Añade un argumento en tu idiomaJaap van Leyden (Sir Ralph Richardson) is in charge of a shipyard in newly occupied Holland. At first he collaborates with the Germans because it is the easiest course to follow. Later, a ch... Leer todoJaap van Leyden (Sir Ralph Richardson) is in charge of a shipyard in newly occupied Holland. At first he collaborates with the Germans because it is the easiest course to follow. Later, a child's rhyme reminds him of his patriotic duty, but how best to resist the Germans without ... Leer todoJaap van Leyden (Sir Ralph Richardson) is in charge of a shipyard in newly occupied Holland. At first he collaborates with the Germans because it is the easiest course to follow. Later, a child's rhyme reminds him of his patriotic duty, but how best to resist the Germans without endangering his wife and fellow workers?
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 2 premios en total
- Captain of the U-boat
- (as Lieut. Schouwenaar R.N.N.)
- Lieutenant of the U-boat
- (as Lieut. van Dapperen R.N.N.)
Reseñas destacadas
Set in Holland in a small shipbuilding town now controlled by the Nazis it is a tale of double intrigue and heroism that is surprisingly watchable. The tale of the shipyard owner (Ralph Richardson) who is friendly to the Nazis by day and a hero of another mettle by night is nicely done. What makes this work is the human aspects are not swept to one side but are tackled too.
Ralph Richardson may never had the matinée idol looks of an Oliver but he makes a very good and quite unassuming impact here, there is both suspense, adventure, and wry humour - this film is memorable and the courage is more than propaganda. Richardson always did sneak up on you and here he does so well.
All in heartily recommended.
First of all, the identity of Piet Hein is obvious from the very beginning but this is not to the detriment of the film. Just the opposite. It is necessary for the audience to know who he is in order for the film to work. The main cast – Richardson and Withers - are good and that includes young Willem Ackerman. I don't normally like kids in films but he plays his part well. However, at the opposite end of the spectrum, Bobby Davro turns up to play a comedy Gestapo officer with scrunched up face, woeful accent and typical comedy shouty Nazi attitude, He is dreadful! The film loses a mark for his performance given that he has so much screen time. Davro should just stick to performing bellyflops as he is most recently famous for.
The story doesn't rush things but this adds to the sentimentality of the proceedings at the film's end when the idea of human sacrifice comes into play. It's a sad end that is aimed to rally the audience to support the war effort and be brave. The film is told in flashback by Withers as she reads a diary and it is a good mechanism to unravel the story.
The cinematography adopts a utilitarian style, frequently relying on shadow-filled interiors and subdued key lighting to suggest both psychological claustrophobia and the literal darkness under occupation. There is an intentional rigidity to the camera work, avoiding expressive movement in favor of composed, stable framings that mirror the protagonist's need for outward calm and inner calculation. It's in the deliberate absence of kinetic visuals that the film finds its unique tension-an effect enhanced by the sharply defined contrasts, often pushing the image toward high chiaroscuro in moments of moral reckoning. While the visual palette is limited, it is not careless; compositions are controlled, and the lack of visual flourish speaks to a kind of narrative discipline appropriate to the film's thematic core.
Sound design is equally measured, almost ascetic in its restraint. Ambient noise is sparse, reinforcing a sense of social vacuum and isolation under enemy control. The score, used with surgical precision, supports the drama without overwhelming it-a notable difference from the emotionally insistent cues found in many contemporary British productions of the same era. It avoids the overt sentimentalism one might expect, which lends it a psychological gravitas uncommon in wartime films primarily designed as morale boosters.
What elevates this film is its central performance, which avoids the typical binary of stoic heroism versus villainous excess. Instead, the lead exudes a kind of moral weariness beneath his calculated composure. His portrayal suggests not just bravery, but the loneliness of acting without visible allies-a subtle register that adds complexity to what might have been a propagandistic cipher. His adversaries, too, are rendered with an unexpectedly measured approach. There is no cartoonish villainy here, but rather a cold, procedural menace that is all the more chilling for its restraint. Secondary characters serve more as ideological functions than psychological portraits, but even within those limits, they are performed with conviction and clarity.
The influence of other wartime thrillers of the period is noticeable, particularly in the way ideological symbols are dramatized on screen. One moment in particular-in which a collaborator is publicly marked with a stark, accusatory letter-calls to mind Hangmen Also Die! (1943), then being produced in Hollywood under the direction of Fritz Lang. While the narrative frameworks differ, both films share a stylized depiction of occupied Europe filled with theatrical, almost ritualized acts of resistance. Given Lang's standing and his admiration among British filmmakers, the visual and thematic parallels are unlikely to be accidental. The gesture toward symbolic justice through visual branding aligns the film, at least momentarily, with the heightened moral stylization characteristic of Lang's exile-period cinema.
One of the film's more intriguing qualities is its tonal ambiguity. Although clearly intended as a work of wartime propaganda, it resists the urge to indulge in triumphalist tropes. Instead, it leans into doubt, portraying resistance not as glorious defiance but as a quiet, grinding calculus of risk. In this respect, it bears comparison to Went the Day Well? (1942), though where that film embraces moments of pastoral disruption and community awakening, this one chooses a more singular, introspective path. Its closest cousin in tone and subject matter might be Tomorrow We Live (1943), another sabotage narrative that leans into the morally gray choices forced upon occupied citizens. Yet this film is far more stripped-down in both style and scope, resisting even the melodramatic flourishes found in Uncensored (1942), which, while thematically similar, ultimately offers a far more conventional arc of resistance and victory.
This stylistic minimalism is in part dictated by the film's production context. The war had entered a new phase in 1943-Allied confidence was growing after El Alamein and Stalingrad, but victory was far from guaranteed. British wartime cinema of this period reflects this dual consciousness: a desire to affirm resistance, but also to reckon with the cost and moral strain of sustained defiance. This film does not offer hope as spectacle; it offers determination as quiet inevitability. It reflects the home front's psychological atmosphere more than any specific battlefield-a subtle nod to the micro-history of war, to the unrecorded acts of sabotage and moral decision-making that take place not in barracks or trenches, but in backrooms and dockyards.
There are, of course, limitations. The film's pacing-so carefully deliberate-occasionally drags under the weight of its own solemnity. In its commitment to understatement, it sometimes lapses into emotional monotony. Secondary characters, while competently portrayed, rarely escape the functional flatness of allegory, serving more as symbols than people. And its refusal to indulge in spectacle may leave viewers yearning for a more visceral representation of the stakes involved. Yet, within the framework it sets for itself, it remains remarkably coherent. The film draws its tension not from the scale of action, but from the gravity of quiet defiance-a slow-burning atmosphere that finds its power in understatement, and in doing so, it captures a form of wartime experience that is rarely dramatized with such internal precision.
The film begins with the capitulation of the Dutch when they were invaded by the Germans in 1940. At that time, the head of a local Dutch shipyard, Jaap van Leyden (Ralph Richardson), was asked by the Nazis to re-open the yard and begin building ships for the Axis. Van Leyden realizes he really has no choice--the Nazis WILL begin building ships there. So, he agrees to run the shipyard for the Nazis and is outwardly a real Hitler-lover. However, his real plan is to use his position to vandalize the ships. But, because EVERYONE (including his own family) believes he's a collaborator, his life is very difficult. What acts of sabotage will this 'Pieter Heyn' perpetrate? See the film.
I like the quiet nature of this movie. It is very patriotic but only at the end did it go overboard to sentimentality and ultra-patriotism. Up until then, it was a solid thriller and seemed very realistic. The end was good but his letter and the things leading up to it went on a bit too long--though this was the style during WWII--to make everything obvious and rousing. Had the ending been a bit more subdued, I think it would have aged a bit better. Still, Richardson and the rest were wonderful and the film kept my interest from start to finish.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesEsmond Knight, who had lost an eye during the war, had not yet regained the use of his remaining eye when he played the role of von Schiffer. Playing his part completely blind, there is only one scene when the audience can guess Knight's disability. It occurs quite briefly when Knight, about to go through a doorway, is gently steered through the door by a fellow actor.
- Citas
Jaap van Leyden: The truth is that a Nation will only live as long as it has people ready to die.
[spoken and diary entry]
- Créditos adicionalesOpening credits prologue: "I know death hath ten thousand several doors
For men to take their exits".
- Banda sonoraPiet Hein's Name Is Short
(uncredited)
Lyrics by Jan Pieter Heije
English Lyrics by Tommie Connor
Music by Johannes Viotta
Arranged by Allan Gray
Sung by the teacher and the students in the school
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Srebrna flota
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Cammell Laird Shipyard, Birkenhead, Merseyside, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Van Leyden's shipyard)
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración1 hora 28 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1