Sailor of the King (1953)
Facts
| Directed by | Roy Boulting |
| Cast | Jeffrey Hunter, Michael Rennie, Peter van Eyck, Wendy Hiller, Bernard Lee, Robin Bailey, Patrick Barr, Peter Van Eyck and John Schlesinger |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 1952 |
| DVD Release | April 24, 2007 |
| Running Time | 83 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 024543432951 |
| Buy this item | $9.99 at Amazon.com As of Sep 1 0:46 EDT (details) 1 DVD, TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX HOME ENT, Usually ships in 24 hours, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), German (Original Language) Or 35 new from $7.13, 11 used from $8.48 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Great story of heroism |
But, the movie begins in World War 1 when a young naval officer (Michael Rennie) has a chance meeting on a train and brief affair with a young woman (Wendy Hiller). She refuses his offer of marriage and they part, apparently, for good. Then the movie cuts to the beginning of World War 2 when a British squadron of light cruisers is chasing down a German surface raider. Seaman Brown (Jeffrey Hunter), a Canadian in the RN, is a top-notch sailor, best at his job as signalman, and the best rifle marksman in the fleet. Brown's ship is sent ahead by the squadron commander, Michael Rennie, but the ship's encounter with the German raider results in a loss with all hands but two, Brown and another sailor, who has lost his leg. However, the raider has taken damage that requires repair in some secluded spot.
On the German ship, Brown refuses to give information to the German captain about the squadron chasing him, insisting that his ship was operating alone. Nevertheless, the captain suspects that a larger squadron is after him and he must make repairs quickly and get away. They pull into a small inlet on Resolution Island off the coast of South America and begin repairs. During the night, with the encouragement of his wounded comrade, Brown escapes from the ship, steals a rifle and ammunition, and takes position on the island.
When dawn breaks, Brown begins sniping the work crews effecting repairs. This stops all work and severely delays the Germans' departure. The Germans fire blindly into the cliffs where Brown is hidden, but as soon as they resume repairs, he starts firing again. He keeps up his attacks despite wounds and intense thirst. A final attempt to land troops under cover of fire to get Brown is called back after the ship's repairs are complete and the Germans must be underweigh.
Just as they are emerging from the inlet, Rennie and his squadron appear and finish off the raider. A German officer's report after he is captured informs Rennie that a British sailor on Resolution has held them up single handedly. The story ends with Rennie and Brown awaiting a ceremony with the king where Rennie will be knighted and Brown will receive the Victoria Cross. Brown is also awaiting the arrival of his mother from Canada, Wendy Hiller.
This is a classic adventure story with true heroes and enemies who are simply foemen, not villainous monsters. The acting is superb. Hunter does a great job as seaman Brown: young, enthusiatsic, devoted to duty. Rennie and Hiller, though really in supporting roles, are terrific as young lovers who meet and part in wartime. The DVD also contains an alternate ending to the story. August 2, 2008
| Unexpected Pleasure |
| Top notch, I'd give it six stars if I could; |
| A Classic B&W gem from the 50's |
The transfer is clean and sharp but be advised that despite what it says on the box, this movie is (and always was) in black and white. March 19, 2008
| Sailor of the King |
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