IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
All leave is cancelled so that a British submarine can be sent after a new German warship. They chase it so far that they have no fuel to get home.All leave is cancelled so that a British submarine can be sent after a new German warship. They chase it so far that they have no fuel to get home.All leave is cancelled so that a British submarine can be sent after a new German warship. They chase it so far that they have no fuel to get home.
Photos
Robert Wilton Jnr
- Cook - 'Pincher'
- (as Robert Wilton)
Marie Ault
- Mrs. Metcalfe
- (uncredited)
Victor Beaumont
- German Airman
- (uncredited)
Frederick Burtwell
- Sidney Briggs
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFilmed in 1942 when British losses in the Battle of the Atlantic reached their peak.
- GoofsEric Portman's character uses the captured German flyer's uniform, including 'flying boots', when going ashore to find fuel, but when the German flyers are first taken they all swim onto the sub barefooted.
- Quotes
[LS Hobson volunteers to go ashore on a dangerous mission]
Lt. Freddie Taylor: [worried] You realize, Hobson, that if you're caught in a German uniform, then it *won't* just be a question being *taken prisoner*-!
L / S. Hobson: There's nobody to cry for *me*, sir.
- Crazy creditsOpening credits prologue: H. M. S. "Sea Tiger"
- ConnectionsEdited into WW II Theater: We Dive at Dawn (2022)
Featured review
Anthony Asquith's wartime action film is surprisingly good, given the constraints under which it was made. The battle sequences are well staged, with stock footage intercut with interior sequences taking place in the submarine. Asquith captures the claustrophobic life of the crew at sea, with each man trying to live as best they can under highly cramped conditions, while remaining loyal to their captain, Lt. Taylor (John Mills). Everyone accepts that death might occur at any time, yet they try their best to extricate themselves from a difficult situation, after trying to torpedo a German battleship, the Brandenburg. WE DIVE AT DAWN is an interesting example of a wartime propaganda film in which every social class is represented, from the upper class officer Lt. Gordon (Jack Watling), to the no-nonsense working class L/S Hobson (Eric Portman), who believes that his wife Alice (Josephine Wilson) has left him for the local fish-and-chip shop owner. Once aboard the submarine, however, social divisions are forgotten: everyone is committed to the cause of destroying the battleship and returning home safely. This message of all people pulling together was one of the most familiar refrains of World War II, both on the home and the battle fronts. In the end the crew succeed in their task, but not without a daring raid on a Danish port in order to purloin some fuel oil, which they achieve in the face of spirited resistance from the Germans. It is chiefly due to Hobson's resourcefulness that the crew succeeds. WE DIVE AT DAWN might seem a little antiquated now, its social attitudes redolent of a bygone age, but it still stands up as an effective piece of wartime propaganda.
- l_rawjalaurence
- Aug 14, 2014
- Permalink
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Zaronićemo u zoru
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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