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The Kidnappers (1953) | Directed by Philip Leacock
Turn the Key Softly (1953) | Directed by Jack Lee
They Who Dare (1954) | Directed by Lewis Milestone
Final Appointment (1954) | Directed by Terence Fisher
It Always Rains on Sundays (1947) | Directed by Robert Hamer
The Clouded Yellow (1950) | British film noir thriller directed by Ralph Thomas
O-Kay for Sound (1937) | British musical comedy directed by Marcel Varnel
Oliver Twist (1948) | Directed by David Lean
Sabotage (1936) | Alfred Hitchcock's thriller based on Joseph Conrad's novel "The Secret Agent"
Miranda (1948) | British comedy film directed by Ken Annakin
The Ghoul (1933) | British horror film directed by T. Hayes Hunter
Gone to Earth (1950) | British romantic drama film directed by Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger
Green Grow the Rushes (1951) | British comedy film directed by Derek N. Twist
The Turning Point (1952) | British drama film directed by Michael Relph
Pygmalion (1938) | British film adaptation of George Bernard Shaw's play
Night Train to Munich (1940) | British thriller film directed by Carol Reed
Dear Murderer (1947) | A British crime film directed by Arthur Crabtree
The Red Beret / Paratrooper (1953) | British war film directed by Terence Young
The Upturned Glass (1947) | A British psychological thriller directed by Lawrence Huntington
They Were Sisters (1945) | British drama film directed by Arthur Crabtree
The Woman in the Hall (1947) | British drama film directed by Jack Lee
A Matter of Life and Death (1946) | Directors: Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger
Drake of England (1935) Colorised | British historical adventure film directed by Arthur B. Woods
Mantrap (1953) | British crime film directed by Terence Fisher
The Gambler and the Lady (1952) | Directed by Patrick Jenkins
The Scarlet Pimpernel (1934) | Directed by Harold Young
The Way to the Stars (1945) | Directed by Anthony Asquith
The Passionate Friends (1949) | Directed by David Lean
The Dark Tower (1943) | Directed by John Harlow
The Seventh Veil (1945) | Directed by Compton Bennett
Young and Innocent (1937) | Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Green for Danger (1946) | Directed by Sidney Gilliat
Elephant Boy (1937) | Directed by Robert J. Flaherty & Zoltan Korda
The Clairvoyant (1935) | Directed by Maurice Elvey
Appointment with Venus (1951) | Directed by Ralph Thomas
The Suspect (1944) | Directed by Robert Siodmak
The Way Ahead (1945) | Directed by Carol Reed
They Were Not Divided (1950) | Directed by Terence Young
21 Days (1940) | Directed by Basil Dean
The Card (1952) | British comedy directed by Ronald Neame
The Shop at Sly Corner (1947) | British crime drama film directed by George King
Malta Story (1953) | Focuses on the historical events surrounding the Siege of Malta
Cottage to Let (1941) | A 1941 British thriller directed by Anthony Asquith
The Long Memory (1953) | Directed by Robert Hamer
The Hidden Room / Obsession (1951) | Directed by Edward Dmytryk
The Cruel Sea (1953) | Directed by Charles Frend
Stage Fright (1950) | Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
I Became a Criminal (1947) | Directed by Alberto Cavalcanti
State Secret / The Great Manhunt (1950) | Directed by Sidney Gilliat
The Third Visitor (1951) | Directed by Maurice Elvey
Personal Affair (1953) | Directed by Anthony Pelissier
The Card / The Promoter (1952) | Directed by Ronald Neame
Black Narcissus (1947) | Directed by Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger
Yellow Canary (1943) | Directed by Herbert Wilcox
The Lady Vanishes (1938) | Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
The Spy in Black (1939) | Directed by Michael Powell
The Weaker Sex (1948) | Directed by Roy Ward Baker
This Happy Breed (1944) | Directed by David Lean
A Place of One's Own (1945) | Directed by Bernard Knowles
Western Approaches (1944) | Directed by Pat Jackson
When the Bough Breaks (1947) | Directed by Lawrence Huntington
The Four Feathers (1939) | Directed by Zoltan Korda
Secret Mission (Secret Mission: Casablanca in USA) (1942 | Directed by Harold French
Here Come the Huggetts (1948) | Directed by Ken Annakin
This Was a Woman (1948) | Directed by Tim Whelan
The Frightened Man (1952) | Directed by John Gilling
Major Barbara (1941) | Directed by Gabriel Pascal
Maytime in Mayfair (1949) | Directed by Herbert Wilcox
They Who Dare (1954) | Directed by Lewis Milestone
"They Who Dare" is a British World War II action-adventure film based on a real-life commando raid. The story follows a small team of British Special Boat Service commandos and Greek resistance fighters who are tasked with infiltrating the German-occupied island of Rhodes in the Aegean Sea. Their mission is to destroy two vital German airfields to cripple Axis operations in the region. The film depicts the physical hardships and moral pressures of covert warfare behind enemy lines.
Genre: War, Action, Adventure
Director: Lewis Milestone
Lewis Milestone was a Moldovan-born American film director best known for his war films and dramatic realism. Born in 1895 in what is now Moldova, he emigrated to the United States and became a prominent Hollywood director during the silent and early sound eras. He won two Academy Awards for Best Director, including one for "All Quiet on the Western Front" (1930), a landmark anti-war film. Milestone had a versatile career and was recognized for his ability to depict the human cost of war with stark authenticity.
Star Cast:
* Dirk Bogarde as Lieutenant Graham
* Denholm Elliott as Sergeant Corcoran
* Akim Tamiroff as Captain Andros
* Harold Siddons as Lieutenant Poole
* Eric Pohlmann as German Commander
* Gérard Oury as Andreas
* Sam Kydd as Private Griggs
"They Who Dare" received mixed reviews upon its release. While some praised its gritty action and the performance of Dirk Bogarde, others found the pacing slow and the storytelling conventional. British audiences were moderately receptive, appreciating the patriotic and heroic subject matter, though the film never reached the critical acclaim of other World War II epics of the period. It has since gained interest as a representative mid-century British war film with a strong sense of realism and location shooting.
Fun Facts:
* The film was inspired by actual wartime operations carried out by the British Special Boat Service (SBS) in the Dodecanese islands.
* Shot on location in Cyprus and Malta, the film benefits from authentic Mediterranean landscapes, adding realism to the commando mission.
* It was one of Dirk Bogarde’s early roles as a leading man in a military setting, foreshadowing his later success in war and espionage films.
* The original title was "The Wind Cannot Read", but it was changed before production began.
* Although not widely known today, the film remains of interest to war film enthusiasts for its depiction of special operations behind enemy lines during WWII.
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