 | |  |
| British War Collection (The Cruel Sea/The Ship That Died of Shame/Went the Day Well?/The Dam Busters/The Colditz Story) | 
enlarge | Directors: Alberto Cavalcanti, Basil Dearden, Charles Frend, Guy Hamilton, Michael Anderson Actors: Richard Todd, Michael Redgrave, Jack Hawkins, Donald Sinden, John Mills Studio: Starz / Anchor Bay Category: DVD
List Price: $26.97 Buy New: $24.37 You Save: $2.60 (10%)
Buy New/Used from $24.37
Avg. Customer Rating:   (10 reviews) Sales Rank: 18696
Format: Box Set, Black & White, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), German (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: DVD Running Time: 535 minutes Number Of Items: 5 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5.6 x 1.9
MPN: 12795 UPC: 013131279597 EAN: 0013131279597 ASIN: B00076YPBM
Release Date: March 22, 2005 Theatrical Release Date: June 28, 1944 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Description Experience all the explosive drama of a nation at war by land, sea and air. The five classic films in this collection ? starring such screen legends as Michael Redgrave, Richard Attenborough, John Mills, Jack Hawkins, Stanley Baker, Robert Shaw and more ? are now presented uncut and fully restored, depicting the men and women of Great Britain at their most compassionate and courageous. These are British war movies? finest hours.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
  5 Top WW2 Dramas October 13, 2008 Once Upon a Time in Hollywood: From the Secret Files of Harry Pennypacker Shadow Watcher Nobody Drowns in Mineral Lake
Over the years, some of the best war movies have come from the United Kingdom, and Anchor Bay Entertainment has released five of them onto DVD in a handsome boxed set, entitled THE BRITISH WAR COLLECTION.
Often, with these multiple title box sets, the distributor sticks in a "lemon" or two, but that is not the case here. These are five terrific films; well acted, directed and extremely entertaining.
Jack Hawkins stars in THE CRUEL SEA (1953), an adaptation of Nicholas Monserrat's best-selling novel about the HMS Compass Rose, a flower-class corvette (i.e. a small warship of under 1000 tons) that is assigned to escort convoys in the North Atlantic.
Directed by Charles Frend. the film is a graphic depiction of the failures of everyday men who are rushed into battle and must face the responsibilities of command. In one shocking sequence, Hawkins, as captain, is forced to run his ship over several British seamen in the water, then drop depth charges onto a Nazi submarine just below them.
It is an act that brings tears to his eyes and one that will haunt him for the rest of his life.
Donald Sinden, Denholm Elliott, Stanley Baker and Virginia McKenna co-star in this classic war drama.
THE DAM BUSTERS (1956) is the suspense-filled true story of the RAF's 1943 attack on the three dams in Germany's Ruhr Valley, the destruction of which did considerable damage to that nation's abilities to make war.
Michael Redgrave plays Dr. Barnes Wallis, the scientist who devised the method whereby five ton bombs could be bounced across the water, so that they would land at the exact spot where the explosion would destroy the dam.
Richard Todd is Wing Commander Guy Gibson, who led the historic raid. The screenplay for this picture was based, in part, on his book, ENEMY COAST AHEAD.
Directed by Michael Anderson, the film incorporates archival footage of the original bomb trials and the flooded Ruhr basin.
Also in the Oscar-nominated film are Ursula Jeans, Basil Sydney, Patrick Barr, Ernest Clark, Derek Farr and, in a very small role, Robert Shaw.
Future James Bond director (GOLDFINGER, etal.) Guy Hamilton directed THE COLDITZ STORY (1955), an adaptation of a memoir written by Major P.R. "Pat" Reid, who is played in this film by John Mills.
Colditz was a German fortress for which there was supposedly no escape. During WW2, only Allied prisoners who had made multiple escape attempts from other POW camps were sent there. Interestingly, by the end of the war, more prisoners had made "home runs" (i.e. successful escapes) from Colditz than from any other German POW facility. Some of the methods of escape were absolutely brilliant.
Along with Mills, Eric Portman, Lionel Jeffries, Ian Carmichael, Anton Diffring and Theodore Bikel co-star in this tense drama that may not be as elaborate as the better known THE GREAT ESCAPE, but is just as exciting.
My personal favorite in this group is also the most obscure. It may also be the most daring.
WENT THE DAY WELL? was made in 1942, but opens after the end of the war. Told in flashback, this propaganda film is the fictional story of Bramley End, a quaint isolated village that is, one day, visited by a company of British soldiers on maneuvers.
In truth, these are German soldiers in disguise and they are there to prepare the way for an imminent invasion of the British Isles. Working with them is sleeper agent Leslie Banks, one of the most respected men in the village.
When it is discovered that these soldiers are, in fact, the enemy, the villagers are all taken prisoner and now they must come up with a plan to overcome the Germans and alert the Home Guard.
This first-rate thriller, adapted from a story by Graham Greene and directed by Alberto Cavalcanti, is filled with heroic action and moments of suspense that would make Alfred Hitchcock proud.
The cast includes Marie Lohr, Basil Sydney, Elizabeth Allan, Frank Lawton, David Farrar and Mervyn Johns.
If there is an oddball in this collection, it would be THE SHIP THAT DIED OF SHAME (1955), because only the first twenty minutes or so of this film deals with the war.
Richard Attenborough, George Baker and Bill Owen served on the same small ship during WW2. However, in peacetime, all are at loose ends, so they purchase their old ship from salvage and go into the smuggling business.
The Michael Relph and Basil Dearden-directed action drama is an audience pleaser. Bernard Lee co-stars.
Michael B. Druxman, author of ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD
  Very Good Value January 26, 2007 This collection brings together five of the older British war stories and is excellent value for anyone who enjoys such movies.
  British War Stories January 10, 2007 This set of very British movies deserves viewing. While in B&W, the restored copies are clear and look good on HDTV.
  British War Collection March 9, 2006 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
Excellent collection of the early black and white british movies. some excellent british actors
  A sterling collection of several excellent British WW II films October 18, 2005 13 out of 14 found this review helpful
Over the years I have with effort to see a large number of British films and had seen four of the five films in this collection. In all four cases, however, the print I saw was vastly inferior to the superb prints contained in this fascinating set of films. So far I've seen three sets of DVDs from Ealing: one featuring the films of Alec Guinness, another containing several non-Guinness comedies, and this collection of war films. I hope that they don't stop with these. Although the sets are remarkable for the utter and complete absence of extras (and by none I truly do mean none), the prints themselves have in ever instance been impeccable. A bit about each film.
THE DAM BUSTERS--Of all the films in the set, this is the one that is most widely available. I first saw this as a small kid when in my most passionate warmonger phase. It is based on an actual bombing raid in WW II where a technique for attacking dams was developed by a British scientist. By dropping bombs so that they would skip across water like stones across the surface of a pond, they were able to attack targets surrounded by water that were normally protected by torpedo nets. Michael Redgrave anchors an excellent cast of performers who will largely be unknown to American audiences, though Basil Sydney appears in both this film and in WENT THE DAY WELL?, while a very young Robert Shaw can be seen in several scenes. If one is very attentive one will spot a very young Patrick McGoohan in a small role as a guard.
THE CRUEL SEA--Far and away the best film of the bunch, and one of the very best films about the Battle of the North Atlantic, this brings home the story of escort work against the German U-Boats better than any other film. The movie tells the story of the Compass Rose, a destroyer employed in protecting cargo ships during the early part of WW II. The cast is outstanding, anchored by a powerful performance by Jack Hawkins, a superb actor not as well known in the US as he deserves to be, though his role in THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI guarantees that he will not ever be forgotten (he is the only one of the major stars who ends the film alive) and also by his memorable role as an alcoholic missionary in ZULU. Speaking of ZULU, the star of that film, Stanley Baker, has a memorable supporting role here as the overly intense first officer in the first third of the film. Many of the other performers will be more familiar by face than by name, the best known by far being a very young and startling handsome Denholm Elliott. The film has many marvelous moments as well as two haunting scenes: the first where Hawkins has to attack a German U-Boat that is submerged below a group of British sailors in the water awaiting rescue, but instead find the destroyer dropping depth charges directly below them, guaranteeing their deaths. Equally disturbing is the sound of the men over the communication tubes after the Compass Rose has been struck by a torpedo. One could add the ensuing scene as well, the British sailors who crowd onto the two rafts following the sinking of the ship, only a few managing to survive the night. All in all, this is a powerful, disturbing film driven by a string of strong performances.
THE COLDITZ STORY--John Mills stars in this excellent film about prisoners of war intent on escaping from an interment camp in Colditz Castle. Directed by Guy Hamilton, of James Bond fame, the film tells the story of British, Polish, and French soldiers who gradually learn to coordinate their efforts in escaping from the camp. There are a score of fine performances in this one, led by Mills and Eric Portman as leaders of the British officers, and backed by memorable performances by the likes of Ian Carmichael, Lionel Jeffries, and Bryan Forbes. Film and folk music fans will also recognize Theodore Bikel as one of the Polish officers.
THE SHIP THAT DIED OF SHAME--I saw this one many years ago in an inferior print. It is an unusual film, almost a gothic ghost story. It stars George Baker and Richard Attenborough as two former officers of a WW II wooden patrol boat. I'm not certain what they were called in Britain, but in the US they were called PT boats, though unlike the famous PT-109 this ship is fitted with deck guns instead of torpedo tubes. The ship distinguishes itself in wartime, but after the war is put into mothballs until after the war, when the two officers buy it to use it for smuggling. With the help of the boat's former coxswain, they engage in petty smuggling for a long while, but eventually get involved in more serious crime. At this point the boat starts mysteriously breaking down or steering hard when doing something deeply wrong. In the end, the boat seemingly commits suicide rather than continue being used in criminal activities. This is certainly not a great film, but it does manage to be a very interesting one.
WENT THE DAY WELL?--This was the one film I had not seen before and it is the only one actually made during WW II. It was definitely made as a morale booster and tells the fictional story of a German invasion by a company of English-speaking troops of a small English village as a prelude to an invasion of Britain by German forces at large. It is a fairly improbable film, in that even if Hitler had been able to assemble that many soldiers who could pass for English, it would be highly unlikely that they would have been squandered so readily. Nonetheless, the film is entertaining and avoids most of the sentimentality and hollow patriotism one might expect in such an effort. The cast is strong, with the normally heroic Leslie Banks playing a German plant in the village. If it isn't in the end especially convincing, it nonetheless features a likable ensemble cast.
One thing all of these films have in common, and something typical of most of the Ealing Studios films, is marvelous scores. Many of Britain's finest orchestral composers wrote for the cinema and scores and the playing are almost always incomparable.
These films may not have the macho heroism associated with American films, but I find these much more focused on the actual human experience. They truly are must-see films both for fans of British cinema and for any WW II buffs.
|
|
|
 Powered by Associate-O-Matic
|  | |