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La nuit commence à l'aube

Titre original : Morning Departure
  • 1950
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 42min
NOTE IMDb
7,0/10
896
MA NOTE
Richard Attenborough, Helen Cherry, James Hayter, John Mills, Lana Morris, and Nigel Patrick in La nuit commence à l'aube (1950)
DramaHistoryWar

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe crew of a submarine is trapped on the sea floor when it sinks. How can they be rescued before they run out of air?The crew of a submarine is trapped on the sea floor when it sinks. How can they be rescued before they run out of air?The crew of a submarine is trapped on the sea floor when it sinks. How can they be rescued before they run out of air?

  • Réalisation
    • Roy Ward Baker
  • Scénario
    • William Fairchild
    • Kenneth Woollard
  • Casting principal
    • John Mills
    • Nigel Patrick
    • Peter Hammond
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,0/10
    896
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Roy Ward Baker
    • Scénario
      • William Fairchild
      • Kenneth Woollard
    • Casting principal
      • John Mills
      • Nigel Patrick
      • Peter Hammond
    • 22avis d'utilisateurs
    • 6avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nomination aux 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 nominations au total

    Photos23

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    Rôles principaux22

    Modifier
    John Mills
    John Mills
    • Lieut. Commander Armstrong
    Nigel Patrick
    Nigel Patrick
    • Lieut. Manson
    Peter Hammond
    Peter Hammond
    • Sub Lieut. Oakley
    Andrew Crawford
    • Sub Lieut. (E) J. McFee
    Michael Brennan
    • C.P.O. Barlow
    George Cole
    George Cole
    • E.R.A. Marks
    Victor Maddern
    Victor Maddern
    • Leading Telegraphist Hillbrook
    Roddy McMillan
    • Leading Seaman Andrews
    Frank Coburn
    • Leading Seaman Brough
    Jack Stewart
    • Leading Seaman Kelly
    James Hayter
    James Hayter
    • Able Seaman Higgins
    Wylie Watson
    Wylie Watson
    • Able Seaman Nobby Clarke
    Richard Attenborough
    Richard Attenborough
    • Stoker Snipe
    George Thorpe
    • Capt. Fenton
    Bernard Lee
    Bernard Lee
    • Commander Gates
    Kenneth More
    Kenneth More
    • Lieut. Commander James
    Alastair Hunter
    Alastair Hunter
    • Capt. Jenner
    Helen Cherry
    Helen Cherry
    • Helen Armstong
    • Réalisation
      • Roy Ward Baker
    • Scénario
      • William Fairchild
      • Kenneth Woollard
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs22

    7,0896
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    Avis à la une

    7irvingwarner

    Routine equipment exercise goes very wrong for submariners.

    A Rank production, with passable production quality and excellent acting. Much stock footage and a healthy amt. of rear projection, par for keeping costs down on Rank dramatic quickies. Since the screenplay was adapted from a play, its stage origins are still somewhat apparent. The performances of Mills, and a very young Attenborough, plus seemingly one-half the J.R. Rank stable of regulars are very good. The sets and costumes were surprisingly ratty--long in the tooth! Still, this is only a few years after the war, and things were still very hard-up in England. Ultimately, this is a "talker" and not an "actioner", and it does fairly well for all that, though not spectacularly so. The ending, to me, disappointed. I do recommend this for classic movie fans.
    7CinemaSerf

    Morning Departure

    This is quite an anxious wartime drama that goes some way to illustrating the perils faced by those in HM Submarine Service. John Mills is the captain "Armstrong" who takes his crew on a routine maritime patrol only for their gear to become ensnared in a mine cable. A suddens stop and reverse engines doesn't quite do the trick and to the bottom they go. Largely in one piece and not in such deep water, they are optimistic of rescue and, indeed, help arrives fairly sharpish allowing the first four of the twelve survivors to don their emergency gear and head to the surface. The sense of enclosure now builds as their air starts to thin, the first officer "Manson" (Nigel Patrick) becomes ill and we discover that "Snipe" (Richard Attenborough) only joined the service for the extra pay and he actually does suffer from claustrophobia. With four gone, its now the turn of the next four - but there is a snag. The damage from the explosion has ensured that these are the last four escape kits. A lottery needs to be held and that further raises the tension as those left behind will have to await the raising of the ship - and that's dependent on fair weather above! The story develops well here, with Mills (who did like snapping his fingers a lot in these roles!) working well with Patrick, an on form James Hayter as the cook and general dogsbody "Higgins" and Attenborough who really does present us with a plausible sensation of his panic at being shut up in this metal tube deep under the sea as well as the growing guilt he feels at the selfishness of his behaviour. The script marries a bit of dark humour with the accruing peril and Roy Baker keeps the pace taut for the duration of this rather more impactful story.
    johnfadrian

    I saw this in first run when I was about 7 years old. Scenes are still vivid in my memory.

    I saw this in first run when I was about 7 years old. It was on a double bill with a Francis the Talking Mule film. My older sister made a deal with me: She'd sit through Francis if I'd sit through OPERATION DISASTER.

    I remember nothing of the Francis film, but scenes from this film are still vivid in my memory. In the late 1950s John Mills was a guest on the JACK PAAR SHOW and spoke of how life imitated art in that a British submarine was lost in the North Sea under very similar circumstances to those portrayed in the film between the completion of shooting and release in the UK. He said there was criticism in the British press at the time for it's release.

    I wish it was available on VHS or DVD in the Unites States, but I haven't been able to find it. I would love to see it again.
    8AAdaSC

    Blimey...!

    Submarine commander John Mills leaves home to take charge of his crew on an exercise at sea. We meet some of his team as they set off and submerge. All good so far. This doesn't last long.

    This is a well-acted film and stoker Richard Attenborough (Snipe) stands out alongside John Mills. All the cast do well. The majority of the film is set aboard the submarine as it sits at the bottom of the sea and plans to escape are drawn up. However, the plans are dealt a blow as rescue ships try to raise the submarine from the seabed. Someone pass the prayer book - this film will make you cry.

    There is some very frank dialogue that is exchanged and it is interesting (and good) to see how claustrophobia was dealt with in those days. Quite right - well done John Mills for his address to the claustrophobic Attenborough. We need more of that attitude in today's work-shy climate where everyone claims they have a mental illness. What a load of nonsense - it's called life and you need to adjust and get on with it.

    Another line of dialogue that has stuck with me is when there are four left in the submarine and Mills suggests they all have a brandy but warns "After this, the pub's closed!" It made me think that it's not a bad idea to have a bar built inside all submarines for just such an occasion when things go wrong and there is nothing you can do. "Pub is open!" would come the call to signal that your duty as a seaman has been fulfilled and you can now get plastered if you so wish.
    10theowinthrop

    A Submarine Disaster Situation

    Every now and then we are reminded of the so-called "silent service" - the submarine arm of the navy. It is hard to believe nowadays but active use of submarines in warfare is barely over one century old. There had been three attempts at getting submarines into warfare before the 1880s: in the American Revolution, when Connecticut inventor David Bushnell designed the "Turtle" to attack Admiral Howe's flagship in New York Harbor; when Robert Fulton attempted to interest Napoleon Bonaparte in his submarine as a weapon against the British fleet in 1800; and when the Confederate (and Northern) navies experimented with torpedo boats and submarines - culminating in the success of the C.S.S. Hunley - in the American Civil War. But the real spur was anti-British animus in Irish-American circles in the 1880s, when they financed the researches of John P. Holland. It was his successful submarine that became the model adopted by most navies.

    But that was after 1900, and the early submarines were small and unpleasant and smelly craft (due to the closed space and the gasoline fumes). Disasters occurred frequently enough. It was not until the sinking of three British cruisers on one day in 1914 by U-boat Captain Weddingen that their power became widely realized. The number of maritime fatalities (led by R.M.S. Lusitania) demonstrated how deadly these ships could become. So by the end of the war everyone was improving their submarine fleets.

    But the ships still had major disasters in the 1920s and 1930s. 1939 was a banner year with major French, British, and American sub disasters. But the last one, the U.S.S. Squalus off Portsmouth, New Hampshire, was important for another reason. For one of the few times in modern history, the crew of a disabled submarine was mostly rescued. Diving bells and decompression chambers saved nearly two thirds of Squalus' crew (and the sub was raised, repaired, and recommissioned to be of use in World War II). But Squalus sank very close to land, and the depth was not an impossibly deep one as a result. Still it was quite a rarity to have survivors of a sub sinking. With a normal shipwreck (of a surface vessel) the crew has a chance to use lifeboats, life preservers, floating wreckage, rafts. You can't readily do that if you are underwater to begin with.

    For some reason submarine disaster films have rarely appeared on screen. There were films about submarines (several versions of Jules Verne's TWENTY THOUSAND LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA, for instance), and even of the wartime subs. For instance RUN SILENT, RUN DEEP, and DESTINATION, TOKYO were two. Some misfires also appeared. Charles Laughton appeared as an insanely jealous submarine commander opposite Gary Cooper and Tallulah Bankhead in THE DEVIL AND THE DEEP (he scuttles his own vessel at the end, going down with the ship). But films about actual tragedies never popped up. Except for this British film.

    John Mills is the commander of a submarine out on maneuvers in the British Channel. A mechanical failure causes it to sink. Mills is able to get most of his men out using snorkel breathing apparatus, and shooting them out of the torpedo tube. But he is unable to do it for the last three men in the sub with him: James Hayter, Richard Attenborough, and Nigel Patrick.

    In their situation they have to just wait out official attempts at rescue. But this is based on the amount of oxygen left on board, and how long it will last. Also, it is turning the ship into a huge tomb for them. And Attenborough, who has claustrophobic problems to begin with, is going over the edge. Patrick turns out to have physical problems that if not treated will possibly be fatal. It is not a happy situation.

    It is a gritty little movie, and it has it's moments of unexpected reality. Hayter was not supposed to be on the cruise, but at the last moment he agreed to go in place of a fellow seaman who had to attend an ailing wife. Details like that make one realize what a gamble our daily life experiences can be.

    As a look at a disaster that is normally uncommon (but still possible - remember the Russian tragedy of the "Kursk"), with four good performances in it, I strongly urge catching this film.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Shortly after filming was completed in 1950, the submarine H.M.S. Truculent went down in the River Thames with a heavy loss of life. The incident is referenced in the opening credits, and nearly caused this movie to be withdrawn from distribution.
    • Gaffes
      In the scene where the destroyers are first seen searching for the Trojan, the pennant letters on the side of one of the destroyers are seen in reverse.
    • Citations

      Helen Armstong: Why does the Navy insist on doing everything at the crack of dawn? The sea's there all day.

      Lieutenant Commander Armstrong: It impresses the taxpayers.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Talkies: Remembering Kenneth More: Part Two (2019)

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Operation Disaster?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 18 mai 1950 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Operation Disaster
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Denham Studios, Denham, Buckinghamshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(studio: made at Denham Studios, London, England)
    • Sociétés de production
      • J. Arthur Rank Organisation
      • Jay Lewis Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 42 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Richard Attenborough, Helen Cherry, James Hayter, John Mills, Lana Morris, and Nigel Patrick in La nuit commence à l'aube (1950)
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    By what name was La nuit commence à l'aube (1950) officially released in India in English?
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