During World War II, British commandos are sent to destroy a Luftwaffe airfield on a Greek island.During World War II, British commandos are sent to destroy a Luftwaffe airfield on a Greek island.During World War II, British commandos are sent to destroy a Luftwaffe airfield on a Greek island.
Gérard Oury
- Captain George Two
- (as Gerard Oury)
William Russell
- Lieut. Tom Poole
- (as Russell Enoch)
Ernest Bale
- Submarine Executive Officer
- (uncredited)
Christopher Rhodes
- German Officer
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
"They Who Dare", which Lewis Milestone directed in 1953, comes across as a kind of preamble for "The Guns of Navarone" and was handsomely shot on location. It deals with the exploits of a small group of British and Greek soldiers tasked with blowing up German air bases on Rhodes but is rather lacking in action; most of the time is spent on the journey to the targets thought when the fighting does start it is lively enough. This is Dirk Bogarde in handsome, dashing leading man mode rather than Bogarde the actor he was ultimately to become and others in the cast include Denholm Elliot and Akim Tamiroff, though they are both wasted. It's hardly comparable to Milestone's other war movies but it's far from being a right-off either.
World War II movie, of British production, which does not have anything that justifies the time one could possibly spare to see it, other than the great Dirk Bogarde starring, with the good British actor Denholm Elliott in a second role. The scenario is rather conventional (we have seen this stuff many times) and does not develop the characters and their relations as it could. It has also attempted to give a Greek aroma, in a very clumsy way: as there is not even one Greek actor among the cast the spoken Greek sound very strange (at least to someone who knows the language like me). Additionally, the portrait of the Greeks falls into a lot of stereotypes, which sometimes are offensive to these people, revealing more things about the script writer himself than the actual Greeks. I have given to this movie 4 out of 10.
A SAS team is sent to Rhodes to sabotage enemies airfields. They bring along four locals (two guides and two officers) and they all get into a mighty mess.
Unfortunately, some of the drama seems contrived and suspenseful situations seem created to add a pep to an otherwise boring plot.
As in any decent war movie, don't expect everybody to survive.
Unfortunately, some of the drama seems contrived and suspenseful situations seem created to add a pep to an otherwise boring plot.
As in any decent war movie, don't expect everybody to survive.
Not sure what I expected from this one. Dirk Bogarde is my favorite actor and I have had pleasant encounters with Milestone as well. Here the latter screws up on multiple occasions.
First off the cinematography is way too light and some of the shots are rather clumsy. The script could be faltered as well. And some of the acting, especially from the one playing a character who keeps singing this awful and quite annoying tune.
Mind you it's not bad. Bogarde's performance makes it worth while. But really if it hadn't been for him this would have been below mediocrity. It got a few strong moments and whenever Bogarde is on screen you nearly forget everything else that has been going on.
I will not recommend this but overall it was OK. I think the casting apartment did some horrible choices though.
First off the cinematography is way too light and some of the shots are rather clumsy. The script could be faltered as well. And some of the acting, especially from the one playing a character who keeps singing this awful and quite annoying tune.
Mind you it's not bad. Bogarde's performance makes it worth while. But really if it hadn't been for him this would have been below mediocrity. It got a few strong moments and whenever Bogarde is on screen you nearly forget everything else that has been going on.
I will not recommend this but overall it was OK. I think the casting apartment did some horrible choices though.
A British war drama; A story about a band of British commandos assigned to sabotage two Nazi outposts in the Aegean. This film is based on the British military mission Operation Anglo during World War II, an inspiring tale of a Special Boat Service attempt to disrupt the Luftwaffe from threatening Allied forces in Egypt. However, the film lacks thrills and is a rather predictable men-on-mission tale. Danger and action come without much suspense, and the film has a throwaway ending. Dirk Bogarde seems miscast as the leader of a deadly commando unit, and the rest of the cast, who perform well, are poorly served by sloppy dialogue. To its credit, the action is convincing, it has some attractive locations, and the colour and light of the setting are richly captured.
Did you know
- TriviaA single parked Bristol Beaufighter can be seen painted in Italian markings in several shots during the raid on the airfield.
- GoofsThe officers are shown wearing SAS parachute badges on their right arms, as they do today; however, during WW2 they wore them on the left breast.
- How long is They Who Dare?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Lewis Milestone's They Who Dare
- Filming locations
- Kalathos Bay, Rhodes, Greece(airfield scenes)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 47m(107 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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