Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA journalist investigates a network of German fifth columnists operating in the midst of the Blitz.A journalist investigates a network of German fifth columnists operating in the midst of the Blitz.A journalist investigates a network of German fifth columnists operating in the midst of the Blitz.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Ballard Berkeley
- Injured AFS Fireman
- (non crédité)
Noel Dainton
- A.R.P. Warden
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
An English journalist just back from Dunkirk writes a story blasting a London-based peace- in-our-time organization, but the story is killed by a government agency. Are there Nazi sympathizers or just cautious bureaucrats in the agency? Is the peace group led by innocent dupes or by ruthless Nazi agents? The reporter intends to find out.
The movie isn't A-list, but it's better than a programmer. It's a craftsman-like piece of work. In feature roles are two first-rate British character actors, Roland Culver (The Pallisers, Dead of Night, On Approval) and Miles Malleson (Kind Hearts and Coronets, The Man in the White Suit).
The movie isn't A-list, but it's better than a programmer. It's a craftsman-like piece of work. In feature roles are two first-rate British character actors, Roland Culver (The Pallisers, Dead of Night, On Approval) and Miles Malleson (Kind Hearts and Coronets, The Man in the White Suit).
British actor Richard Greene was well on his way to rivaling Tyrone Power at 20th Century Fox when he returned to England when war broke out. Later he became my childhood Robin Hood in a successful TV series.
Here he stars with Valerie Hobson in "Unpublished Story" from 1942, directed by Harold French.
Greene plays reporter Bob Randall, who is exhausted as he returns from his assignment in Dunkirk. Among the young fighting men, he saw Nazis posing as French citizens as the Germans took over France.
What upsets him is that there are groups in England, such as Peace in our Time who refuse to accept the war news and believe there is a path to negotiation and peace. Hitler isn't such a bad guy.
Randall and a fellow reporter Carol (Hobson) investigate Peace in our Time further. She believes they have a right to free speech. He thinks they're dangerous and a threat to national security. In fact, he's having trouble getting his stories critiquing the pacifist movement published.
The film uses real newsreel footage of bombs dropping, and we see people walking in blackouts, running into the subway when they hear an alarm. It's everyday people coping with war happening on their own soil.
The acting is very good. Greene and Hobson have a nice chemistry. It's a propaganda film, but couched in an effective story.
Here he stars with Valerie Hobson in "Unpublished Story" from 1942, directed by Harold French.
Greene plays reporter Bob Randall, who is exhausted as he returns from his assignment in Dunkirk. Among the young fighting men, he saw Nazis posing as French citizens as the Germans took over France.
What upsets him is that there are groups in England, such as Peace in our Time who refuse to accept the war news and believe there is a path to negotiation and peace. Hitler isn't such a bad guy.
Randall and a fellow reporter Carol (Hobson) investigate Peace in our Time further. She believes they have a right to free speech. He thinks they're dangerous and a threat to national security. In fact, he's having trouble getting his stories critiquing the pacifist movement published.
The film uses real newsreel footage of bombs dropping, and we see people walking in blackouts, running into the subway when they hear an alarm. It's everyday people coping with war happening on their own soil.
The acting is very good. Greene and Hobson have a nice chemistry. It's a propaganda film, but couched in an effective story.
Unpublished Story is a propaganda piece with almost a documentary type setting in parts when it shows the effects of the Nazi bombings on Londoners.
Bob Randall (Richard Greene) and Carole Bennett (Valerie Hobson) are journalists investigating a pacifist group called People For Peace. The group is in effect taken over by Nazi fifth columnists to spread misinformation that resistance is futile.
Basil Radford plays Lamb, the man from the ministry with the habit to spike any news story not in the national interest.
It is an intriguing look at the peace movement at the time and the government at the time would had been aware that some unsavoury types would attempt to hijack such groups.
The film is rather uneven, you see brutal effects of the bombings but this is mixed with humour which sits rather inappropriately. The story of the secret Nazi infiltrators is not well told and at times appears confusing with little action regarding the main plot.
Bob Randall (Richard Greene) and Carole Bennett (Valerie Hobson) are journalists investigating a pacifist group called People For Peace. The group is in effect taken over by Nazi fifth columnists to spread misinformation that resistance is futile.
Basil Radford plays Lamb, the man from the ministry with the habit to spike any news story not in the national interest.
It is an intriguing look at the peace movement at the time and the government at the time would had been aware that some unsavoury types would attempt to hijack such groups.
The film is rather uneven, you see brutal effects of the bombings but this is mixed with humour which sits rather inappropriately. The story of the secret Nazi infiltrators is not well told and at times appears confusing with little action regarding the main plot.
8JHC3
British war correspondent Bob Randall (Greene) personally witnesses the Allied defeat in France in May of 1940. After a harrowing experience, he is fortunate to be evacuated to England. He immediately resumes his position as a reporter
for a major London newspaper.
While reporting daily news events, he discovers a society of pacifists, the
People for Peace. Bob is incensed by this group, believing their activities are defeatist and are only advancing the Nazi cause. Unknown to the public, this group has been infiltrated by German agents who manipulate the society to sow despair among the British people.
As the Germans bomb British cities, Bob makes it his personal mission to report on the activities of this group. He finds opposition among reporters who want free speech and British censors who, for security reasons, don't want the story published. Bob is eventually joined by another reporter, Carol Bennett
(Hobson), who helps expose the enemy in their midst.
This well made wartime film includes elements of quiet and very effective
humor. This offsets the grim nature of war against the civilian population of London. Recommended.
for a major London newspaper.
While reporting daily news events, he discovers a society of pacifists, the
People for Peace. Bob is incensed by this group, believing their activities are defeatist and are only advancing the Nazi cause. Unknown to the public, this group has been infiltrated by German agents who manipulate the society to sow despair among the British people.
As the Germans bomb British cities, Bob makes it his personal mission to report on the activities of this group. He finds opposition among reporters who want free speech and British censors who, for security reasons, don't want the story published. Bob is eventually joined by another reporter, Carol Bennett
(Hobson), who helps expose the enemy in their midst.
This well made wartime film includes elements of quiet and very effective
humor. This offsets the grim nature of war against the civilian population of London. Recommended.
One of the films made by Two Cities Films in the 1940s and 1950s, this is a mostly, well-done story of newspaper reporters running into fifth-columnists within their midst in Britain during WW II. The editor of the paper and some other characters say some silly lines, but they can be overlooked. Richard Greene, Valerie Hobson, and Basil Radford star in this predictable spy thriller, showing the realities of bombed out London, although much of it is a background screen projection. The plot brings up the usual "Do we fight back or acquiesce?" wartime debate.
Hobson had played Elizabeth in Bride of Frankenstein with the master B. Karloff in 1935. Greene was Sir Henry Baskerville opposite Basil Rathbone prior to "Unpublished...", and would later play Robin Hood in the British TV series for several years. Two Cities Films was part by the Rank Organization, which made films for many years. The Rank Organization would later be turned into a casino operator, which is still operating as a public company in England. Another interesting tidbit is Hobson's marriage to producer/writer Anthoney Havelock-Allen; she appears to have met and married him in 1939, and made nine films together. Sadly, they divorced in 1952, and she only made a couple more films after that...
Hobson had played Elizabeth in Bride of Frankenstein with the master B. Karloff in 1935. Greene was Sir Henry Baskerville opposite Basil Rathbone prior to "Unpublished...", and would later play Robin Hood in the British TV series for several years. Two Cities Films was part by the Rank Organization, which made films for many years. The Rank Organization would later be turned into a casino operator, which is still operating as a public company in England. Another interesting tidbit is Hobson's marriage to producer/writer Anthoney Havelock-Allen; she appears to have met and married him in 1939, and made nine films together. Sadly, they divorced in 1952, and she only made a couple more films after that...
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film uses actual film of bombing raids including the aftermath - searchlights, fires and firefighters, building collapses, building damage, etc.
- GaffesWhen George explains that Carol has left for Dover, he appears to have been badly dubbed, and is saying different words from those which are heard.
- Crédits fousOpening credits prologue: THE NORTH OF FRANCE
MAY 1940
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Alta Espionagem
- Lieux de tournage
- D&P Studios, Denham, Uxbridge, Buckinghamshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(studio: made at D&P Studios)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 32min(92 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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