Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0
No 23: Mr Davis
Beppie Leemans
Maj. Richards
No 16
Mr. Barratt
Brigade Major Harcourt
Pvt. John
Lt. Cummins
Miss Clare
Mrs. Webster
Naval captain
Mr Vemon
Brigadier Blunt
Pvt. Durnford
Intelligence officer
German General
ATS drover with puncture
Colonel
Neutral Seaman - Irish Joe
Pvt. Jimmy
The Frenchman - Captain Mercier
Careless Talker on Train
Careless Talker on Train
Lance-Corporal
Wing-Cmdr. Kenton
German Colonel (uncredited)
Corporal on Train (uncredited)
Naval Officer (uncredited)
Builder's Labourer (uncredited)
Sailor on Train (uncredited)
Mr. Palmer (uncredited)
Warden (uncredited)
Inspector Jolly (uncredited)
Soldier in Buffet Car (uncredited)
Ted (uncredited)
General Cooper (uncredited)
Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-06-26
This isn't so much an action film, as a series of scenarios that convey a message to the watching public that "careless talk costs lives". It started out life as a training film and you can tell by the rather clunky editing that director Thorold Dickinson was thinking on his feet as this project aimed at the military grew into a very important, and effective, counter-espionage tool. It's got quite a formidable cast of serving (or reservist) soldiers including Mervyn Johns, Jack Hawkins, Stephen Murray, Basil Sydney as well as Torin Thatcher in his typical role as the baddie; and the narrative weaves threads that cleverly expose just how easily the enemy got hold of information and capitalised on it. It uses actuality from time to time, and has a strange sort of excitement especially as the climaxes to each thread are not always favourable to the British which also lends it a considerable authenticity. There is a bit of wartime black humour to enjoy too, and though a curious film to watch, it has an unique plausibility which I found interesting, and to an extent, quite enjoyable.