Exciting adventure with humour and romance
25 August 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Exciting adventure, with nice moments of humour and a bit of stiff- upper-lip romance, about the daring exploits of a factory foreman (Clifford Evans) who single handed goes over to France in June 1940 to retrieve some vital machinery before it falls into the hands of the advancing Germans. Vividly shot in black and white, with music by William Walton and script partly by J. B. Priestley, it portrays the tragedy of the French collapse and the terrible toll on civilians.

In a commandeered British Army lorry with two Tommies (Gordon Jackson and Tommy Trinder) and a blonde American secretary (Constance Cummings), commandeered as interpreter, he finds the machines and heads for the coast, but then the troubles start. They are strafed by German fighters, attacked by German dive bombers, fight through German infantry and shoot their way out of a German-held château. More sinister in a way are their encounters with fascists, collaborators and fifth-columnists. To viewers at the time, this collection of slime represented not only the shameful Vichy régime over the Channel but also the internal danger Britain could face.

Highly recommended, both as a period piece that gives you a window into that dangerous time and as an inspiring quest. Under challenge an ordinary man finds that he has the qualities of a hero, acquires loyal helpers, overcomes his evil adversaries, brings home the treasure and wins the beautiful girl.
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