Went the Day Well?
Went the day well? We died and never knew. But, well or ill, freedom we died for you.
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Went the Day Well?
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DVD Details
- Rated: Not Rated
- Run Time: 1 hours, 28 minutes
- Video: Black & White
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: July 9, 2015
- Originally Released: 1942
- Label: Reel Vault
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Leslie Banks, Elizabeth Allan & Mervyn Johns | |
Performer: | Basil Sydney, Frank Lawton, Valerie Taylor, David Farrar, Marie Lohr, Harry Fowler, Thora Hird, Edward Rigby & C.V. France | |
Directed by | Alberto Cavalcanti | |
Edited by | Sidney Cole | |
Screenplay by | John Dighton, Diana Morgan & Angus MacPhail | |
Original story by | Graham Greene | |
Composition by | William Walton | |
Produced by | Michael Balcon | |
Director of Photography: | Wilkie Cooper |
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: 5/5 --
Home-front propaganda has rarely seemed so cutthroat or so cunning; for Americans, the chance to see this rarity is an opportunity to indulge in the sort of cinematic ecstasy that makes us obsessed with movies in the first place.
Full Review
Time Out
To look down on the blatant propagandizing of Went the Day Well? is pointless insofar as it disallows the possibility of learning from it, but it's nevertheless difficult to not take certain elements of the film with a grain of salt.
Full Review
Not Coming to a Theater Near You
Rating: 3.5 --
A sickeningly giddy action thriller that looks forward to Straw Dogs, Inglorious Basterds, and Red Dawn.
Full Review
Slant Magazine
Graham Greene has written a good story but the scripting is indifferent, banal at times, and the direction lacks cohesion.
Full Review
Monthly Film Bulletin
WENT THE DAY WELL' is the innocent-sounding title of one of the most subversive films to come out of World War II, a British drama that was unsettling in its day and is even more so now.
Los Angeles Times
Rating: 5/5 --
Still truly unnerving, one can only imagine how terrifying it must have been for audiences facing the very real threat of Nazi enslavement.
Full Review
Time Out
Rating: 3/4 --
The summer's first all-around audience-pleaser arrives this week after 70 years in hibernation.
Full Review
Film-Forward.com
Product Description:
Made in 1942, when the possibility of a German land invasion of Britain seemed all to real to the citizens of England, WENT THE DAY WELL' was originally intended as a propaganda film. Being superbly made, however, it has managed to maintain its power in the interceding years. A group of soldiers arrives in a small British town with orders to be interred there for a period. The townspeople are happy to have them, until they discover that the soldiers are in fact German spies. With no help in sight, the people find that they themselves will have to fight back against the Germans. WENT THE DAY WELL' transcended its wartime propaganda purposes to become a classic of British film.
Product Description:
During WWII, British villagers hospitably receive a platoon of soldiers who will be billeted with them. But as it turns out, they're actually German paratroopers who hold the village hostage. Produced by Michael Balcon. Written by John Dighton and Angus M
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Product Info
- Sales Rank: 8,183
- UPC: 644827112722
- Shipping Weight: 0.18/lbs (approx)
- International Shipping: 1 item