King and Country
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"King & Country" redirects here. For the band, see For King & Country (band).
King and Country | |
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Theatrical release poster
| |
Directed by | Joseph Losey |
Produced by | Joseph Losey Norman Priggen |
Written by | Evan Jones (screenplay) based on a play by John Wilson and a novel byJames Lansdale Hodson |
Starring | Dirk Bogarde Tom Courtenay Leo McKern Barry Foster |
Music by | Larry Adler |
Cinematography | Denys Coop |
Edited by | Reginald Mills |
Production
company |
BHE Films (UK)
Landau/Unger (US) |
Distributed by | Warner-Pathé (UK) Allied Artists (US) |
Release dates
| September 1964, Venice Film Festival |
Running time
| 88 min. |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
King and Country (stylised as King & Country) is a 1964 British war film directed by Joseph Losey, shot in black and white, and starring Dirk Bogardeand Tom Courtenay. The film was adapted for the screen by British screenwriter Evan Jones based on a play by John Wilson and a novel byJames Lansdale Hodson.
Background[edit]
See British Army during World War I for information on the historical background.
Synopsis[edit]
During World War I, in the British trenches at Passchendaele, an army private, Arthur Hamp (Tom Courtenay) is accused of desertion. He is to be defended at his trial by an officer, Captain Hargreaves (Dirk Bogarde). Hamp had been a volunteer at the outbreak of the war and was the sole survivor of his company but then decided to 'go for a walk': he had contemplated walking to his home in London but after more than 24 hours on the road, he's picked up by the Military Police and sent back to his unit to face court-martial for desertion.
Hargreaves is initially impatient with the simple-minded Hamp but comes to identify with his plight. Following testimony from an unsympathetic doctor (Leo McKern) (whose solution to all ailments is to prescribe laxatives), Hargreaves is unable to persuade the court to consider the possibility that Hamp may have been suffering from shell shock. He is found guilty, but the court's recommendation for mercy is overruled by higher command, who wish to make an example of Hamp to bolster morale in his division. He is shot by firing squad, but as he is not killed outright Hargreaves has to finish him off with a revolver. His family are informed that he has been killed in action.
The action is confined to the mud-entrenched, rat-infested confines of the trenches and dugouts. The film shows a grim picture of life in the trenches during the war.
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Cast[edit]
- Dirk Bogarde as Captain Charles Hargreaves
- Tom Courtenay as Private Arthur Hamp
- Leo McKern as Captain O'Sullivan
- Barry Foster as Lieutenant Jack Webb
- Peter Copley as Colonel
- James Villiers as Captain Midgley
- Jeremy Spenser as Private Sparrow
- Barry Justice as Lieutenant Prescott
- Vivian Matalon as Padre
- Keith Buckley as Corporal of the Guard
- Derek Partridge as Captain Court Martial
- Brian Tipping as Lieutenant Court Martial
- Categories:
- English-language films
- 1964 films
- 1960s drama films
- 1960s war films
- British films
- British war films
- British black-and-white films
- Anti-war films about World War I
- Military courtroom films
- Films about capital punishment
- Films directed by Joseph Losey
- War drama films
- Western Front films (World War I)
- Films based on plays
- Films based on British novels
- Films based on adaptations
- British drama films
- Films set in 1917