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Riposte à Narvik

Original title: The Day Will Dawn
  • 1942
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
643
YOUR RATING
Deborah Kerr, Griffith Jones, Ralph Richardson, and Hugh Williams in Riposte à Narvik (1942)
DramaWar

A British journalist working in Norway during WWII finds himself hunted by the Germans when he's tasked with a secret combat mission, while the daughter of a Norwegian sea captain helps the ... Read allA British journalist working in Norway during WWII finds himself hunted by the Germans when he's tasked with a secret combat mission, while the daughter of a Norwegian sea captain helps the Brits combat the Nazi menace.A British journalist working in Norway during WWII finds himself hunted by the Germans when he's tasked with a secret combat mission, while the daughter of a Norwegian sea captain helps the Brits combat the Nazi menace.

  • Director
    • Harold French
  • Writers
    • Frank Owen
    • Terence Rattigan
    • Anatole de Grunwald
  • Stars
    • Hugh Williams
    • Griffith Jones
    • Deborah Kerr
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    643
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Harold French
    • Writers
      • Frank Owen
      • Terence Rattigan
      • Anatole de Grunwald
    • Stars
      • Hugh Williams
      • Griffith Jones
      • Deborah Kerr
    • 17User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos2

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    Top cast82

    Edit
    Hugh Williams
    Hugh Williams
    • Colin Metcalfe
    Griffith Jones
    Griffith Jones
    • Police Inspector Gunter
    • (as Griffiths Jones)
    Deborah Kerr
    Deborah Kerr
    • Kari Alstad
    Ralph Richardson
    Ralph Richardson
    • Frank Lockwood
    Francis L. Sullivan
    Francis L. Sullivan
    • Kommandant Ulrich Wettau
    Roland Culver
    Roland Culver
    • Cmdr. Pittwaters
    Finlay Currie
    Finlay Currie
    • Capt. Alstad
    Niall MacGinnis
    Niall MacGinnis
    • Olaf
    Elizabeth Mann
    • Gerda
    Raymond Huntley
    Raymond Huntley
    • Norwegian Under Secretary (scenes deleted)
    Patricia Medina
    Patricia Medina
    • Ingrid
    Roland Pertwee
    Roland Pertwee
    • Capt. Waverley - Naval Intelligence
    Henry Oscar
    Henry Oscar
    • Newspaper Editor
    David Horne
    David Horne
    • Evans, Foreign Editor
    Henry Hewitt
    • Jack, News Editor
    John Warwick
    John Warwick
    • Milligan, Reporter in Fleet Street Pub
    Brefni O'Rorke
    Brefni O'Rorke
    • Political Journalist
    Bernard Miles
    Bernard Miles
    • McAllister (Irish Soldier)
    • Director
      • Harold French
    • Writers
      • Frank Owen
      • Terence Rattigan
      • Anatole de Grunwald
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    6.1643
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    Featured reviews

    6calvertfan

    A fine performance from a very young Deborah Kerr

    I found the best scenes in this movie to be the ones in which Deborah Kerr was acting. And I'm not even a fan of hers (or I wasn't, before this!) so that must say something about her...it was only about her 5th or 6th role, she was very young, yet she was perfect for the role. The rest of the movie traveled along fairly slowly, but luckily had a few exciting war time scenes, and an outstanding, terrifying, climax. Good for a rainy day, and don't give up on it. 7/10.
    6ksf-2

    wartime flick with the usual patriotic messages

    Called the day will dawn in europe, but the avengers in canada and the united states. It's a brit film. Reporter colin metcalfe (hugh williams) is assigned to the european beat, after hitler moves into poland. When the germans sink his boat on the way to norway, no one seems to believe him. But he does fall for kari (young deborah kerr, in an early role), the captain's daughter. And as the german ships come into the harbor, pretending to be merchant ships, colin is abducted and held prisoner by the germans. Will metcalfe ever get to tell what he knows? Will his stories make a difference? The script is peppered with patriotic messages. A call to take action, avoiding neutrality, as hitler moves into more euro countries. Acc to imdb, this was released in the united kingdom in june 1942, so both britain and the united states were already actively in the war by then. This seems to start the story from earlier, before britain was involved in action. Directed by harold french. According to wikipedia dot org, french lost his own wife in a bombing raid in 1941. Produced by general films, and distributed in the united states by paramount. It's a little disjointed, but does show the chronology of events in europe.
    8clanciai

    Norwegian Deborah Kerr getting mixed up with a local Quisling and an English spy

    We have seen this before, the freedom fighters of Norway under Nazi occupation, their hardship, their courage, their determination, their heroism and so on, and if this film at least is better than "The Moon Is Down" on the same theme, it's not up to Errol Flynn's "The Edge of Darkness". The one outstanding asset of this film though is the leading lady, a very young Deborah Kerr, who in a way sustains the whole movie. In the beginning she is just a very cheerful and happy Norwegian lass, but when the Germans come to build an oil refinery, which turns out to be a submarine base, the Norwegians get into trouble, and in order to save her father's life (Finlay Currie) Deborah has to marry the local Quisling, the local police, whom the Norwegians don't know at first that he is collaborating with the Germans (Francis L. Sullivan, awesome as usual.) When Hugh Williams as an English spy learns this on his second coming, he fell in love with Deborah during the first, he is not very happy.

    It's a very typical British edifying war film from the very darkest year 1942 and sides with many others of the same kind, outdated today, but still interesting for their great moral enthusiasm about surviving and fighting tyranny.
    7lorenellroy

    British World War 2 flag waver

    This movie is markedly more propagandist in tone than most movies made in the UK about the war while it was still in progress.It more closely resembles the overtly patriotic US pictures from the same era such as Guadalcanal Diary or Back To Bataan .It does not neglect to pay a merited tribute to the Norwegian people for their resistance either.

    Hugh Williams plays Colin Metcalfe ,a London journalist sent by his paper to Norway , soon to be conquered by the Nazis .He falls in love with Kari Alstead (Deborah Kerr)the daughter of a local fisherman(Finlay Currie).He returns to London after a short posting to Norway where he witnesses a Nazi submarine in operation .He is sent back to the country by Naval Intelligence to help the Royal Navy pinpoint the exact location of the U-Boat base from which crippling attacks are being launched on allied vessels .In the time he was away Kari has been forced to enter into an engagement with the Quisling police chief Gunther(Griffith Moore)in order to protect her father from arrest by the local Nazi chief (Francis L Sullivan).He is able to engineer a raid which is in turn followed by brutal Nazi repression The movie gives a good picture of life under the jackboot and is well acted -although for all her talent Deborah Kerr is not ideal casting as a Norwegian fisherwoman .Ralph Richardson impresses as a journalist and Roland Culver is good as Naval Intelligence man Rousing and patriotic, the movie ends with a typically robust Churchillian sentiment that still stirs the blood and it is good to see British cinema indulging in patriotism rather than restraint for once
    5Maverick1962

    WW2 propaganda could have been better.

    Hugh Williams plays a reporter dropped into Norway to find a U-boat dock that is sending out convoys to destroy British ships. His job is to find it and report back so that our navy can destroy it. He meets and falls in love with beautiful twenty one year old Deborah Kerr, a Norwegian.

    Various other well known faces from that era of British film making crop up including Finlay Currie as Kerr's father, Francis L. Sullivan as a brutal Nazi officer, Griffith Jones as a German police chief, the great Ralph Richardson as another reporter, Roland Culver as a British navy bigwig, even Bernard Miles in a small role towards the end.

    Much of the film is shot in the dark, which can be a bit boring as I couldn't see a lot of what was going on, but maybe that was to cover up some of the cheap sets used. I don't think much money was spent on this production so probably best to think of it as a play rather than a film.

    Our hero, Hugh Williams is stiff as a board but fortunately he's completely out acted by our leading lady and it is not hard to see why Kerr became one of the great star actresses of the cinema.

    One gripe is that I would have given a higher rating had the actor's accents been more consistent. Some like Kerr and other Norwegians, at least speak in broken English, which I think gives an impression of being foreign but for some annoying reason, Francis L. Sullivan, who is fine otherwise as the nasty German officer, speaks in perfect English with no attempt to disguise his voice at all. That rather spoilt the film for me as other Germans also just spoke in English with no accent.

    One scene towards the end is particularly harrowing so still worth a watch, and to see Deborah Kerr of course near the start of her brilliant career.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The shot of the wooden building being blown up towards the end was from one of the British Commando raids on the Norwegian coast. These were usually to attack things like fish-oil processing plants. Various other extracts from newsreels or other reality footage were inserted into this film at various points.
    • Goofs
      Metcalf takes off in a Wellington aircraft and parachutes from a Whitley.
    • Quotes

      Milligan, Reporter in Fleet Street Pub: This is the man in the street, Frank, the average man. And he's asking you a question the average man in the street wants answering. World war over Danzig?

      "Man-in-the-Street" in Fleet Street Pub: That's right. As you say, Danzig's only a small place.

      Frank Lockwood: So was Thermopylae. And Verdun. And Madrid. All very small places. Big enough to bury the people that hadn't the guts to fight for them. Did you ever hear Hitler laugh?

      [Man shakes head]

      Frank Lockwood: I did. I was in Vienna when he entered the city in triumph. "Providence has sent me here to save you," he bellowed to the mob of his followers. "And Heaven help all those that have been against me." And then he laughed. It's a kind of mad laugh. And they all laughed too, in the same way. They were baying for blood. Hitler was giving it to them. We're in this for our own sweet selves. If we want to save our skins we've got to fight.

    • Crazy credits
      Postscript on screen: "In a dozen famous ancient states, now prostrate under the Nazi yoke, the masses of the people, all classes and creeds, await the hour of liberation, when they, too, will be able once again to play their part and strike their blows like men. That hour will strike, and its solemn peal will proclaim that the night is past and that the dawn has come."

      The PRIME MINISTER In the SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES 26 · 12 · 1941
    • Soundtracks
      Rule Brittania
      (uncredited)

      Lyrics by James Thomson

      Music by Thomas Augustine Arne

      Sung in bar in Norway

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 16, 1948 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • The Avengers
    • Filming locations
      • D&P Studios, Denham, Uxbridge, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(studio: made at D&P Studios England)
    • Production company
      • Paul Soskin Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 38 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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