It came by Netflix, and I watched it on my Sony flatscreen last night. Lots of dramatic shots of British soldiers in deep doo-doo, bombs falling, tide going out, few to no boats in sight, struggling in the water. Many pitiful scenes of British soldiers standing in line on the sand, (queuing up the British say) waiting for a vessel to take them home. One group takes a stranded fishing trawler out into the Channel. They spend most of their time below decks shouting at each other. I kept wondering why they stayed below, rather than out on deck where they could see where they were going and who was coming after them. Lots of shots of RAF fighters going out at low level. RAF pilots looking and sounding cool as cucumbers under fire.
Although the camera man did things right, turning on the lights before filming, the sound man bungled badly. He never muted the score and the sound effects when characters were speaking. That, combined with modern actor's tendency to mumble their lines, caused a good deal of the dialog get lost. Fortunately there wasn't much dialog. I never caught the stage names of any of the characters, mostly because nobody ever addressed any one else by name. And with the exception of the two teen aged boys aboard the old codger's yacht, nobody had any connections with friends, family, sweethearts, warbuddies, any other human being. There was no protagonist for us audience to rally behind and root for.
The movie never told us that we were watching a turning point in WWII. Hitler could have won the war that day. If der fuhrer had stayed off the telephone and let his best tank general, Heinz Guderian, commander on the scene, do what he wanted to do, the British army (every soldier Britain had) would have been surrounded and taken prisoner of war. Instead, Hitler feared that Guderian's panzers were too far out in front, they might be counter attacked. He ordered Guderian to stop and wait for the bulk of the German infantry, marching on foot, to catch up with him. This delay gave the British time to evacuate. This fact comes right out of Guderian's after-the-war memoir.
Britain nearly gave up the fight that summer. They had been driven out of Norway, driven out of the Low Countries, driven out of France. They had sacked their prime minister and installed Winston Churchill that very week. The entire British establishment, members of parliament, the press, academia, the churches, business men, the entertainment business (we call ours Hollywood, dunno what the Brits called theirs) were against fighting the war. Many of them had fought in the First World War, and they were not going to do that sort of thing, ever again. And Germany had more people, more industry, more advanced science, and looked invincible.
Hitler was offering the Brits a deal, You Brits let me keep all of continental Europe, and I Hitler will let you keep your overseas empire and your Navy. A lot of Brits were ready to take this deal. Not Churchill. Newly installed as prime minister, Churchill had to rally his country. The British rank and file were more tough minded than their establishment. The rank and file didn't want to kowtow to the Nazis, and were willing to fight. They figured they had whipped the Germans twenty years ago and they could do it again. But in June of 1940 everything was in flux. If the Germans had taken the BEF prisoners of war that would have been a tremendous downer to all of England. As it turned out, the Brits got nearly every man, 350,000 or so, off the Dunkirk beaches and safely home. That did a lot to steady things down and build support for Churchill.
If the evacuation had failed, Churchill might have been turned out of office (he had a lot of old enemies going back forty years) and Britain might have signed a deal with Hitler. Which would have made launching the D-Day invasion from Britain impossible, and deprived USAF of bases from which to bomb Germany.
No comments:
Post a Comment