Dunkirk_(1958_film)

<i>Dunkirk</i> (1958 film)

Dunkirk (1958 film)

1958 British war film by Leslie Norman


Dunkirk is a 1958 British war film directed by Leslie Norman that depicts the Dunkirk evacuation of World War II, and starring John Mills, Richard Attenborough, and Bernard Lee.[4][5] The film is based on the novels The Big Pick-Up by Elleston Trevor and Dunkirk co-authored by Lt Col Ewan Butler and Major J. S. Bradford.[6]

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Plot

In 1940, English journalist Charles Foreman, in search of propaganda, strives to warn his complacent readers of the dangers posed by the build-up of German forces in western Europe. He rails against the Ministry of Information for suppressing the truth. Most of his compatriots, including his neighbour John Holden, have been lulled by the lack of significant fighting during the "Phoney War". Holden owns a garage, with a profitable side-line manufacturing belt buckles for the British Army.

The Battle of France begins, and the Germans advance rapidly, trapping Allied forces along the Channel coast. Lieutenant Lumpkin, Corporal "Tubby" Binns and a handful of men of the British Expeditionary Force return from blowing up a bridge to find their division has withdrawn. The lieutenant speaks to a driver left behind for them, but both are killed in a Luftwaffe aerial attack before Binns can be apprised of the situation, leaving him in charge of four men, Privates Barlow, Bellman, Fraser and Russell, with no idea where their unit has gone. They witness an aerial attack on refugees and reach a Royal Artillery battery camp. Fraser is killed when the battery repulses a German tank force. The officer commanding the battery orders Binns to head north with his men and two stragglers, Privates Harper and Miles, and try to find their unit. Just after they leave, the battery is wiped out by Stuka dive bombers.

Meanwhile, the situation has become so desperate that BEF commander General Gort ignores orders to counterattack and instead positions his units for evacuation from Dunkirk. In England, Vice-Admiral Ramsay directs Operation Dynamo; the Admiralty begins commandeering all suitable civilian boats, including those owned by Foreman and Holden, to sail to Dunkirk to help evacuate troops from the beaches. The boats are marshalled at Sheerness. Foreman insists on taking his motorboat Vanity to Dunkirk himself, despite warnings of the danger. Other boat owners follow his example. After initial reluctance, Holden decides to take his boat Heron too, assisted by his teenage apprentice Frankie.

Binns and his men spend the night in an abandoned farmhouse, but at dawn, a German unit arrives; in the ensuing firefight, Bellman is badly wounded. The men escape, but Binns is forced to leave Bellman behind. Later, after slipping past a German camp under cover of darkness, they stumble upon an RAF lorry, manned by Airmen Froome and Pannet, and go with them to Dunkirk, where Allied troops are being subjected to regular aerial bombing and strafing. Binns and his men manage to board a ship, only for it to be bombed as it departs, and they are forced to jump overboard as it sinks. Their prospects of rescue are made worse by the Admiralty's decision to withdraw its destroyers. Ramsay argues against the withdrawal, and the Admiralty reluctantly agrees to send them back.

Foreman and Holden ferry many soldiers to the larger vessels, but Foreman's boat is sunk by a bomber, killing Joe. Foreman is picked up by Holden. With harbour operations no longer possible, thousands of Allied troops gather on the beaches. In the next attack, Barlow is wounded and taken to an aid station. Heron's engine breaks down just off the beach. While Russell, a motor mechanic in civilian life, effects repairs, Foreman and Frankie go ashore to survey the scene. Next day, during church parade, Foreman is killed in an aerial attack. Russell completes his repairs, and Binns' group and six more soldiers board. Holden sets sail for home. At sea, the engine breaks down again and the boat drifts towards the German-held port of Calais. Fortunately, they are spotted by a destroyer and taken back to England.

Cast

Production

Owners of small boats were tracked down for production and the cast featured genuine army officers.[7] Approximately twenty minutes was cut for the U.S. release. Popular wartime British music hall performers Bud Flanagan and Chesney Allen portray themselves, performing "We’re Going to Hang Out the Washing on the Siegfried Line." The film was shot on location in France and at M-G-M's British Studios. Stock footage is used from The Cruel Sea (1953) to show a destroyer being sunk at the mole.[8] Beach sequences were shot at Camber Sands near Rye, East Sussex, and Dunkirk town centre was recreated using part of Rye Harbour. A canal-type bridge was temporarily constructed over the upper harbour, leading on to the quayside. It was over this bridge that the refugees and troops poured into the "town centre". Several scenes take place at this location, particularly a tracking shot following two British Army officers as they discuss the situation. In the background, the viewer can make out Rye Church and some old warehouses, still extant, albeit in much restored condition. One of the warehouses was used as the interior for the "Barn Scene".[citation needed] The scene where the bridge was blown during the early part of the film was on the River Medway at Teston Bridge, Teston in Kent.[9]

Director Leslie Norman later recalled:[2]

Dunkirk was bloody difficult to make from a logistics point of view. Yet it was made for £400,000 and came in under budget... I was the council school boy who became a major in the war, and that had a lot to do with the way I felt about Dunkirk. I didn't think that Dunkirk was a defeat; I always thought it was a very gallant effort but not a victory.

The musical score is by Malcolm Arnold, which may account for the fact that many of its segments sound very much like his Academy Award-winning theme from The Bridge on the River Kwai, made the previous year (1957).[citation needed]

Reception

The world premiere was at the Empire, Leicester Square, in London on 20 March 1958.[10]

The film was the third most popular production at the British box office in 1958, after Bridge on the River Kwai and The Vikings.[11][12] (Other accounts say it was the second, making $1,750,000.[13])

According to MGM records it earned only $310,000 in the US and Canada but $1,750,000 elsewhere; after distribution costs were deducted MGM earned a profit of $371,000.[1]

Bosley Crowther, in his New York Times review, praised the performances of the leads and supporting cast.[14]

Later reviews give positive to mixed feelings on the film.[15] A review for "The Movie Scene" gave the film three out of five stars, praising the performances of the leads, and the effects.[16] Nerdly.co.uk notes the film has "a level of authenticity that is surprisingly truthful, even about the mishandling of events by the British".[17] The critic Derek Winnert noted that the film was "long, ambitious, engrossing, intelligent and informative film, and not nearly as celebrated as it should be."[18] A review for The Spinning Image noted that "while it was a hit in its day and went onto be a staple of television broadcasts for many years, you can't but mention it was overshadowed by Christopher Nolan's Dunkirk in 2017 which applied twenty-first century techniques to a nineteen-forties plot and was one of the biggest movies of the twenty-tens, but the '58 version had a power of its own, and should not be dismissed."[19] Another reviewer said that the film "pales beside Nolan’s film, but in many respects, it more accurately reflects the British attitude in the immediate post-World War II period and is a good complement to it."[20]

See also


References

  1. The Eddie Mannix Ledger, Los Angeles: Margaret Herrick Library, Center for Motion Picture Study
  2. Brian McFarlane, An Autobiography of British Cinema, Metheun 1997 p. 441
  3. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 June 2007. Retrieved 10 April 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. Variety film review; 26 March 1958, p. 6.
  5. Harrison's Reports film review; 23 August 1958, p. 134.
  6. Connelly, Mark (2014). We Can Take It!. Routledge. p. 84.
  7. "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved 26 January 2024.
  8. Kent Film Office (20 March 1958). "Kent Film Office Dunkirk Film Focus".
  9. "Queen to See Preem of 'Dunkirk' in London". Variety. 5 February 1958. p. 10. Retrieved 25 September 2021 via Archive.org.
  10. "The Best in 1958". Kinematograph Weekly. 18 December 1958. p. 6.
  11. Alec Guinness "world's biggest box-office attraction" The Manchester Guardian 2 January 1959: 5.
  12. Crowther, Bosley (11 September 1958). "The Screen: Stern Look at Dunkirk; British Army Retreat is Shown at Capitol". The New York Times.
  13. Paprocki, Matt (29 March 2020). "Dunkirk (1958) Blu-ray Review". www.doblu.com. Retrieved 26 January 2024.
  14. "Dunkirk (1958)". themoviescene.co.uk.
  15. "Nerdly » 'Dunkirk (1958)' DVD Review". Nerdly.co.uk. Retrieved 26 January 2024.

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