From collectibles to cars, buy and sell all kinds of items on eBay
home | pay | site map
Shop for itemsSell your itemTrack your eBay activitiesLearn, connect, and stay informed-for business and for funGet help, find answers and contact Customer SupportAdvanced Search
Home > Listing Index > Movies > It Happened Here

Movies - It Happened Here


It Happened Here is a 1966
British film set during World War II, about the possible effects of a successful German invasion of the United Kingdom. The film was directed by Kevin Brownlow, who later became a prominent film historian, and Andrew Mollo, who was to become a leading military historian. The film was conceived by Brownlow, then only eighteen, in 1956. He turned to Mollo, a sixteen-year-old history buff, to help him with the design of costumes and sets; Mollo was intrigued by the project, and became his collaborator.

Production and staff

The film was in the making for the next eight years. The Guinness Book of World Records (as of 2003) lists It Happened Here as the film with the longest ever production schedule. It was shot in black and white, giving it a grainy, newsreel feel. It had a cast of hundreds, all volunteers, with only one professional actor among them (Sebastian Shaw
).

The key role of Pauline, an nurse evacuated from Salisbury to London, was played by Pauline Murray, the Irish wife of a doctor in Wales. According to the IMBd website she was born in Dublin, Ireland, on 30 August 1922 and died on 31 December 1994 in Kingston, England. Her only other film credit is, according to the IMBd, playing the part of "Marion", an Englishwoman, in the award winning 1948 Danish war film "Støt står den danske sømand", ("Perilious Expedition") - about Danish sailors in the service of the Allies, which was directed by pioneer Danish film-maker Bodil Ipsen and by Lau Lauritzen. This movie won the award for "best Danish film" at the 1949 Danish film critics event - Bodil Festen, the Danish "Oscars", held in Copenhagen, Denmark.

According to DVD Times - http://www.dvdtimes.co.uk/content.php?contentid=59755 -Murray worked as a doctor's receptionist, we might speculate that this was possibly for her husband, and she would later describe herself as looking “like a vicious moron”, but as DVD Times puts it "this is unfair and it’s interesting to compare her to other British leading ladies of the time. The early sixties, of course, had seen the ‘Free Cinema’ movement spill over into features and a British New Wave of sorts prompting films such as A Taste of Honey and Poor Cow. By coincidence Tony Richardson’s Woodfall Film Productions (central to the new wave) stumped up the money to allow It Happened Here to be completed on a less amateur level, yet the results are quite different. Murray may share the resilience of a Rita Tushingham or Carol White, but she’s a tougher breed, altogether more human."

In a contemporary review of a showing of the movie at the Little Carngie theatre at 146 West 57th Street in New York city, published in the New York Times on August 9, 1966, titled "If the Finest Hour Had Failed: Little Carnegie Offers 'It Happened Here' Occupation of England by Nazis Depicted", Bosley Crowther wrote "The acting by unfamiliar people is beautifully natural and restrained, particularly that of Pauline Murray in the principal role. Through her human and subtle generation of an ungrudging sympathy, one becomes involved in her dilemma and is caught up all the way in the despair, uncertainty and terror of her experiences."

Stanley Kubrick, who was intrigued by the project, donated film stock from Dr. Strangelove
to Brownlow to help him finish the film. Most of the equipment used in the production was borrowed. Director Tony Richardson helped to pay for the final production. Though the cast was almost entirely amateur, It Happened Here helped to launch the career of its cinematographer, Peter Suschitzky, who went on to work on such films as The Rocky Horror Picture Show
and The Empire Strikes Back.

Film content

The film opens with the statement: "The conquest of England was swift and brutal. Due to pressure from the eastern front, German troops are removed from England, and the garrisoning of England is largely carried out by British volunteers". The story focuses on a young Irish nurse, Pauline, who is forcibly evacuated from her village by the Nazis and their collaborators, and is witness to a massacre of the fascist forces by a group of British partisans. She makes her way to London, where she becomes a collaborator herself, only gradually learning about what this really means to the British people. She is witness to friends of hers being taken away for harboring a partisan, the treatment of the Jews under German rule, and, in a climactic section, discovers that she has taken part in a euthanasia program and killed a group of foreign slave laborers who have contracted tuberculosis (portrayed by real patients with tuberculosis). The film ends with Pauline being captured and forced to work for the partisans as they retake England. In a chilling finale, she is witness to them executing a large group of Germans and collaborators, reminiscent of the massacre of a group of English villagers shot by the Nazis in the beginning of the film for failing to evacuate their village.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for It Happened Here ]



Some related entries: Ramparts of Clay | G.I. Jane | Mo' Money | White Oleander | The Perfect Husband: The Laci Peterson Story | List of films with unexposed contents | Old Gringo | The Tigress | George Hickenlooper | Brighton Beach Memoirs | Silver City

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article It Happened Here; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

Searches on eBay


eBay Pulse | eBay Reviews | eBay Stores | Half.com | Kijiji | PayPal | Popular Searches | ProStores | Rent.com | Shopping.com
Australia | Austria | Belgium | China | France | Germany | India | Italy | Spain | United Kingdom

About eBay | Announcements | Security Center | Policies | Site Map | Help