A gossipy housewife is overheard talking about what her son is doing by a Nazi spy.A gossipy housewife is overheard talking about what her son is doing by a Nazi spy.A gossipy housewife is overheard talking about what her son is doing by a Nazi spy.
- Awards
- 1 win
- No. 23 (Mr. Davis)
- (as Ft. Lt. Mervyn Johns RAF.VR.)
- Maj. Richards
- (as Sqn-Ldr. Reginald Tate RAF.VR.)
- Mr. Barratt
- (as L/C Stephen Murray RASC)
- Intelligence Officer
- (as Ft-Lt. David Hutcheson RAF.VR.)
- Brigade Major Harcourt
- (as 2nd. Lt. Jack Hawkins RWF)
- German General
- (as Lt. Torin Thatcher R.A.)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe War Office asked Ealing to make a feature length training film for them on the subject of security, but provided minimal funds. Ealing more than doubled the budget from their own resources, to produce a film whose appeal transcended its military function. The very large profits from commercial distribution went first to repay this outlay, then to the War Office rather than Ealing.
- GoofsWhen Beppie meets her soldier boyfriend near his north of England training ground, he is standing by a Western National bus stop. Western National only operated in the South West of England, not the North.
- Quotes
Narrator: [Spoken as camera pans across dead soldiers after the battle sequence] The object of the raid has been achieved. Locked gates, oil storage tanks, harbour equipment were destroyed. One enemy submarine was put out of action, our own losses, both in men and craft were very heavy. The enemy had been warned. He was waiting for us. And although our troops fought throughout with great skill and gallantry, they were not able to effect the surprise that had been hoped for. They paid the price for bad security. The next of kin of causalities' have been informed.
- Crazy creditsSECURITY This is the story of how YOU - unwittingly worked for the Enemy, YOU - without knowing gave him the facts, YOU in all innocence helped to write those tragic words - 'THE NEXT OF KIN'
- ConnectionsFeatured in I See a Dark Stranger (1946)
There is as usual the dry humour one associates with even the most single-minded British wartime propaganda (some of the peripheral detail is even quite racy, and the wartime censor permitted a reference to cocaine addiction)!
Among a large cast of familiar faces the use of Mary Clare is particularly striking, while Phyllis Stanley is a fox as the film's Mata Hari. But the final scene with two old favourites manages to surpass all that has gone before.
Essential viewing: I would love to know what Goebbels made of it!
- richardchatten
- Dec 22, 2019
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 42 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1