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Sons of the Sea | |
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Directed by | Maurice Elvey |
Written by | George Barraud Gerald Elliott (screenplay) (as W.G. Elliott) Maurice Elvey (screenplay) Reginald Long (dialogue) D. William Woolf (scenario) |
Produced by | K.C. Alexander |
Starring | Leslie Banks Kay Walsh Mackenzie Ward Cecil Parker |
Cinematography | Eric Cross |
Edited by | Douglas Myers |
Production company | British Consolidated |
Distributed by | Grand National Pictures (UK) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 82 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Sons of the Sea is a 1939 British colour drama film directed by Maurice Elvey and starring Leslie Banks, Kay Walsh, Mackenzie Ward and Cecil Parker. [2] [3]
Britain, 1939. The head of Dartmouth Naval College is murdered. His successor, Captain Hyde, believes that he himself was in fact the intended target of the assassination. He soon begins to realise that both British and foreign intelligence agents are at work. He enlists the help of his son, a reluctant sea cadet, to smoke them out.
Sons of the Sea was filmed during the summer of 1939, just before the outbreak of the Second World War, something explored in the themes of the film. The only feature film to be shot using the Dufaycolor process, [4] [5] it was shown on BBC television in 2005 after restoration. [6]
The film premiered in London on 11 March 1940, at the then recently opened Cinephone cinema at 241 Oxford Street, [7] with the attendance of the main star, Leslie Banks. [1]
Captain Boycott is a 1947 British historical drama film directed by Frank Launder and starring Stewart Granger, Kathleen Ryan, Mervyn Johns, Alastair Sim and Cecil Parker. Robert Donat makes a cameo appearance as the Irish nationalist leader Charles Stewart Parnell. The film explains how the word boycott appeared in the English language. Ironically, the title character plays a secondary role in the film, as an anti-hero, and the hero of the film is Hugh Davin.
Cecil Parker was an English actor with a distinctively husky voice, who usually played supporting roles, often characters with a supercilious demeanour, in his 91 films made between 1928 and 1969.
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