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词条 Albert R.N.
释义

  1. Plot

  2. Cast

  3. Historical background

  4. Production

  5. Release

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2016}}{{Use British English|date=June 2016}}{{Infobox film
| name = Albert R.N.
| image = Albertrn.jpg
| caption = Theatrical release poster
| director = Lewis Gilbert
| writer = Vernon Harris
Guy Morgan
| based on = play by Guy Morgan and Edward Sammis
| starring = Jack Warner
Anthony Steel
Robert Beatty
| producer = Daniel M. Angel
| editing = Charles Hasse
| music = Malcolm Arnold
| cinematography = Jack Asher
| distributor = Eros Films
| released = 1953
| country = United Kingdom
| budget = ₤80,000[1]
| runtime = 88 minutes
| language = English
}}

Albert R.N. is a 1953 British war film directed by Lewis Gilbert and starring Jack Warner, Anthony Steel and Robert Beatty.

Plot

The escape tunnel for the Allied prisoners at a German prisoner-of-war camp for naval officers is discovered.

Lieutenant Ainsworth devises a scheme with the escape committee to use a disassembled mannequin named Albert to convince the Germans that all prisoners sent outside the camp for a bathhouse wash up are returned to the camp. A piece of Albert is smuggled with the prisoners going to the bathhouse and reassembled for the return. Ainsworth also has a woman pen pal he has never seen; he plans to marry her once he is free. Though the originator has the right to try out his own idea, Ainsworth insists that his hut mates draw cards for the privilege; Erickson wins and gets away.

After waiting a while, they decide to reuse the ploy. This time, Ainsworth's friend, after hearing that his pen pal has not written in a while, sees to it that the draw is rigged so that he wins. Ainsworth, however, auctions off his place, only to have Captain Maddox, the senior prisoner of war, order him to go. Ainsworth is recaptured the same day.

Later, the camp commandant informs the men that Erickson was shot while resisting arrest by the Gestapo; his ashes are handed over.

When SS Hauptsturmführer Schultz expresses interest in American Lieutenant "Texas" Norton's chronometer, Norton notes Schultz is in charge of the camp's boundary lights and asks him to see that they malfunction during the next Allied nighttime bombing raid. However, it is a trap. Schultz signals his men to turn the lights back on while Norton is cutting through the barbed wire fence, then shoots him down in cold blood.

Schultz tries to suborn Ainsworth, but Ainsworth tells him he will see to it he is prosecuted for murder after the war. When Schultz becomes the new Kommandant, Ainsworth insists on trying to escape again, using Albert. He gets away, but waits at night to confront Schultz outside the camp. After a struggle, he gets Schultz's pistol. When Allied bombs drop uncomfortably close by, Schultz runs for it. Ainsworth is unable to bring himself to shoot the fleeing German in the back, but a bomb kills him. Ainsworth takes back Norton's chronometer from the dead man and walks away.

Cast

{{div col}}
  • Jack Warner as Captain Maddox
  • Anthony Steel as Lieutenant Geoffrey Ainsworth
  • Robert Beatty as Lieutenant Jim Reed
  • William Sylvester as Lieutenant Texas Norton
  • Michael Balfour as Lieutenant Henry Adams
  • Guy Middleton as Captain Barton
  • Paul Carpenter as Lieutenant Fred Erickson
  • Moultrie Kelsall as Commander Henry Dawson
  • Eddie Byrne as Commander Joe Brennan
  • Geoffrey Hibbert as Lieutenant Cutter Craig
  • Peter Jones as Lieutenant Schoolie Browne
  • Frederick Valk as Camp Kommandant
  • Anton Diffring as SS Hauptsturmführer Schultz (credited as a Hauptmann, the Heer equivalent in the credits)
  • Frederick Schiller as Hermann
  • Walter Gotell as Feldwebel
  • Peter Swanwick as Obergefreiter
{{div col end}}

Historical background

The film is based on a true story. "Albert R.N." was a dummy constructed in Marlag O, the prisoner of war camp in northern Germany for naval officers. The head was sculpted by war artist John Worsley (1919–2000), the body by Lieutenant Bob Staines RNVR, and Lieutenant-Commander Tony Bentley-Buckle devised a mechanism enabling Albert's eyes to blink and move, adding realism to the dummy.[2] "Albert" was used as a stand-in for a head count while a prisoner escaped and was used on two separate occasions.[3] In the first attempt Lieutenant William "Blondie" Mewes RNVR escaped from the camp shower block, and the skillful use of "Albert" during roll-calls gave him four days head start before a missing PoW was reported. Unfortunately, Mewes was recaptured in Lübeck and returned to Marlag camp. The second occasion was unsuccessful, when the escaping PoW was discovered hiding in the camp shower block and "Albert" was discovered in the subsequent searches.[4]

Worsley made a new "Albert" for use in the film. Senior Commissioned Gunner (TAS) Lieut. John William Goble RN. aided Worsley in the development of "Albert" in the POW camp, Marlag O and acted as technical adviser for the film. Worsely made a third "Albert" for the retrospective exhibition of his work held in Brighton College's Burstow Gallery. After the show, it was donated to the Royal Naval Museum Portsmouth.

Guy Morgan and Edward Sammis, who were British POWs, wrote a play based on the story on which this film was based. This was subsequently adapted into a screenplay.[5]

Production

The film was going to be made by Romulus Productions and star Sonny Tufts.[6]

Jack Warner and Anthony Steel were both leased to producer Daniel Angel by the Rank Organisation. Both had previously appeared in POW movies, The Captive Heart (1946) and The Wooden Horse (1950) respectively.

A POW camp was built on Headley Heath.[1]

At one stage the film was going to be called The Spare Man.[7]

Release

Lewis Gilbert says the film earned its money back in the United Kingdom.[1]

References

1. ^Brian MacFarlane, An Autobiography of British Cinema, Methuen 1997 p 220
2. ^[https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/military-obituaries/naval-obituaries/7982962/Lieutenant-Commander-Tony-Bentley-Buckle.html Daily Telegraph obituary: Lieutenant-Commander Tony Bentley-Buckle]
3. ^[https://www.theguardian.com/news/2000/oct/13/guardianobituaries.books Steve Holland, 'John Worsley: Energetic artist who drew a debonair police hero for the Eagle comic, and created Albert RN, the dummy hero of a famed wartime escape', The Guardian, 13 October 2000] accessed 11 July 2012
4. ^{{cite book | last1=Worsley | first1=John | authorlink1=John Worsley (artist) | last2=Giggal | first2=Kenneth |title=John Worsley's War: An Official War Artist in World War II |location=Shrewsbury | publisher=Airlife |year=1993 |isbn=978-1-85310-257-8}}
5. ^{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article57568306 |title=Dummy as star of film. |newspaper=The Mail |location=Adelaide |date=13 September 1952 |accessdate=11 July 2012 |page=7 Supplement: SUNDAY MAGAZINE |publisher=National Library of Australia}}
6. ^'Slapstick' Will Tell Big Comedy Saga; Tufts Builds British CareerSchallert, Edwin. Los Angeles Times 12 Jan 1953: B9.
7. ^{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article58876614 |title=FROM LONDON. |newspaper=The Mail |location=Adelaide |date=17 October 1953 |accessdate=11 July 2012 |page=60 |publisher=National Library of Australia}}

External links

  • {{IMDb title|id=0045487|title=Albert RN}}
{{Lewis Gilbert}}{{authority control}}

10 : 1953 films|1950s war films|British films|British black-and-white films|British war films|English-language films|Films based on actual events|Films directed by Lewis Gilbert|Films scored by Malcolm Arnold|World War II prisoner of war films

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