En 1941, en tiempos de guerra en el Reino Unido, dos hermanos irlandeses que trabajan para el IRA se enfrentan a los métodos despiadados de su líder local.En 1941, en tiempos de guerra en el Reino Unido, dos hermanos irlandeses que trabajan para el IRA se enfrentan a los métodos despiadados de su líder local.En 1941, en tiempos de guerra en el Reino Unido, dos hermanos irlandeses que trabajan para el IRA se enfrentan a los métodos despiadados de su líder local.
Fotos
Jack MacGowran
- Patsy McGuire
- (as Jack McGowran)
Terence Alexander
- Ship's Officer
- (sin créditos)
Harry Brogan
- Barney
- (sin créditos)
Edward Byrne
- Ambulance Attendant
- (sin créditos)
Patric Doonan
- Sentry
- (sin créditos)
Stephen Dunne
- Brennan
- (sin créditos)
Harry Hutchinson
- Bill - Detective
- (sin créditos)
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaEddie Byrne, Michael Golden, and E.J. Kennedy had also featured in a 1950 television play in different roles.
- ErroresThe car which is used to escape after the shootout with the prison vehicle has different number plates front and back. DZ 7563 on the front and ZC 6034 on the rear.It has the DZ plate when the arrives at the scene. DZ would be a Co Antrim registration, ZC would be Dublin.
It appears that two different cars were used as the Northern car also has an extra spotlight on the front and no padlock on the wiper.
- Créditos curiososOpening credits prologue: NORTHERN IRELAND 1941
- ConexionesFeatured in Century of Cinema: Ourselves Alone? (1995)
- Bandas sonorasMoonshiner
(uncredited)
Traditional
Arranged by Delia Murphy
Opinión destacada
As fate would have it, I bought a low price DVD with this movie shortly before the bomb attacks on the London underground on July 7th, 2005. I suppose the story is based on real facts. Members of the IRA planted bombs in London's underground system during WW II. This is what happens in the first part of this movie anyway, and an amazing amount of footage seems to have been shot on real locations. Dirk Bogarde plays the young Irishman who deposits the suitcase with the time bomb on a station platform full with families and children who are bedding down for a night during the Blitz, John Mills is his older brother, also a member of the terrorist gang but beset by moral qualms. He follows the Bogarde character and manages to throw the bomb into the tunnel just before it explodes.
Basically this is a story about the questioning of causes and of the justification of terrorist acts, specially in relation to the situation in Northern Ireland. In this aspect it is not unlike Carol Reed's Odd Man Out, made a few years earlier. The main character takes a critical view of the actions of the terrorists who in turn suspect him of being a traitor (not without reason). The action soon moves to an isolated road house on the Green Island, the base of the gang, and the point is clearly made, that all the actions of the terrorist are senseless and just cause harm to many innocent people without achieving anything but generating more suffering and hate.
What is really interesting for a viewer of our days about this movie is how the issue of terrorism is treated. The terrorists are basically presented as misguided dimwits who will never be able to shake the system. Compared with how terrorism is regarded today this treatment struck me as being a very mild and strangely relaxed view of people ready to commit atrocities. But then I came to understand that even terrorism and its impact have to be relativised. Compared with the surface bombings by German planes during the Blitz (a memory certainly still very fresh in 1952), the damages caused by a group of terrorists must have seemed very limited indeed.
Basically this is a story about the questioning of causes and of the justification of terrorist acts, specially in relation to the situation in Northern Ireland. In this aspect it is not unlike Carol Reed's Odd Man Out, made a few years earlier. The main character takes a critical view of the actions of the terrorists who in turn suspect him of being a traitor (not without reason). The action soon moves to an isolated road house on the Green Island, the base of the gang, and the point is clearly made, that all the actions of the terrorist are senseless and just cause harm to many innocent people without achieving anything but generating more suffering and hate.
What is really interesting for a viewer of our days about this movie is how the issue of terrorism is treated. The terrorists are basically presented as misguided dimwits who will never be able to shake the system. Compared with how terrorism is regarded today this treatment struck me as being a very mild and strangely relaxed view of people ready to commit atrocities. But then I came to understand that even terrorism and its impact have to be relativised. Compared with the surface bombings by German planes during the Blitz (a memory certainly still very fresh in 1952), the damages caused by a group of terrorists must have seemed very limited indeed.
- manuel-pestalozzi
- 6 dic 2005
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Bombe im U-Bahn-Schacht
- Locaciones de filmación
- Ealing Studios, Ealing, Londres, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(studio: made at Ealing Studios, London, England.)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 26 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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Principales brechas de datos
By what name was The Gentle Gunman (1952) officially released in India in English?
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