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Doreen Montgomery

Bill Nighy, Gemma Arterton, and Sam Claflin in Une belle rencontre (2016)
Lone Scherfig’s ‘Their Finest’ Profiles the Death-Defying Female Filmmakers of WWII
Bill Nighy, Gemma Arterton, and Sam Claflin in Une belle rencontre (2016)
Lone Scherfig’s “Their Finest” isn’t a biopic, but that doesn’t mean the World War II-set romantic drama isn’t true.

Adapted by Gabby Chiappe from Lissa Evans’ novel, “Their Finest Hour and a Half,” Scherfig’s latest period piece traces a fictionalized heroine as she changes the face of England’s propaganda-film machine in the waning days of World War II. Catrin Cole (Gemma Arterton) isn’t a big dreamer — in war-torn London, no one is — but when she’s drafted into writing feel-good scripts for the Ministry of Information, she unexpectedly finds her calling.

“There were female scriptwriters at the time, but they weren’t credited,” Scherfig said. “They did write a lot, and the character is very loosely based on one of those.”

Scherfig, known for her early Dogme features and her breakout “An Education,” saw herself in both Catrin and in the character’s new and weird professional world.
See full article at Indiewire
  • 4/7/2017
  • by Kate Erbland
  • Indiewire
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