MORNING DEPARTURE 🌄 (Full Movie)
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- Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024
- MORNING DEPARTURE 🌄 (Full Movie)
CLASSIC BRITISH MOVIE 🎬 🎞 🎥 CHOSEN FOR YOU BY LEGENDARY WORLDWIDE BROADCASTER LIVESTREAMER AND INTERNATIONAL INTERNET ICON SCOTTIE McCLUE ENJOY 😉 💜 🙌 ♥️
DINKY-DOO
@ScottieMcClue
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FABULOUS MOVIE ❤
It was actually a law in England that all wartime navy movies had to star John Mills.
@@PointyTailofSatan I’m not sure if John Mills actually served in the armed forces, so perhaps he was more readily available. Perhaps someone will correct me if I’m wrong.
Haven't heard that one 😕
The movie was 1950
@daveyr7454 He was in The Army but was invalid out in 1942 and spent the rest of the was making films He plays a superb officer.
Check out 'Tunes of Glory' 😊
That's funny, I got a good laugh out of that one.
Excellent movie.
Thank You 😊 🙏
A good old golden oldie. Some great British stars in it . Many thanks for the upload.
Thank You 😊 🙏
Absolutely superb, all down to script, direction and pure acting ability. No need to depend on dramatic effects or AI.
Understated and emotive, the quality shows.
There's something about these ol' time chaps, even in the novels of the day, like Neville Shute, honor, courage and brotherly love. Cheerie O'.
In the 1950's when I was about 13 or 14 years old Mornning Departure was produced as a radio play My Father who was a radio ham got me an old Pye valve radio which had a very distinct musty smelll and dull yellow flowing dial. I listened, on my own, in the dark, totally rivited to the radio. I saw the men in the sub as being in the dark as I was. Unforgettable introduction to fine drama.
Great Story
Bloody brilliant,Royal Navy good bless em
Thank You
As an ex submariner... If the boat had a double gun chamber and conning tower chamber. Either one could have let a diver in the open hatch to shut it. Then the chamber drained for another escape. Diver could have taken down spare escape kits..
As an ex 1960's A - boat man I agree
great film Thanks for posting such good acting
A Pleasure 🙏 ☺️
Based on the HM Thetis
Ecellent thoroughly enjoyed it . Thank you.
A Pleasure 🙏 ☺️
HMS Tiptoe was used for the external shots of the submarine (not HMS Thetis). HMS Maidstone was the depot ship. My father served aboard HMS Tiptoe for some years when she was based in the Clyde and in Malta.
Fantastic cast, RUclips gold..
Thank you kindly
Excellent film and cast. The name "Snipe" for the Attenborough character is the US Navy and Merchant Mariine slang term for members of the'black gang' or engineering ratings. This iis at least the 3rd submarine film starring
John Mills I can recall.
"As a submariner with 6 'boomer' patrols, the film accurately depicted a bouyant ascent from 90 feet. At sub school we did 2 ascents from 50 feet. On the way up you have to forcefully expel several several lungfulls of of air as it is continuously expanding.
Very good movie!
Thank You 😊 🙏
Well I thought that was a spectacular film ...drama at its best
Absolutely 💯
Any other recommemdations?
Correct me if I'm wrong but couldn't the diver have taken down replacement escape breathing equipment, put them through the open hatches, then closed those hatches from the outside, so allowing the last men to open the inner hatch and re use the chamber to escape?
@@melbeasley9762 The two hatches were already filled with water and had no way of removing it. They would not have been able to get hold of the delivered rescue equipment. HM Submarine Thetis, along with USS Thresher were to instigate the development of DSRV (Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle) within the Royal and US navies.
I agree. They should have been able to save the third set of men somehow. If they were almost at the surface. They might have even been able to free dive to the surface without gear, if they weren't too deep. Just quitting because of weather when they were so close to getting them up ...seems stupid to quit. Also. It seems to me that the submarine hanging on the cables would have actually acted like sea ballast - a sort of ballasted sea anchor which actually should have reduced the pitching and heaving of the two vessels doing the lift.
Wow there are more ships in the harbor at the beginning of the movie than the entire Royal Navy has now!
...and a great many more will be on the high seas and scattered across the World
Blimey, that caused a tear or two.
Many married couples have two single beds, for different reasons.
That was actually very common in the days of old. Many people had almost puritan attitudes toward sex. Some considered it to be for procreation, not recreation. 🤷♂️
@@stargazer5784 I doubt it. The majority were just like us today. You get a better nights sleep if you sleep in different beds.
Different bedrooms if possible
@@mikeanderson4401 One can always meet up in the hallway.
@@mikeanderson4401 Better still, own bathrooms. So none of that embarrasing "Better give it 5 minutes luv".
Portland hbr. Used in many old Naval films.
Portland Bill
@@ScottieMcClue Portland Bill is the pointy bit at the end. In the Cruel Sea it is Plymouth they start in and Portland they finish in.
Excellent Thank You 😊 🙏
Core a young George Cole aka Arthur Daily. Gordon Jackson, all so young
Part of the joy is seeing all these superb actors 👏 throughout life 👏 🙌
What no Sam Kydd ?
@@robertsmith3672 Sam Kydd was without doubt an essential underpin character to any decent B&W film of the 1950s.
Arthur Daley, not Daily.
@@davidlauder-qi5zv And his mate - George Coal...
Why does a married couple have two single beds, only for the film censors,but not in real life
I'M SURE MANY WILL AND PERHAPS EVEN SEPERATE ROOMS IF BOTH ARE FULLY EMPLOYED AND MAYBE SHIFTWORKERS 🤔
@petercooper9277 In Germany I was surprised to see Married couples sleeping in separate beds alot. Lived there for 5 yrs.
@@ScottieMcCluegreat film Scottie
Not so unusual at the time, especially with upper classes. Single beds gave a better sleep and grumpy pumpy was more exciting after a minor expedition.
Good, except for the end.
Why didn't the Captain reverse?
Exactly....and keep a safe distance then use the deck gun to destroy the mine? But then, I guess there would be no drama or plot involving a rescue...lol.
havent seen this yet but a ship doesnt stop on a dime, it takes a considerable distance to stop then reverse, turning also moves the bow one way but the stern moves the other, gets complicated.
What are the 39 steps?😺
The thirty-nine steps are an organisation BANG ....did I get it right sir? ✅️ 😔
I watched this classic navy/submarine movie a day or so ago.....somehow ended up starting to watch it again just now. It is a really interesting movie, about a topic seldom covered....making an underwater emergency escape from a submarine stranded hundreds of feet below the surface.... But in watching it the second time....Things stood out now knowing the ending of the movie and the fact that the entire crew was lost except for 8 very lucky men. But watching again, I asked, why on earth did the submarine captain dive under near this mine knowing it might be triggered accidentally. The submarine was on the surface, where escape was much easier vs. diving ...and why even keep moving, why not stop or go into reverse away from the mine, and report the mine and it's location to a mine sweeper properly equipped to deal with the mine ....or....keep a safe distance, report the position, then use the large deck gun to fire at the mine from a safe distance...until you hit it and destroy the mine. I realize this was done to create a plot for the movie. But in real life the move made by the Captain would not have been a wise one.
Another great old film . Cheers Scottie
A Pleasure 🙏 ☺️