Dunkirk (1958 film)
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. The film is based on the novels The Big Pick-Up by Elleston Trevor and Dunkirk co-authored by Lt. Col. Ewan Butler and Maj. J. S. Bradford.
Plot
In May 1940, a civilian in England, newspaper reporter Charles Foreman, fails to rouse his complacent readers on the home front, lulled by the lack of significant fighting during the "Phoney War". His acquaintance, John Holden, owns a small factory manufacturing buckles and is quite pleased with his profits from the Phoney War.The Battle of France begins, when the Germans invade and rapidly advance, threatening to trap much of the Allied forces in a pocket in northern France and overwhelm them. British Army Corporal "Tubby" Binns, his platoon leader Lieutenant Lumpkin and a depleted section return to camp after blowing up a bridge, only to discover that their company has pulled out during the night, leaving them alone. One man and a lorry have been left for them, but the driver and Lumpkin are killed by a German air attack, leaving Tubby in charge of a five-man squad with no idea what the situation is or where to go. It is up to him to keep his increasingly demoralised men on the move. They reach a Royal Artillery battery camp, where they lose Private Frazer while repelling a German column. They are then ordered to head north with two other stragglers to try to link up with the rest of the British Expeditionary Force. The party spends the night in a farmhouse, but at dawn a German patrol breaks in and Private Dave Bellman is shot badly in the chest, eventually forcing Tubby to leave him behind, as it is Bellman's only chance of receiving medical attention. Plunkett suffers the effects of a concussion from a grenade. Eventually, they encounter a Royal Air Force lorry and get a lift to Dunkirk. They join the rest of the BEF and tens of thousands of French soldiers who are hoping to be evacuated to England.
The situation becomes so desperate that General John Vereker, Viscount Gort, the commander of the BEF, pulls out two divisions against orders to reinforce the wavering Belgians. The Admiralty commandeers all available civilian boats to help evacuate the troops from the beaches. Foreman insists on taking his motorboat Vanity himself, despite warnings of the danger. Other boat owners follow his example. Holden takes his boat Heron, with some reluctance at first, but his lack of commitment is soon forgotten.
The soldiers on the beaches are subjected to regular aerial bombing and strafing. Tubby and his men get aboard a ship, only to have it blown up and sunk before it can depart. When they get back to the beach, Private Barlow is hit in the face and taken to the aid station. After ferrying soldiers to the larger vessels, Foreman's boat is destroyed by a bomber. He is picked up by Holden in the Heron. When Herons engine breaks down, Private Mike Russell, one of Tubby's men, effects repairs while Foreman and teenage crewman Frankie go ashore to survey the scene. Foreman and Tubby discuss who is responsible for the debacle. During a Sunday morning church parade, Foreman is fatally wounded in an attack by Luftwaffe Ju 87 Stuka dive bombers. After repairs, Holden, Tubby and several other armed personnel set off towards Dover but the engine breaks down again.
As the boat drifts towards the German-held port of Boulogne, they are spotted by a British destroyer. Holden, Tubby and the rest of his men arrive safely back in Britain.
Cast
- John Mills as Cpl. "Tubby" Binns, a corporal leading his left-behind men to Dunkirk
- Richard Attenborough as John Holden, the proprietor of a motor garage and small buckle making workshop
- Bernard Lee as Charles Foreman, a newspaper reporter who participates in the evacuation
- Robert Urquhart as Pte. Mike Russell
- Ray Jackson as Pte. Barlow
- Meredith Edwards as Pte. Dave Bellman
- Denys Graham as Pte. Fraser
- Maxine Audley as Diana Foreman, Charles's wife
- Michael Shillo as Jouvet, a French reporter
- Patricia Plunkett as Grace Holden, John's wife
- Sean Barrett as Frankie, Holden's apprentice
- Victor Maddern as merchant seaman in pub
- Bud Flanagan and Chesney Allen as themselves
- Kenneth Cope as Lt. Lumpkin
- Barry Foster as the despatch rider who directs Tubby to the artillery camp
- Anthony Nicholls as military spokesman
- Warwick Ashton as battery sergeant major
- Peter Halliday as battery major in France
- Ronald Hines as Gnr. Miles
- Roland Curram as Gnr. Harper
- John Welsh as staff colonel
- Lloyd Lamble as staff colonel
- Cyril Raymond as General Viscount Gort, VC
- Nicholas Hannen as Vice-Admiral Ramsay at Dover
- William Squire as captain of minesweeper
- Eddie Byrne as commander at
- Michael Gwynn as commander at Sheerness
- Michael Bates as Froome
- Fred Griffiths as Old Sweat
- Christopher Rhodes as sergeant on the beaches
- Lionel Jeffries as medical colonel
- Harry Landis as Dr. Levy, a military doctor working on the beach
- John Horsley as a padre
- Patrick Allen as sergeant on parade ground
- Bernard Cribbins as thirsty sailor
- Bud Tingwell as sergeant in cookhouse
Production
Director Leslie Norman later recalled,
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.
Reception
The world premiere was at the Empire, Leicester Square, in London on 20 March 1958.Box Office
The film was the third most popular production at the British box office in 1958, after Bridge on the River Kwai and The Vikings.According to MGM records it earned only $310,000 in the US and Canada but $1,750,000 elsewhere, resulting in a profit of $371,000.