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The New Lot

  • 1943
  • 43 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,9/10
151
IHRE BEWERTUNG
The New Lot (1943)
DramaKriegKurz

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuDuring World War II, five civilians from different backgrounds become reluctant conscripts in the British Army.During World War II, five civilians from different backgrounds become reluctant conscripts in the British Army.During World War II, five civilians from different backgrounds become reluctant conscripts in the British Army.

  • Regie
    • Carol Reed
  • Drehbuch
    • Eric Ambler
    • Peter Ustinov
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Eric Ambler
    • Ivor Barnard
    • Robert Donat
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,9/10
    151
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Carol Reed
    • Drehbuch
      • Eric Ambler
      • Peter Ustinov
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Eric Ambler
      • Ivor Barnard
      • Robert Donat
    • 7Benutzerrezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos1

    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung19

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    Eric Ambler
    • Bren Gun Instructor
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Ivor Barnard
    Ivor Barnard
    • Photographer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Robert Donat
    Robert Donat
    • Actor
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Ian Fleming
    Ian Fleming
    • Medical Officer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Philip Godfrey
    • Art Wallace
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Kathleen Harrison
    Kathleen Harrison
    • Keith's Mother
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Bryan Herbert
    • Soldier
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Raymond Huntley
    Raymond Huntley
    • Barrington
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Mike Johnson
    • Railway Porter
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Geoffrey Keen
    Geoffrey Keen
    • Corporal
    • (Nicht genannt)
    John Laurie
    John Laurie
    • Harry Fyfe
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Bernard Lee
    Bernard Lee
    • Interviewing Officer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Albert Lieven
    Albert Lieven
    • Czech Soldier
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Bernard Miles
    Bernard Miles
    • Ted Loman
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Stewart Rome
    Stewart Rome
    • Officer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Johnnie Schofield
    • Homeguard Sgt
    • (Nicht genannt)
    John Slater
    John Slater
    • Soldier in Truck
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Austin Trevor
    Austin Trevor
    • Soldier Talking to Corporal
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Carol Reed
    • Drehbuch
      • Eric Ambler
      • Peter Ustinov
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen7

    6,9151
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    7Bunuel1976

    THE NEW LOT (Carol Reed, 1943) ***

    This pretty good 43-minute Allied short (the copy of which I acquired bafflingly boasts no credits, despite the involvement of several notables!) about the training of civilians for active war duty would eventually be reworked and expanded into a full-length feature – the excellent THE WAY AHEAD (1944) – by the same director. Among the titular components (a veritable microcosm of British society of the time) are Raymond Huntley (a Ministerial executive who, through a bureaucratic mix-up, gets not only by-passed for the desk job he had requested but even drafted into the army!), John Laurie (as the quintessential big-hearted Scot), Bernard Miles (as a brick-layer, the epitome of the working-class man) and Peter Ustinov (as the youngest, he has the hardest time adjusting to the handling of weaponry and, by extension, the necessity for killing). A young Geoffrey Keen is the obligatory D.I. (though he predictably reveals a heart of gold underneath his tough-as-nails exterior), while Robert Donat basically does a spoof(!) "Guest Star" cameo (interestingly, he only appears – atypically – as a reckless gung-ho hero in a film the raw recruits take some time off to check out and promptly dismiss for lack of realism!). The climax sees the group being sent on a trial mission in which they manage to outsmart their superiors via some unorthodox but undeniably nifty sneak-attack tactics! Somewhat optimistically, the epilogue states that if the British soldier will prevail over the current enemy, it is going to be thanks to the country's unique policy of instilling a military discipline in their men prior to undertaking official service.
    7lee_eisenberg

    there comes a time when you have to fight

    We in the US have no doubt seen a number of the training films made for our troops in World War II. We might not know about the ones made for British troops. "The New Lot" is an example. It depicts a couple of new recruits going into the army and having to go through the usual training.

    We in the 21st century are bound to view these movies differently, given the sorts of wars that we've seen waged since World War II. I guess that we can accept these, considering that the enemy in World War II was responsible the slaughter of twelve million people (it's always worth reminding people that there are NO good Nazis).

    Anyway, worth seeing. The cast includes Peter Ustinov and Bernard Lee (M in the original James Bond movies).
    6malcolmgsw

    Second success for the aks

    The Army Kinematograph Service was set up mainly to provide film screenings for the troops.Arranging for them to see the latest films via mobile 16mm units and shows at Garrison Theatres.They made only a handful of films.The first being Next Of Kin.This was made in cooperation with Ealing Studios.This was to warn troops against careless talk.It was so good that it was decided to release this in cinemas.So this promotion film for army recruiting was so successful that it was made into The Way Ahead.A number of the actors in this film also appeared in the feature.The cameo of Robert Donat as the film hero is truly hilarious.
    6GianfrancoSpada

    Fres meat...

    Among the wartime films produced in Britain during the height of World War II, The New Lot (1943) occupies a distinctive and often overlooked position. Not quite a piece of straightforward propaganda, not fully a fictional drama, and certainly not a typical training film, it resides somewhere in the fertile interstice between institutional cinema and humanist micro-history. Commissioned by the British Army Kinematograph Service and co-written by collaborators who would later rework its structure into The Way Ahead (1944), the film carries an unmistakable pedagogical intent-yet what emerges from its tightly woven fabric is a portrayal of military induction that, despite its constraints, contains a level of psychological granularity rare for its function.

    Shot during a time when Britain was slowly regaining strategic initiative but remained deep in national anxiety, the film's tone reflects a society attempting to construct a cohesive military identity from its class-fractured civilian base. This imperative-to forge unity from disparity-is not simply thematic but built into the bones of the film's mise-en-scène. The visual language is utilitarian but not crude. There is no indulgence in dramatic stylization; instead, it favors tight, workmanlike framing and subdued lighting that borders on documentary realism. The barracks, the uniforms, the bleak transport depots-all are rendered without embellishment. This is not a war of glory or heroism, but of procedures, disorientation, and gradual adjustment. That refusal to aestheticize aligns the film more closely with titles like Nine Men (1943), which similarly locate drama in camaraderie and endurance rather than battle spectacle. Yet where Nine Men constructs its narrative around an external enemy and combat stress, The New Lot turns resolutely inward, mapping out the social tensions and class anxieties fermenting beneath the surface of newly issued khaki.

    The performances, though modest in screen time and largely ensemble-based, strike a carefully calibrated tone between archetype and authenticity. Each recruit represents a social category-the urban clerk, the rural laborer, the middle-class teacher, the emotionally guarded intellectual-but they are not reduced to slogans or caricatures. Their interactions, especially in early scenes of unease and miscommunication, are given space to breathe. Dialogue flows naturally, avoiding the clipped, declamatory rhythms so common in wartime morale films. This subtle realism allows the viewer to engage not only with characters but with the mechanisms by which they are drawn together, fractured, and reconstituted into a functioning military unit.

    What's most impressive is the film's ability to hold ideological purpose and dramatic subtlety in suspension. It does not shy away from its role in shaping a narrative of the "new British soldier," but it does so with a delicacy that avoids the heavy-handedness found in more overtly propagandistic contemporaries. Unlike Tomorrow We Live (1943), where ideological alignment is practically shouted, The New Lot whispers its convictions, relying on accumulated gesture and interaction rather than speechifying. Still, its institutional purpose is clear: to show that the army can absorb and refashion civilians into something cohesive, productive, and psychologically sound. In that sense, the film functions as a kind of cinematic manual, not just for military procedure, but for national integration under crisis.

    The editing is spare and direct, its rhythm aligned with the instructional goals of the film. Transitions between training episodes are brisk, but not rushed. The sound design is equally minimal: ambient noise, shouted orders, footsteps on gravel. Music is used only where strictly necessary, reinforcing a mood rather than commanding it. The cinematography avoids flourish, preferring flat, even lighting and compositions that reinforce uniformity-visually echoing the very discipline the narrative seeks to instill.

    Within this carefully controlled structure, however, there is a remarkable footnote that merits special attention: the early screen appearance of a very young Dustin Hoffman. Though his role is minor, almost fleeting, it is one of the first recorded instances of his presence in film. He appears as one of the recruits in a transitional scene, likely uncredited and unnoticed by contemporary viewers. But what is striking-even in this embryonic stage of his craft-is the undercurrent of internalization he brings. Unlike the rest of the cast, largely composed of British actors delivering controlled, externally oriented performances in service to the ensemble, Hoffman's energy, however subtle, seems to move inward. There's a twitch of uncertainty in his posture, a flicker of internal conflict, which-viewed retrospectively-suggests the psychological depth he would later bring to defining roles in The Graduate and Midnight Cowboy. It is a historical curiosity, yes, but also a fascinating point of contact between two acting traditions: the British wartime ensemble and the emerging American method, still gestating in the background.

    Moreover, his presence-however marginal-adds another layer of resonance to the film's quiet tension between the institutional and the individual. The project is, after all, meant to flatten difference, to mold variance into homogeneity. Yet here, by historical accident or quiet subversion, the camera captures someone whose very career would come to represent resistance to that process: the rise of the dissonant, fragile, psychologically fragmented man of the postwar American screen. It is tempting to see this moment, however small, as symbolic-a brief rupture in the film's cohesion, through which a different future leaks.

    The New Lot ultimately reveals more than it likely intended. Conceived as a tool of wartime instruction, it also captures, with quiet precision, the social and emotional labor of militarization. In doing so, it becomes something richer: not just an ideological artifact of 1943 Britain, but a textured reflection on the slow, deliberate reprogramming of the civilian mind. And in its background, almost ghostlike, stands the unlikely figure of a young actor whose presence reminds us that even in the most controlled cinematic environments, the future is always lurking.
    6lestermay

    The model for "The Way Ahead"

    Made by the Army Kinetographic Service, this training film was aimed at conscripts. This short film takes five different raw recruits and shows how, during basic training, they gradually come to terms with both their new role in the Army and the need for them to fight.

    The Director, Captain Carol Reed, and the writers, Lieutenant Eric Ambler and Private Peter Ustinov, of this film were later released by the War Office to direct and write "The Way Ahead" (1944) starring David Niven. This feature film was modelled on "The New Lot", though it included officers as well as conscripts, and was intended to do for the Army what "In Which We Serve" had done for the Royal Navy.

    Quite neatly done, "The New Lot" starts with the recruits each in their last days in their very different civilian environments. They all embark a train - pulled by the Southern Railway's Lord Nelson Class locomotive "Sir Walter Raleigh" (BR No. 30852 - built 1928 and withdrawn from service in 1962) - where they begin to get to know each other en route for the training barracks.

    It's propaganda, of course, and not very exciting but it will raise a smile here and there. It will certainly be of interest to those who know classic British cinema and TV from the 1940s to the 1980s. Look out for some famous names and well-known faces.

    This short was released on a region-free DVD called "The Next of Kin" by DD Home Entertainment in the UK in 2005, as part of the Imperial War Museum official collection.

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    Handlung

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      The film was considered lost until a copy was discovered in a disused Army base in India in the early 1990s.
    • Zitate

      Harry Fyfe: By the left - quick WRIGGLE!

    • Verbindungen
      References The Young Mr. Pitt (1942)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 1943 (Vereinigtes Königreich)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Az újoncok
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Army Kinematograph Service
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 43 Min.
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Mono
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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