Warn That Man
Warn That Man is a 1943 British comedy thriller film directed by Lawrence Huntington and starring Gordon Harker, Raymond Lovell and Finlay Currie.[1]
Warn That Man | |
---|---|
Directed by | Lawrence Huntington |
Written by | Lawrence Huntington Vernon Sylvaine |
Based on | Warn That Man! by Vernon Sylvaine |
Produced by | Warwick Ward |
Starring | Gordon Harker Raymond Lovell Jean Kent Finlay Currie |
Cinematography | Günther Krampf |
Edited by | Flora Newton |
Music by | Charles Williams |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Pathé Pictures |
Release date | 13 July 1943 |
Running time | 82 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
It was based on the 1941 play Warn That Man! by Vernon Sylvaine which had run for ten months on the West End stage, with Harker reprising his original role. The film was made at Welwyn Studios, with sets designed by the art director Charles Gilbert.
The plot is noted for the similarity of the later The Eagle Has Landed which also concerns a plot to kidnap Winston Churchill from rural England.
Premise
At a country house during the Second World War, a German actor, who looks uncannily like a British peer, takes his place as part of a German attempt to kidnap the Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, when he visits the estate. Unfortunately for their plans, the niece of the peer arrives unannounced, along with her RAF pilot fiance, and two of his new friends, who had rescued him at sea when he was shot down.
Cast
- Gordon Harker as George Hawkins
- Raymond Lovell as Hausemann / Lord Buckley
- Finlay Currie as Captain Andrew Fletcher
- Philip Friend as John Cooper
- Jean Kent as Frances Lane
- Frederick Cooper as Charles / Frampton
- Carl Jaffe as Schultz
- John Salew as Wilson
- Veronica Rose as Miss Conway
- Anthony Hawtrey as Brent
- Anthony Holles as Waiter
- Patrick Aherne as Mellows
- Frank Bagnall as Lehmann
- Ferdy Mayne as German Radio Operator
- Friedrich Richter as Wolheim
- Leonard Sharp as Miles
References
- "Warn That Man". British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 1 June 2014.
Bibliography
- Fox, Jo. Film Propaganda in Britain and Nazi Germany: World War II Cinema. Bloomsbury Academic, 2007.