Film Review
Although enthusiastically received when it was first seen in 1940, this
early war film from Ealing Studios now appears hopelessly dated.
Heavily reliant on back-projection and unconvincing models for its
action sequences, and with sets that offer the poorest approximation to
ships navigating their way through the stormy wastes of the North Sea,
the film feels laughably theatrical and has none of the realism that we
find in Ealing's subsequent war films.
With its stilted dialogue and wooden performances,
Convoy looks more like a caricature
of the 1940s British war film, complete with stiff-upper lipped
officers who are all too willing to die horribly for their country (and
die horribly they certainly do) and characters who are able to speak
German and quote verbatim Nelson's prayer on the eve of Trafalgar, as
and when required. Yet, despite the film's many failings, it is
strangely compelling and, to its credit, does not take itself too
seriously. For one thing, it plays the propaganda card far more
subtly than most war films of this era. The film marks the screen
debut of Anton Diffring as a U-boat officer, the first in a long line
of Nazi portrayals (ironic, as he was a fugitive of Nazi Germany).
Convoy was the third and final
film to be directed by Penrose Tennyson, the eldest great-grandson of
the poet Alfred Lord Tennyson, who began his career as an assistant to
Alfred Hitchcock on
The Man Who Knew Too Much
(1934). Tennyson's first directorial efforts
There Ain't No Justice (1939) and
The Proud Valley (1940) (made at
Ealing under producer Michael Balcon) earned him instant recognition as
one of the most promising young British filmmakers of his day.
Sadly, his early promise was not to be fulfilled, as he died in an
aeroplane crash in July 1941, not long after enlisting in the Royal Navy.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In 1940, Royal Navy cruiser
HMS
Apollo returns to base only to be immediately reassigned for a
special mission: to escort a convey of merchant ships across the North
Sea. When a civilian ship containing refugees is attacked by a
German U-Boat, Lieutenant David Cranford overrides the orders of his
captain, Tom Armitage, and sends a destroyer to its aid.
Cranford's motive is to rescue his former mistress, Lucy Armitage, who
he knows is onboard the doomed ship. Lucy also happens to be the
captain's ex-wife. Although the crew of
HMS Apollo manage to save Lucy and
her fellow passengers, they are unaware of a greater threat that awaits
them. A German pocket battleship is heading their way, intent on
decimating the entire convoy...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.