Film Review
One of the worthiest films to come out of the fruitful partnership of director
Herbert Wilcox and his wife Anna Neagle is this gripping wartime
melodrama which offers a fascinating insight into the activities of
British agents working undercover for the war effort in Nazi occupied
France. The film owes its trenchant verisimilitude to the
first-hand testimony provided by the remarkable woman whose experiences
as an agent are so vividly portrayed, namely Odette Churchill, the
first woman to be awarded the George Cross. In order that her
portrayal be as authentic as possible, Neagle worked closely with the
real-life Odette, and even visited the locations where she had been
tortured and held prisoner during the war. Odette's employer,
Maurice Buckmaster, introduces the film and Odette herself contributed
the self-effacing postscript in which she pays tribute to the valour of
her comrades in arms.
The performances are
extraordinarily convincing, with both Neagle and her co-star Trevor
Howard effectively playing down the heroism of their characters to
reveal their nobler qualities - loyalty, tenacity and, of course,
courage - whilst never letting us forget their ordinariness.
Marius Goring (best known for his Powell-Pressburger outings,
A Matter of Life and Death (1946) and
The Red Shoes (1948))
is superbly sinister as a shady German intelligence operative.
Goring delivers a wonderfully ambiguous characterisation - we cannot be
sure whether his Colonel Henri is as ambivalent to the Nazi cause as he
pretends or whether he is just a master of deceit. Bernard Lee's
character feels uncannily like his most famous role, that of M in the
original James Bond films (
Dr No (1962)), and Peter Ustinov provides some welcome
comedic value to lighten what would otherwise be a relentlessly grim
film.
Odette may not be
a cinematic masterpiece (Wilcox's direction lacks the inspired touch and the pace
drags a little in parts) but it is an important historical document,
one that sheds considerable light not only on the activities of the
British agents who served in France during the Second World War, but
also on their character. Watching this stirring account
of one woman's heroism is a deeply humbling experience.
© James Travers 2014
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Film Synopsis
In the early years of WWII, Odette Sansom, an ordinary French woman
living in England, is recruited by the Special Operations department of
the War Office to work as an agent in Nazi-occupied France. Peter
Churchill, another British agent, gives Odette her first assignment, to
help smuggle plans of Marseille back to England ahead of a landing by
the Allies. A German officer calling himself Colonel Henri
contacts Odette and offers his help if she will put him in touch with
her superior, Maurice Buckmaster. Odette's mistrust of Henri is
vindicated when he acts to arrest her and Peter. Tortured by the
Gestapo, Odette refuses to reveal the location of her fellow
agents. In the end, she is sent to a concentration camp where it
is certain she will shot as a British spy...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.