Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1957


The One That Got Away (1957 film)

Buy The One That Got Away (1957 film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'The One That Got Away' is a 1957 Second World War film starring Hardy Krger and featuring Michael Goodliffe, Jack Gwillim and Alec McCowen. The film was directed by Roy Ward Baker with a screenplay written by Howard Clewes, based on the 1956 book of the same name by Kendal Burt and James Leasor.

The film chronicles the true exploits of Oberleutnant Franz von Werra, a Luftwaffe pilot shot down over Britain in 1940. He initially tried to escape while captive in England, but was later successful during transfer to a Canadian POW camp.Erickson, Hal. [https://web.archive.org/web/20071119135812/http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/36442/The-One-That-Got-Away/overview "The One That Got Away (1957)."] 'The New York Times.' Retrieved: 6 May 2012. Von Werra was the only Axis POW to succeed in escaping and make it home during the war.

Plot



Luftwaffe fighter pilot Franz von Werra is shot down during the Battle of Britain and captured. At the POW reception centre, he wagers with his RAF interrogator that he will escape within six months.

Initially, von Werra is sent to No 1 prisoner-of-war camp Grizedale Hall in the Furness area of Lancashire. During a group walk, he drops over a wall he is lying on and escapes into the hills. It takes an intense manhunt by troops and police to recapture him.

Subsequently, von Werra is sent to a more secure POW camp (based on the Hayes Conference Centre) near Swanwick, Derbyshire. During a German air raid, he and four others escape through a tunnel. The others pair up, but von Werra goes it alone. Reaching Codnor Park railway station, he impersonates a Dutch pilot and claims his Wellington bomber had crashed while on a secret mission. The station master telephones the police to take him to the nearest airfield, RAF Hucknall. Von Werra tricks the RAF duty officer into sending a car. The police arrive first, but with much bravado he delays them until the RAF car arrives. He gets to the airfield and spots a Hawker Hurricane. When his story starts to fray, von Werra creeps away and tries to steal an experimental Hawker Hurricane, getting as far as sitting in it and starting the engine before being caught.

Along with many other POWs, von Werra is then sent by ship to Canada, arriving at Halifax, Nova Scotia. On the train ride across the country, while the guards are distracted, he escapes near Smiths Falls, Ontario, by jumping from a window. Making his way south hitching rides, von Werra finds the St. Lawrence River not as frozen solid as he has been led to believe, He then steals a rowing boat and pushes it over the ice until he reaches the free-flowing section. He reaches the still-neutral United States almost frozen to death.

Back in the United Kingdom the RAF interrogator receives a postcard from von Werra, featuring a photograph of the Statue of Liberty, informing him that he has lost his bet.

The epilogue states:



Despite the efforts of the Canadian Government to obtain his return, and of the United States Authorities to hold him, Von Werra crossed the border into Mexico. Travelling by way of Peru, Bolivia, Brazil and Spain, he reached Berlin on 18 April 1941.

On October 25th of the same year, while on patrol, his plane was seen to dive into the sea. No trace of Von Werra was found.



Cast



*Hardy Krger as Franz von Werra

*Michael Goodliffe as RAF Interrogator

*Colin Gordon as Army Interrogator

*Alec McCowen as duty officer, Hucknall

*Terence Alexander as RAF intelligence officer

*Jack Gwillim as Commandant, Grizedale

*Andrew Faulds as Lieutenant, Grizedale

*Julian Somers as booking clerk

*Harry Lockart as German prisoner

*Robert Crewdson as German prisoner

*George Mikell as German prisoner

*George Roubicek as German prisoner

*John Van Eyssen as German prisoner

*Frederick Jaeger as German prisoner

*Richard Marner as German prisoner

*Paul Hansard as German prisoner

*Edward Cast as duty driver, Hucknall (uncredited)

*Cyril Chamberlain as Sergeant 'Later' (uncredited)

*Reed De Rouen as Canadian truck driver (uncredited)

*Michael Golden as First detective (uncredited)

*Glyn Houston as Harry, the aircraft fitter working on the Hurricane fighter (uncredited)

*Stratford Johns as Second detective (uncredited)

*Charles Morgan as Workshop manager, Hucknall (uncredited)

*Al Mulock as American patrolman at Ogdensburg (uncredited)

*Michael Ripper as Corporal of group with cook (uncredited)

*Anthony Sagar as Cook who captures von Werra in Kent (uncredited)

*Norman Rossington as Sergeant, Swanwick (uncredited)

*Ben Williams as Policeman, Hucknall (uncredited)

*Frank Williams as Station porter (uncredited)

Production



Kenneth More says he was approached to play the lead role but turned it down as he had just played another real-life POW, Douglas Bader in 'Reach for the Sky' (1956).More 1978, p. 171. John Davis, head of the Rank organisation, wanted Dirk Bogarde. Director Roy Baker insisted on a German.[https://books.google.com.au/books?id=UyYTDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA386&lpg=PA386&dq=vincent+porter+sue+harper&source=bl&ots=978Q3rMq7B&sig=R2UhMp6T53KbfjIFniBqZYP0amw&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjLzJmegsPMAhUB_2MKHZcZDfEQ6AEIQzAI#v=onepage&q&f=false 'British Cinema of the 1950s: The Decline of Deference' by Sue Harper, Vincent Porter Oxford University Press, 2003 p 47] O.W. Fischer was reportedly considered for the lead, then disregarded as he was too old. Rank's overseas distribution manager then suggested Hardy Krger."The most explosive object to hit Britain since the V2!": The British Films of Hardy Krger and Anglo-German Relations during the 1950s Williams, Melanie. Cinema Journal46.1 (Fall 2006): 85-107

A Messerschmitt Bf 109 and Hawker Hurricane were featured in the production.

,[https://www.flightradar24.com/data/aircraft/lf363 "FlightRadar24"] Retrieved: 31 August 2022 the Hawker Hurricane IIc (serial number LF363) is still in existence, flying with the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight.[http://www.raf.mod.uk/bbmf/theaircraft/hurricanelf363.cfm "Hurricane LF363 (Mk IIc)."] 'RAF BBMF.' Retrieved: 12 July 2012.

Reception



'The One That Got Away' was generally well received by audiences and critics; Howard H. Thompson of 'The New York Times' noted its "... restrained, well-knit scenario."Thompson, Howard H. [https://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9F02E0DC1E39EF3BBC4B51DFB2668383649EDE "The One That Got Away (1957): Escape Drama Opens."] 'The New York Times,' 23 April 1958.

The film was popular in Britain and did extremely well in West Germany, making over 3 million. It made a comfortable profit.

This prompted producer Julian Wintle to form his own production company and he made two films with German protagonists, 'Bachelor of Hearts' (also starring Krger) and 'Tiger Bay'.

See also



* List of British films of 1957

References



Citations



Bibliography



* Evans, Alun. 'Brassey's Guide to War Films'. Dulles, Virginia: Potomac Books, 2000. .

* More, Kenneth. 'More or Less'. London: Hodder & Staughton, 1978. .


Buy The One That Got Away (1957 film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1957



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1108312247.