46 was kind of the reverse of the P-51, making its name in the CBI and Pacific theaters then making an appearance in the ETO just before the end.
While the Germans were able to produce "super weapons' Japans Air Forces just got further and further behind after their carriers and pilots were lost at Midway.
The Japanese air forces had very high-quality training, but a very short-sighted program for training replacement aircrews, and never rotated experienced crews out of combat to train newcomers. They fought till they were killed. Also, unlike the USN, Japanese carrier air groups were part of the crew of that particular carrier. If a carrier was damaged and in port, the squadrons stayed with it. If a carrier lost too many planes, it had to basically rebuild its air group from the bottom up with replacement crews. The USN just shuffled squadrons around from carrier to carrier as needed, and had plenty of "spare" replacement squadrons.
Can anyone here tell me why the U.S. didn't use aircraft carriers in the European theatre?
They did, they were just the small, slow escort variety to chase subs and support amphibious landings. German naval strength lay in the U-boats; she did not have a major surface battle fleet, and what she did (plus Italy's) the Royal Navy could handle quite well. Germany also had very little in the way of naval aviation. Japan, on the other hand, was a major naval power, with a very potent fleet of modern, sophisticated and high-quality warships, and a fast carrier striking force that was stronger than the USN's at the beginning of the war, plus a major land-based naval air force scattered around the Pacific. So, the US fast carriers were very much needed against Japan.
--Justin