6/10
"Phew, what a scorched earth policy!"
6 December 2022
Never was the proud declaration at the end beneath a fluttering Union Jack that this was "A British Picture" more apt. Described by David Quinlan as "Probably Ealing's least convincing war film", this contrives to do for the Yugoslavs what 'Hangman Also Die' did for the Czechs.

Full of adorable little models and British actors as comic-book Germans clicking their heels and strong-arming women and children, their victims played by slavic types like Niall MacGinnis when he still had a full head of hair, Finlay Currie, Michael Wilding and Tom Walls (the latter grumbling at his son that "Guerrillas were different in my day!").

Sunny Wales masqueraded as Central Europe, which presumably explains the presence of a fifteen year-old Stanley Baker, one of the few cast members who doesn't have an English accent.
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