"Single-Handed"/"Sailor of the King" (1953) - Naval Battle

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 23 фев 2011
  • H.M.S. Amesbury engages in battle with the Essen in Roy Boulting's "Sailor of the King" (British title: "Single-Handed"), the second movie based on C.S. Forester's "Brown on Resolution" (1929). In this clip: Jeffrey Hunter, Patrick Barr, Robin Bailey, Bernard Lee, Victor Maddern, Michael Rennie, John Horsley et al.
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 455

  • @trevorgeorge5814
    @trevorgeorge5814 6 месяцев назад +22

    My father was a serving sailor on HMS Manxman where this film was made, all shot around Malta in 1953. All the crew were dressed as German sailors as the ship was disguised as a German cruiser. Geoffrey Hunter was one of the main stars, our family still has a signed autograph of Geoffrey Hunter addressed to my late father James George.

    • @peterclague3539
      @peterclague3539 3 месяца назад

      I’m a Manx Man....we hold her very high in our history, even had a Airfix model of her. Thanks for fathers service. 🇮🇲

  • @paulgumbley4868
    @paulgumbley4868 2 года назад +157

    You can't beat a good old
    british black and white war film, with you're Sunday roast, and the kip after.
    Happier days.
    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧

    • @roybennett6330
      @roybennett6330 2 года назад +10

      Too right,my dad was ex subs,rn.. remember him stopping the gardening say 1400 for slap up feed of sardines,or spotted dick for bridge on river Kwai,Mr chips, battle of Britain.. good English fare on both fronts.

    • @danielguy1963
      @danielguy1963 2 года назад +5

      Absolutely 👍🇦🇺

    • @StickTheGlue
      @StickTheGlue 2 года назад +2

      how to confuse an American in 1 sentence :P

    • @jonny7491
      @jonny7491 2 года назад +2

      I was just about to (corrected, write) right the same.

    • @gregtaylor6146
      @gregtaylor6146 Год назад

      @@jonny7491 - write

  • @tomhanna8508
    @tomhanna8508 4 года назад +109

    I love the authenticity of the lookout using his eyes and then confirming with binoculars. Too often you see binoculars glued to the observer’s eyes which is exhausting and inefficient.

    • @benwilson6145
      @benwilson6145 2 года назад +4

      Well said, obviously you have kept a lookout at sea.

    • @KJs581
      @KJs581 2 года назад

      Part of the drill is a policy broadcast. In the policy broadcast is "lookout routine xxxxxx"; where they insert "standard" or "shadowers". The two routines take into account whether the lookouts will be there for days (not expecting much/less tiring) or "contact expected" (more active).
      I could rattle off a policy broadcast, but few would be interested, and ship specific; and most wouldn't be interested/raise more questions than it answers (acronyms/abbreviations), but "lookout routine" used to be the last line of a very long policy broadcast.

    • @just-dl
      @just-dl 2 года назад

      @@KJs581 I for one would be fascinated, and love to hear about it!

    • @user-iz1of7pb1m
      @user-iz1of7pb1m 8 месяцев назад

      В детстве я не понимал, для чего бинокль, мне было все видно и без него на любом расстоянии

  • @coleparker
    @coleparker 2 года назад +39

    I love these old British War movies. They are accurate in their portrayals

    • @Bruce-1956
      @Bruce-1956 Год назад +6

      Yes because most of the actors knew war.

    • @lordeden2732
      @lordeden2732 6 месяцев назад

      Because they used advisers who had served in the Royal Navy during the war.

    • @Bruce-1956
      @Bruce-1956 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@lordeden2732and men who had known war.

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis 6 месяцев назад

      Yes warts and all.

    • @peterharvey1762
      @peterharvey1762 6 месяцев назад

      Also most of the ships used where in WW2 , like HMS Exeter in the Battle river plate

  • @Bruce-1956
    @Bruce-1956 6 месяцев назад +17

    One of the great British 1950s b&w films where most if not all the actors fought in WW2 and knew what war was.

  • @michaelmixon2479
    @michaelmixon2479 4 года назад +58

    I love the older movies! Especially in black and white!

    • @pieterweatherall2826
      @pieterweatherall2826 4 года назад +1

      Surprising what a few years of movie making can do!

    • @tobytaylor2154
      @tobytaylor2154 2 года назад +3

      Theirs is the glory is a good watch, filmed just after the war on the ground it was fought over, starring the men who were there. Not good acting obviously, but a interesting watch about arnhem.

  • @Sid1035
    @Sid1035 8 лет назад +188

    I remember exercising with Indian Navy Ship DELHI in 50's off Ceylon. Dehli was originally HMS Achillies and later HMNZ Achillies (Battle of the River Plate) I was a telegraphist on HMS Newfoundland (Colony class Cruiser) at the time.

    • @bobmetcalfe9640
      @bobmetcalfe9640 7 лет назад +8

      Hell, my dad was on Newfoundland in WW2. Small world.

    • @Sid1035
      @Sid1035 7 лет назад +9

      Must have been the same commission as me. We brought 'Newfy' out of a major refit in Gus sailed for Trinco to become Flagship East Indies. Happiest ship i ever had.

    • @Sid1035
      @Sid1035 7 лет назад +6

      Sorry i missed the WW2 part, she came out of major refit in 1952.

    • @bobmetcalfe9640
      @bobmetcalfe9640 7 лет назад +9

      "Happiest ship i ever had."That's what my dad said too. He was at the Japanese surrender. I've got some photos somewhere :).

    • @philipg52
      @philipg52 7 лет назад +4

      One of my patients was there too.

  • @beagle7622
    @beagle7622 6 месяцев назад +3

    I remember watching this in the 80’s on TV . It was a great film, different for the time.

  • @tedjinla
    @tedjinla 13 лет назад +69

    "In the Royal Navy, we never strike an ensign, see?"
    Best line in the movie...by "M' of James Bond fame.

    • @halnywiatr
      @halnywiatr 4 года назад +6

      Bernard Lee

    • @allenjenkins7947
      @allenjenkins7947 2 года назад +3

      Hence "nailing our colours (ensign) to the mast". Sometimes, a large battle ensign would also be unfurled on each side of the hull, just to make it really clear. That was also the symbolism of the giant U.S. flag draped down the side of the Pentagon following the "9-11" attacks - "No surrender!".

    • @archangel2143
      @archangel2143 2 года назад +2

      Actually, the British struck their flag on September 23rd, 1779 during the American Revolution when John Paul Jones in the USS Bonhomme Richard defeated HMS Serapis off of Flamborough Head; however all is forgiven now! 🇺🇸🇬🇧

    • @chrismc410
      @chrismc410 2 года назад +1

      @JZ's Best Friend adapt to situations as they happen and act as logic demands?

    • @lordeden2732
      @lordeden2732 6 месяцев назад

      Three colours One each side and one in the middle

  • @Barouche
    @Barouche 2 года назад +11

    I remember reading Brown On Resolution 50 years ago. It must have been good to stay in my memory all of that time.

  • @mikebrown1926
    @mikebrown1926 2 года назад +43

    This is based on "Brown on Resolution" by C. S. Forester, which is an excellent book to read. Also if you have seen the clips from "Greyhound" with Tom Hanks, that film is also based on a C. S. Forester novel, "The Good Shepherd'. In fact, if you like great sea stories, I recommend that you read everything that Forester wrote.

    • @edl617
      @edl617 5 месяцев назад

      I read almost everything written by C.S. Forester. Including The one the movie Greyhound was based on, which I found the movie lacking

  • @tedjinla
    @tedjinla 13 лет назад +63

    This movie was filmed in the Mediterranean using HMS Cleopatra as Amesbury, Cambridge and Stratford, and the fast minelayer HMS Manxman as Essen. They fitted fake turrets and funnels to try and make a convincing German light cruiser out of her.
    The lagoon where most of the "shooting" took place (yuk yuk) was Gozo the northern-most island of the Maltese archipelago to stand in for Resolution Island in the Galapagos.
    Thanks for uploading this wonderful sequence.
    TEDJ in LA

    • @stevewright2444
      @stevewright2444 3 года назад +4

      My dad was serving on the manxman when they used her in this film

    • @KJs581
      @KJs581 2 года назад +1

      Good info mate. These ships were of the time of the AA evolution of these ships. Originally light cruisers were the "sort out raiders/run away if get in trouble" ships, as in the 30's surface ships were the major threat.
      Cleo had the 5.25 guns here (down from 6 inch previously) which were an interim AA (dual purpose) solution, but as aircraft emerged as the major threat to convoys, (and aircraft got faster) even that was found wanting, as the traverse rate, elevation capability and rate of fire was too limited.
      Later cruisers had multilple 4.5 and more capable HACS (and early radar). The faster traverse/more rounds carried/higher ROF - AND the VT fuse made for the first (and very capable) true AA cruisers.
      The Americans did the same with the "Atlanta" class (5 inch guns) and they were capable AA ships; but had to be careful, two were caught in surface battles and outgunned by 6 inch cruisers and sunk.
      Mountbatten (who the producer knew) liked the internals of guns to be in these movies, and he allowed them to use the ships for movies like this - and the internals of "Vanguard" to be used in "Sink the Bismarck!" where they use Vanguard's 15 inch mounts to portray all loading sequences.

    • @Bruce-1956
      @Bruce-1956 Год назад

      Thanks for the information.

  • @overlycreative1
    @overlycreative1 4 года назад +30

    I hope the sound editor got a proper award for this great work.

  • @Laceykat66
    @Laceykat66 2 года назад +7

    I am a big movie fan and have never even HEARD of this film before.
    Thank you for expanding my education.

  • @lisabrooks8092
    @lisabrooks8092 7 лет назад +21

    Jeffrey Hunter is the absolute bomb! One British sailor holding off an entire German cruiser. Of course, that feat was accomplished by the original Captain Kirk!

  • @simul8guy75
    @simul8guy75 2 года назад +31

    The ship is supposed too be making 10 knots but is clearly dead in the water as the German shells are finding the range... Gotta love old movies...

    • @andrewstackpool4911
      @andrewstackpool4911 2 года назад +5

      AMESBURY's movements are the major weaknesses of the footage. And noting the CO's comments I think Essen is meant to be a heavy cruiser which outranges Amesbury. Of well, never let the facts get in the way of a good dit, but perhaps they could have looked at Sink The Bismarck for authenticity. Oh and 10 knots? At Action Stations. Not in any war canoe in which I served.

    • @andywhysall6744
      @andywhysall6744 5 месяцев назад

      Needs Noel Coward on the bridge. He'd get the steam up.

  • @carrickrichards2457
    @carrickrichards2457 6 месяцев назад +6

    I found this by far the saddest of all Forester's books. The film sought to hide that, even filming two endings (both endings were shown at the premier for the audience to choose).

  • @joeavent5554
    @joeavent5554 2 года назад +21

    "Take your hand out of your pocket"...discipline at all times.

    • @gregwalsh5880
      @gregwalsh5880 2 года назад +2

      50 black stitches to the inch and every 50th a white stitch. This stopped you pretty quick putting your hands in your pockets. Pockets were for putting items in, not your hands. Discipline never hurt at all.

    • @joeavent5554
      @joeavent5554 2 года назад +5

      @@gregwalsh5880 In just about all military forces throughout the world it is forbidden to keep hands in pockets unless retrieving an object.
      Notice all the thumbs up? Prior service members get it. The director added this very tiny tidbit not just for nostalgia but to prove a point about attention to detail.

    • @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684
      @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 2 года назад +1

      Hands in pockets? "Manchester gloves".

    • @joeavent5554
      @joeavent5554 2 года назад

      @@walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 Lol

    • @teecee1567
      @teecee1567 2 года назад

      @@gregwalsh5880 What's the deal with the stitches?

  • @teresaponziani7983
    @teresaponziani7983 4 года назад +32

    God bless the greatest generation!!!!!

  • @Crackdennumber1
    @Crackdennumber1 7 лет назад +70

    The 3rd Marine [0:47] is my dad Ron Crabb...

  • @DragoonEnNoir
    @DragoonEnNoir 5 лет назад +38

    HMS Amesbury is 'played' by the Dido-class light cruiser HMS Cleopatra

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis 6 месяцев назад +1

      The DIDO class had a very busy war 33% were lost.

  • @Aethelwolf
    @Aethelwolf 2 года назад +6

    Great movie. I remember watching this as a kid.

  • @williamc.1198
    @williamc.1198 3 года назад +31

    I served aboard two former Royal Navy ships while attached to the Chilean Navy. British compartmentation is quite a bit different from ours. Far fewer openings for fore and aft passageways.

    • @eyemstillhear
      @eyemstillhear Год назад

      I served on HMS NORFOLK County class destroyer in '79, sold onto the Chilean navy early eighties, who subsequently sank it. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @nemo6686
      @nemo6686 6 месяцев назад +2

      To better maintain watertight and smoke integrity in the event of being hit. One of the lessons of the Falklands campaign was that they'd been putting holes in lateral bulkhead to run cables, vents, etc and this allowed smoke to spread and seriously hamper damage control and fighting the ship.
      It was one of many things that had been forgotten and had to be relearned, and the RN subsequently put a lot more effort into Operational Sea Training to try and minimize this backsliding.

    • @SvenTviking
      @SvenTviking 6 месяцев назад

      Learned that off the Germans when we took the High seas fleet.

  • @tag427
    @tag427 7 лет назад +5

    Thanks for posting!

  • @fixento
    @fixento 7 лет назад +43

    You have to love the open bridges when men were men.

    • @s.sestric9929
      @s.sestric9929 7 лет назад +11

      And sheep were scared.

    • @hhoward14
      @hhoward14 6 лет назад +3

      In steam ships it made sense, because of the extra heat, from the boilers, and the window fogging moisture in an enclosed wheel house, or bridge. Also, the need for 360 deg visual communications.

    • @rollosnook3031
      @rollosnook3031 5 лет назад +9

      Pleasant on the arctic convoy escort with a 30 knot speed and stormy headwind I'm sure...

    • @Bisexual_Sovereign
      @Bisexual_Sovereign 3 года назад

      @@rollosnook3031 I mean they had some form of improvised cover but the front was still exposed

    • @mwnciboo
      @mwnciboo 3 года назад +1

      @@hhoward14 What? Thats not the reason at all, we didn't use piped steam like some kind of pseudo air conditioner through the ship, causing condensation or otherwise.

  • @paulmoffat9306
    @paulmoffat9306 4 года назад +9

    Shows the craftsmanship of movie makers in the days before CGI became prevalent. Today's Academy Award for 'Special Effects' should be discarded, as it has become 'Animation' instead, and no longer has relevance.

  • @michaelgibson4705
    @michaelgibson4705 6 месяцев назад +1

    Fortunately Geoffrey Hunter had that old cockney stalwart Victor Maddern helping out,B&W British war films gave him a career a great character actor

  • @enochpowelghost
    @enochpowelghost 12 лет назад +9

    yes thanks for uploading such a good film clip well done

  • @jackjacko8706
    @jackjacko8706 2 года назад +3

    This looks more like a training film compared to “The Cruel Sea” a far superior film

  • @Richard500
    @Richard500 4 года назад +8

    These older movies are all so much better acted, many of the actors were already War Veterans and knew the drill so to speak. Soldiers looked like soldiers and so did airmen and sailors. These days it makes you cringe when actors THINK they are looking very "military, and they're not.
    The Dido class cruiser HMS Cleopatra plays both the fictional Royal Navy ships "HMS Amesbury" and "HMS Stratford". Presumably with REAL sailors as extras.

    • @robsaunders9521
      @robsaunders9521 2 года назад

      And the blanket stackers always tops 👍. Sua Tela Tonanti.

  • @Phaaschh
    @Phaaschh 4 года назад +15

    "I've got a strange feeling things are about to get a bit dodgy"
    So would I, sitting there, beam on, engines dead slow and hopelessly outranged. And then get bracketed by their first salvo.
    Ze Chermans must have been hooting with laughter.

  • @davidsirett5560
    @davidsirett5560 4 года назад +11

    Jeffrey Hunter Captain Christopher Pike of the space ship Enterprise from the stellar group at the other end of this galaxy.

    • @randyjohnson6845
      @randyjohnson6845 4 года назад

      You knew that right .Hunter was his son from the brief encounter with the British lady

    • @ivorholtskog5506
      @ivorholtskog5506 2 года назад

      I think he also played in corvette K225.

  • @ieatoutoften872
    @ieatoutoften872 6 месяцев назад +5

    This scene features a Dido class destroyer (small ship, with relatively short range gns) attacking a German heavy cruiser (a medium sized ship, with longer range gns).
    About three times, various British sailors mention [His Majesty's Ship] Cambridge (fictitious as to being a W.W.2 era heavy cruiser), and an even match for the German ship), hoping it would join this battle.
    This fictitious (imagined) scene on fictional destroyer H.M.S. Amesbury has several parallels (honorary references) to The Battle of the River Plate [or rather the estuary of said river; or more so the southwest Atlantic Ocean] (December 1939). The outcome of that December 1939 battle was probably on the front page of every newspaper in the U.K., and New Zealand, and many other places by the time the month of January 1940 passed.
    There were newsreel films shown at movie theaters of those three ships' triumphant return to respective home ports. And the respective crews were filmed marching in parade formation in front of ecstatic, welcoming civilians.
    The ships in the December 1939 battle were heavy cruiser H.M.S. Exeter, destroyer H.M.S. Achilles (home port New Zealand), destroyer H.M.S. Ajax, and the German "pocket battleship" (super heavy cruiser) Admiral Graf Spee.
    In that battle, enemy shrapnel cut a rope holding H.M.S. Achilles' battle ensign (flag). Great grandparents in New Zealand are still talking about the news story about how a replacement flag was raised in the midst of the battle. It was like the U.S.A.'s national anthem: "Oh say can you see that our flag was still there?" That emotional moment is also referenced in this short video when the master chief is showing and teaching the enlisted men why a rolled up flag is made ready, and why there are two extra ropes ready to hoist it up.

    • @ericadams3428
      @ericadams3428 6 месяцев назад +1

      The Dido class light cruiser HMS Cleopatra (10 x 5.25" played both Amesbury and Stratford. HMS Glasgow was also in the film and the Essen was played by the minelayer HMS Manxman.

    • @gerarddelmonte8776
      @gerarddelmonte8776 6 месяцев назад +1

      Ajax and Achilles were light cruisers, not destroyers.

    • @ieatoutoften872
      @ieatoutoften872 6 месяцев назад

      @@gerarddelmonte8776
      I sincerely thank you for correcting my mistakes because my ambition is to be accurate, and I realize you are correct.

    • @Tourist1967
      @Tourist1967 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@ieatoutoften872
      New Zealand ships are styled HMNZS.

    • @ieatoutoften872
      @ieatoutoften872 6 месяцев назад

      @@Tourist1967
      There was some tricky history regarding the New Zealand Navy.
      In 1939, the New Zealand Navy was a subset of the Royal Navy. From 1921 to 1 October 1941 the force was known as the New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy.
      On 1 October 1941, the New Zealand Navy was established independent of the Royal Navy. And then, also on 1 October 1941, HMS Achilles was commissioned (recommissioned / styled) HMNZ Achilles.
      In 1948, it was sold to India.

  • @gregnowak5704
    @gregnowak5704 2 года назад

    "Take that hand out of that pocket there you" its little details like that that help add to the realism of the film

  • @Weesel71
    @Weesel71 4 года назад +3

    Great flick. Well worth watching.

    • @matthewgray469
      @matthewgray469 4 года назад

      I first saw it over 50 years ago and I still remember it vividly -a courageous sailor with a rifle pinning down the nazi sailors

  • @stevefisher8323
    @stevefisher8323 2 года назад

    Michael Rennie in his uniform, very dashing indeed!

  • @NJPurling
    @NJPurling 2 года назад +29

    The only thing the guns of the 'Essen' could not penetrate were the stiff upper lips of the officers.

  • @davidrussell8689
    @davidrussell8689 6 месяцев назад +4

    Understanding that this is only fiction but one can only wonder if the calm , collected attitude in combat actually existed ? If those officers and men were so then they are more than heroes.

    • @nightjarflying
      @nightjarflying 6 месяцев назад +3

      Training & experience - it's exactly how most professional soldiers/sailors/aircrew act under fire

    • @SSN515
      @SSN515 4 месяца назад

      Been there. Done that. It's correct. At that point all you have is training and coolness, even if you are terrified. If you freak, you die.

  • @edwardramirez8768
    @edwardramirez8768 2 года назад +1

    " Damn the Torpedoes, full steam ahead"!

  • @zillsburyy1
    @zillsburyy1 10 лет назад +1

    yes and i have the movie on DVD

  • @user-uo8px3tf5h
    @user-uo8px3tf5h 4 года назад +4

    Корабли 20-40-х годов самые красивые.

  • @S250385
    @S250385  13 лет назад +4

    @Marafox2 You can order the DVD from Amazon.com or Ebay (probably from other sites too, that I'm not aware of). The only problem is that it is a region 1 DVD and since you live in a region 2 area you need a region-free DVD player to watch it. Good luck!

    • @gerry343
      @gerry343 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/uB0F5QOurXo/видео.html

    • @fairportfan2
      @fairportfan2 2 года назад

      Or a copy of DVDFab

  • @CRAZYHORSE19682003
    @CRAZYHORSE19682003 2 года назад +1

    I remember being a signalman striker in the USN in 1988, clapping the shutters on the signal lights was considered very bad form.

  • @johngreen3543
    @johngreen3543 Год назад

    The opening comment mentions that this was the 2d adaptation of Brown On Resolution. The first was "Forever England" starring John Mills. It is available on youtube.

  • @zorro456
    @zorro456 2 года назад

    A Movie I did not know Before.

  • @photodom2000
    @photodom2000 4 года назад +20

    Spotted Jeffrey straight away. What was a Yank doing in the Royal Navy? Or was he Canadian? I used to love watching these films on a Sunday afternoon when I were a lad.

    • @1chish
      @1chish 4 года назад +2

      He played the role of "Signalman Andrew 'Canada' Brown"

    • @Fjobiden
      @Fjobiden 4 года назад +3

      Those movies are still better than anything they can come up with today

    • @rb1179
      @rb1179 4 года назад

      What was HITLER'S nephew doing in the US Navy during WW2?

    • @HootOwl513
      @HootOwl513 4 года назад

      @@rb1179 He was a Corpsman.

    • @photodom2000
      @photodom2000 4 года назад +1

      @@rb1179 You'll need to explain that one?

  • @brianwinters5434
    @brianwinters5434 3 года назад

    Great movie

  • @georgebuller1914
    @georgebuller1914 8 лет назад +8

    3-12. 'I say, let's stop engines altogether and just sit here waiting for it!' LOL

    • @j3lny425
      @j3lny425 4 года назад

      So you noticed that as well. If you noticed the torpedo aiming the German ship was not moving either.

  • @ichabodon
    @ichabodon 4 года назад +6

    Sorry James, that is not Compo from Last of the Summer Wine. It’s the great late Victor Madden

    • @teecee1567
      @teecee1567 2 года назад +1

      Maddern...as opposed to Madden

  • @vernedavis5856
    @vernedavis5856 2 года назад +5

    Torpedos had very short range. Largest guns, such as ones that were beyond range of opponents, were several miles, close to past range of site

    • @freddieclark
      @freddieclark 6 месяцев назад +1

      Totally depends on which torpedo's you are talking about. The Japanese type 93 had a massive range of over 40,000 yards (although the effective range was only around 24,000 yards), far longer than allied light Cruiser guns could effectively engage. The British 21 inch Mark IX had a range of around 15,000 yards.

    • @paulmaxwell8851
      @paulmaxwell8851 5 месяцев назад +1

      Wrong. The standard U..S Navy Mark 15 had a range of 15,000 yards or 7.4 nautical miles. The Japanese Long Lance had a range of 44,000 yards or an unbelievable 22 nautical miles.

  • @willbest1547
    @willbest1547 9 лет назад

    Good one, have not seen it.

  • @agwhitaker
    @agwhitaker 6 лет назад +6

    Open bridge or whatever - those Dido class cruisers were hansom ships.

    • @torinbrown8196
      @torinbrown8196 4 года назад +2

      Yes, except ships are "she" not "he." She's beautiful not handsome.

    • @jonathanstrong4812
      @jonathanstrong4812 Год назад

      the Dido light anti-aircraft-cruiser HMS Cleopatra a veteran warship which who fought in WW2 against the Italian-Navy to force a desperate Malta-convoy to relieved Malta in March 1942 And the Cleopatra was the flagship of the desperate situation And the Cleopatra play in the A Sailor Of The King in a double roll one was the doomed HMS Amesbury and also the victorious HMS Stratford

  • @zillsburyy1
    @zillsburyy1 10 лет назад +3

    along with SAILOR OF THE KING

  • @S250385
    @S250385  10 лет назад +3

    No, the movie was definitely B&W (I have it on DVD), but there are many colour posters of it.

  • @garfieldsmith332
    @garfieldsmith332 2 года назад +2

    Great little movie. Available on DVD. Two different endings were filmed for the American release.

  • @freebeerfordworkers
    @freebeerfordworkers 5 лет назад +12

    Actually the book on which this is based, CS Forester's "Brown on Resolution" has a much sadder ending. Brown is son of a greengrocers daughter and the result of a weekend fling she has with a young naval officer whom she never sees again.
    Nevertheless with very limited means she looks after the boy with the intention he should join the Navy like his father. Unfortunately her money is stolen by her solicitor and she cannot afford to send him to Britannia Royal Naval College. She dies when he is a teenager, but her dying wish is that he should join the Royal Navy and having been educated to do nothing else he does.
    The story seems to follow the book from then on, but it is Brown's harassment of the German ship that makes it possible for his father's ship to catch her. Brown dies of wounds and his father is famed throughout the Navy as the man who sank the German Raider but nobody ever knows the part his son played including him.

    • @adamcarreras-neal4697
      @adamcarreras-neal4697 4 года назад

      the film had 2 endings, one with the boy dying and one surviving, dont remember him being the son

    • @freebeerfordworkers
      @freebeerfordworkers 4 года назад

      @@adamcarreras-neal4697 I didn't see the film, so I couldn't say. I think someone told me with the "happy ending" he is picked up introduced to his father and they are unaware of the relationship. But in another change from the book Brown tells him his mother is still alive and the implication is his father will write congratulating her on her (actually their) son's action.

  • @billyponsonby
    @billyponsonby 6 месяцев назад +2

    Authentic because it was soon after the war. Also, fighting from an open bridge must have required a particular type of toughness.

  • @randyjohnson6845
    @randyjohnson6845 4 года назад +11

    At this range you couldn't hit a British cruiser. 32.5 knots zigzagging, straight line and making smoke.not a chance if the cruiser was trying to survive

  • @grindupBaker
    @grindupBaker 3 года назад +18

    If he could get GORT to assist they'd vaporize that other ship.

    • @teecee1567
      @teecee1567 2 года назад +1

      I was wracking my brains to think what the acronym GORT meant. I'd been a navy man for 25 years and know that the RN uses acronyms for everything... ECR for engine control room, DC for damage control, NCS for naval control of shipping, STANAVFORLANT for standing naval force atlantic... etc etc... but was so annoyed to realise I never knew what it meant.
      then I bloody realised it wasn't an acronym at all..GORT is the name of the alien played by the Captain in this piece, Michael Rennie.
      DOHHH!!!!!

    • @pracylopgonzer3176
      @pracylopgonzer3176 2 года назад

      Gory couldn’t swim

  • @Marafox2
    @Marafox2 13 лет назад +4

    Thanks for the upload! Where did you get the pictures from? Is there a DVD buyable? I would like to get the hole film, because I love the book of C.S. Forester really a lot. Thanks for a repy.

    • @gerry343
      @gerry343 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/uB0F5QOurXo/видео.html

  • @flagwanker6346
    @flagwanker6346 4 года назад +16

    10” lamp being answered by 20” carbon arc lamp. 20” carbon arc lamp carbon rods were a bitch to change!

    • @KJs581
      @KJs581 2 года назад

      Yeah, ours only ever had the 10". The older RN based ships had them; saw some on some of the older Kiwi ships.

  • @JohnSmith-zv8km
    @JohnSmith-zv8km 5 лет назад +11

    would have been believable if the ship was actually moving

  • @FightAtTheForum
    @FightAtTheForum 11 лет назад

    hey i've searched amazon, cant find the copy to buy! any chance of a link?

  • @stevek8829
    @stevek8829 3 года назад +1

    The Day the Earth Stood Still

  • @Alex_Guy1011
    @Alex_Guy1011 6 месяцев назад

    A battle just about as destructive as the HMAS Sydney vs Kormoran.

  • @alanmusicman3385
    @alanmusicman3385 2 года назад +3

    Never heard of or seen this film. With the DVD versions of it selling for what they do on Amazon, I probably never will either!

  • @raymaxwell2940
    @raymaxwell2940 2 года назад +2

    victor maddern was in some iconic war movies served in the RN in ww2 joining at 14 these movies take me back to the 70s as a kid watching with my grandfather who was a RM in ww2 narvik dunkirk Russian convoys crete malta dieppe burma etc etc

  • @ericpelote998
    @ericpelote998 4 года назад

    The late great Michael Rennie !!!

    • @tomryan914
      @tomryan914 4 года назад

      'The Day The Earth Stood Still'

    • @jonathanstrong4812
      @jonathanstrong4812 Год назад

      he was very-good in the Robert Wise production of when the earth stood still

  • @Lee-70ish
    @Lee-70ish 8 лет назад +3

    Bloody open bridges

  • @m4ch207
    @m4ch207 4 года назад +4

    That movie's quality is mich better than today's cctv

  • @Auge2011
    @Auge2011 7 лет назад +4

    rarely i seen in any war movie ships using torpedoes launchers

  • @cttc4132
    @cttc4132 7 лет назад +7

    Those must be special homing torpedoes. They fired them where their opponent is, as opposed to where the opponent is headed.

    • @sirderam1
      @sirderam1 5 лет назад +7

      Ct Tc. I dont know how this torpedo system worked, but perhaps the sights were offset, by a calculated deflection angle, with respect to the tubes. If not you'd be sighting on empty ocean, which would be a bit pointless since you'd have no aiming mark.

    • @flybobbie1449
      @flybobbie1449 4 года назад +4

      I had a customer who was in the navy, he said they would practise shooting guns at a sea target with offset, not to destroy target. But he said they often knew the offset and deliberately fired to hit the target. Reckoned he was one of the last to use cordite firing guns. A miss fire was an exciting time in the turret if you were nominated to unload the gun.

    • @barthoving2053
      @barthoving2053 2 года назад +1

      @@sirderam1 That's generally how sights work. Even rifle sights you adjust to range and at longer ranges wind.

    • @sirderam1
      @sirderam1 2 года назад

      @@barthoving2053
      Yes, thanks. I've a fair idea how sights work, I shot full bore target rifle for many years in my younger days. 😂😜

    • @KJs581
      @KJs581 2 года назад

      @@flybobbie1449 Yeah, misfires still suck. Worse with a "hot gun" if a HE round.

  • @frankblangeard8865
    @frankblangeard8865 4 года назад +1

    Lots of fire but virtually no smoke 4:04.

  • @markquinn3478
    @markquinn3478 2 года назад +1

    One of my dads work mates served on Manxman and told him she was good for 40 knots but couldn’t sustain it cos she’d shake herself to bits

  • @ffrederickskitty214
    @ffrederickskitty214 3 года назад +2

    I think the ship might have fared better if it was actually moving?

  • @rosewhite---
    @rosewhite--- 6 месяцев назад

    It would be wonderful if some of those big guns were in a museum and we could open and load with blanks!

  • @bigbob1699
    @bigbob1699 6 лет назад +6

    Those German range finders will get you every time!

    • @johnminehan1148
      @johnminehan1148 5 лет назад

      Solid bracket, 2 overs and 2 shorts, drop 50 fire for effect.

    • @Supergeologist
      @Supergeologist 4 года назад

      After the Graf Spee action the brits set up a fake scrap company in Uruguay and bought the salvage rights to the Graf Spee mainly so they could get the range finder tech. I maybe wrong but I've got a feeling it was designed by a Brit many years previously but the Navy fobbed him off so he sold it to the Germans.

    • @bigbob1699
      @bigbob1699 3 года назад

      The results were the same .@@Supergeologist

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis 6 месяцев назад

      well the Warspite 1915.16 did ok hit a moving ship at 26000 yards as did the Scharnhorst 1937 ship

  • @eeagleeric
    @eeagleeric 8 лет назад +13

    open bridges! they were tougher then...

    • @jonsouth1545
      @jonsouth1545 6 лет назад +2

      still use them today all warships have both an enclosed and an open bridge and its the personal preference of the CO which one to use when I was in (only left a few years ago) we always used the open bridge as although it was bloody freezing you got a better view and was generally less cramped

    • @KJs581
      @KJs581 2 года назад

      The open bridges (on MFU's in any case) they have now are more of a flying bridge and not much up there, (if at all) all our ships have enclosed bridges. The skippers routinely use the bridge wings if they want to "get out in the breeze; hence why a "CO's Chair" both inside and out. Any flying bridge we have now has nowhere near the access old open bridges did - at least in my Navy (RAN); However; (as said below by Jon S) smaller ships (patrol boats/minehunter etc) often have everything duplicated; so in that sense, they DO have an "open bridge". They don't have the complex "ops room" larger fleet units have; so the open bridge is a good alternative for awareness.
      But is different now than above. CO's on Frigate size and above NEVER "fight the war" from the bridge now, they fight it from the ops room, along with the PWO (warfare officer)
      The bridge during action is run by the Officer of the watch, and he virtually "just checks ship is clear of stuff" - the full picture (radar/combat awareness) is in Ops.
      The open bridges of the past were "open" and EVERYTHING the CO needed could be accessed from there; but they had a "sheltered section" which was like a "shelf" that ran around the outside of the bridge.
      Under there was usually a chart table, a radar display, clearview screens, and (on really old ships) a side room for primitive sonar, before sonar grew and got it's own control room.
      By the time I came along, our Darings had enclosed bridges (got updated). But we went over to Duchess (older Daring we were loaned after losing Voyager) and had a look at her open bridge. They had an old JUA valve radar display. While under cover; that would be a nightmare to maintain with the spray and humidity. JUA's where horrible to maintain in an Airconned Ops room!!!!!!!

  • @timw5108
    @timw5108 6 лет назад +1

    Was this a Swiftsure-class cruiser?

    • @cwjian90
      @cwjian90 5 лет назад +2

      No, the movie was filmed on HMS Cleopatra, a Dido-class cruiser

  • @frankward8336
    @frankward8336 4 месяца назад

    What happened to radios and radar?

  • @edwinsalau150
    @edwinsalau150 Год назад

    What’s the sequels name?

  • @davidlipman8093
    @davidlipman8093 5 месяцев назад

    'tis to Glory we Steer!'

  • @davidevans-eg1ut
    @davidevans-eg1ut 7 лет назад +3

    The original story was called Brown on Resolution and was written by C.S. Forrester. The book differed from the film.

    • @gerry343
      @gerry343 2 года назад

      The book is set in World War 1.

    • @johngreen3543
      @johngreen3543 Год назад

      Only on minor points. But in the main Brown does prevent Essen from getting repaired quickly. That is the essence of the story and that is preserved in the movie.

  • @S250385
    @S250385  10 лет назад +7

    Are you referring to "The Cruel Sea"? (just a guess - I haven't watched that film, though after seeing the trailer I'll definitely try to find it). I totally agree with your comment about the spirit of 'those days'.

    • @Weesel71
      @Weesel71 4 года назад +1

      Also look up The Key. I believe this is based on Jan de Hartog's The Captain. Read book; watch movie; enjoy both. HAGO.

    • @ariadnekorais9031
      @ariadnekorais9031 4 года назад

      @@Weesel71 Thank you!

    • @noelnicholls1894
      @noelnicholls1894 4 года назад

      Cruel Sea was on the North Atlantic run to Russia. This looks to be the Med

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 3 года назад +2

      "The Cruel Sea" is a hell of a book. The movie is hard to find.

    • @noelnicholls1894
      @noelnicholls1894 3 года назад

      Steve K - Helluva book for sure. No wonder Fleming gave Bond that Arctic Convoy as part of his background story. Tougher than I could stand.

  • @seymourskinner2533
    @seymourskinner2533 2 года назад

    Is that sailor at the start Jeff hunter?

  • @ralebeau
    @ralebeau 7 лет назад +1

    The 68 minute 1935 version is here ruclips.net/video/KfamPJyDpPg/видео.html It was titled "Forever England", "Born for Glory" and "Brown on Resolution." I don't know which was the original title.

  • @JohnSmith-zf1lq
    @JohnSmith-zf1lq 7 лет назад +4

    What's the vest the damage control men are wearing over their coveralls? Life preserver? Respirator? Storage?

    • @232nightowl
      @232nightowl 4 года назад +2

      Floatation devices in case they go overboard

  • @adrianjackson2696
    @adrianjackson2696 5 лет назад +6

    Capt is Peter Finch a fine AussIe actor of the era

    • @adrianjackson2696
      @adrianjackson2696 5 лет назад

      OOPS, Yes and I have seen "The Day The Earth Stood Still" too. I must have been watching, before writing this comment about Peter Finch, the WW2 film about the German ship scuttled by its captain off South America who was played by Peter Finch.

    • @johngreen3543
      @johngreen3543 Год назад +1

      He played Captain Landsdorf in the Battle of the River Platte.

    • @clinging54321
      @clinging54321 6 месяцев назад +1

      Peter Finch was English, born in South Kensington, London. - he did play an Aussie in A Town like Alice, may have caused confusion..

    • @adrianjackson2696
      @adrianjackson2696 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@clinging54321- Finch immigrated to Australia from UK as a teenager and was raised in Sydney. After WW2 service in Australia he moved overseas permanently according to Wikipedia.

    • @clinging54321
      @clinging54321 6 месяцев назад

      @@adrianjackson2696 so he was English then? He died in the US does that make him American?

  • @mariahoulihan9483
    @mariahoulihan9483 2 года назад

    whilst I haven't seen the entire film, was that sailor giving a message on deck speaking with an American (Canadian?) accent?

    • @jonathanstrong4812
      @jonathanstrong4812 Год назад

      Jeffery Hunter WAS american but wendy hiller's which who was Brown's mother and the Stratford's captain canoodled with Mrs Hiller but he didn't know this unfortunately in the other end to the movie Brown died and she came to receive her son's Victoria-Cross by keeping the Essen's damage-control-teams to repair the damage done to the Essen's lower-bow caused-by the Amesbury's torpedo-spread the Cambridge and Captain Savile's Stratford sunk the Essen

  • @TorontoJediMaster
    @TorontoJediMaster 4 года назад +6

    Are the wearing berets, who are seen 0:46 going into a gun turret Royal Marines?

    • @andrewstackpool4911
      @andrewstackpool4911 2 года назад +1

      Yes, Marines were part of the gun crews

    • @roybennett6330
      @roybennett6330 2 года назад

      @@andrewstackpool4911 I'm told generally X turret.mmm and to keep the silly sailors on their toes...bootneck, bootneck

    • @andrewstackpool4911
      @andrewstackpool4911 2 года назад

      @@roybennett6330 Nah, to keep em busy lest they get into mischief. Incidentally, the Bofors used before Essen used her main armament (overkill?) was a 40/60, a radar-controlled version that was not built at the time of the story.

    • @KJs581
      @KJs581 2 года назад

      @@andrewstackpool4911 Probably a STAAG mount. Hardest radar EVER to maintain. Couldn't handle the vibration/weather; most of ours were removed and reverted to standard bofors. Essentially CIWS idea before it's time.

    • @KJs581
      @KJs581 2 года назад

      During action, it is not unusual for every branch/type of crew to man "lower quarters." Needed a lot of hands to get rounds from Mag/shellroom up to gunbay, and thence to breech/loaded on the older mounts. (16 sailors in each 4.5 mount on a Daring/DE). On these ships; marines not needed for their normal job during main armament engagement, so............................
      On a current Anzac class FFH (for example) they cruised (defence) with 19 rounds in the drum, and could fire with the gunbay unmanned (we have one guy in there in case of problems, Kiwi's didn't). But go to action, have to man the mags (mixed mags) so that can get shells from mag racks, up hoist into drum as the FCO fires them.
      So they have a weapons sailor in each one as the expert (identify ammo/ensure proper handling), and "anyone else" (usually cooks) as the "spare hand." Makes sense. Unless "action messing" cooks won't be cooking much at action.

  • @statewidefilms
    @statewidefilms 4 года назад +1

    Ha har .... the guy on the right at 3.09 was my uncle Victor Maddern . He lives on in movies ..

    • @pungarehu
      @pungarehu 4 года назад +1

      He was a fantastic actor. What was he like as your uncle?

    • @statewidefilms
      @statewidefilms 4 года назад

      @@pungarehu would you believe I never met him .. but my father spoke of him all the time .. we came to Australia and they all lived in England ..

  • @daveybernard1056
    @daveybernard1056 2 года назад

    So what guns are we ACTUALLY seeing at 4:59?

    • @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684
      @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 2 года назад +1

      British BL 8 inch Mark VIII guns fitted onboard Royal Navy "county class" heavy cruisers.

  • @hippyscollectables
    @hippyscollectables 10 лет назад +2

    Is that Jeffrey Hunter, as the sailor taking the message, in the begining?

    • @S250385
      @S250385  10 лет назад +2

      That's right, and he re-appears later in the clip. Actually, he's the protagonist of the film.

    • @ussnewjerseybb62
      @ussnewjerseybb62 7 лет назад

      Yes.

    • @TheHongKongHermit
      @TheHongKongHermit 5 лет назад

      Ah, that explains why he gives an American salute, not a British one.

    • @johngreen3543
      @johngreen3543 Год назад

      @@TheHongKongHermit He did indeed give an American salute. That I noticed when I watched the movie years ago.

  • @S250385
    @S250385  12 лет назад +8

    I have uploaded another excerpt as "Clip from "Single-Handed"/"Sailor of the King" (1953)", but as you understand, the entire movie is copyrighted. Fortunately, the DVD is available in 'Amazon' and it contains both ends.

  • @dickvarga6908
    @dickvarga6908 6 лет назад +4

    damned smooth seas, eh?

  • @richardburton7960
    @richardburton7960 6 месяцев назад

    What a difference between men and septic tanks.

  • @mikjon67
    @mikjon67 4 года назад

    Was the sailor who brought the message British or American???

    • @jrt818
      @jrt818 4 года назад

      A Canadian character.

    • @mikjon67
      @mikjon67 4 года назад

      @@jrt818 Canadian??? Thank you!!!

  • @bambam144
    @bambam144 6 лет назад +3

    Ah a T6 fight :D

  • @SvenTviking
    @SvenTviking 6 месяцев назад

    “Amesbury”? For a Dido class cruiser?

  • @johnhough7738
    @johnhough7738 5 месяцев назад

    Based on book "Brown on Resolution" ... I think.