For Those in Peril (1944) Poster

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5/10
Filming Locations
info-1786524 October 2008
The majority of it was filmed at Newhaven and some, such as the Walrus flying over the Church at nearby Shoreham by Sea where the plane was based. Although released 1944 said locally to have been filmed in mid 1943. Many useful shots of Royal Air Force Air Sea Rescue craft of No 28 Air Sea Rescue unit as well as Royal Navy Coastal craft (ie Motor Launches and Torpedo boats )from HMS Aggressive which was based in the ferry port of Newhaven. There are also several shots of Royal Navy Patrol Service Armed Trawlers and other Auxillary craft. Acting a little wooden by modern standards but never the less a valuable insight into a Port at War
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5/10
Air sea rescue with copious stock footage
Leofwine_draca20 April 2019
Warning: Spoilers
FOR THOSE IN PERIL is another sea-based slice of WW2 propaganda, this time focusing on air sea rescue operations in the Atlantic. The film has an almost documentary feel in tone thanks to the presence of endless scenes of stock footage featuring naval warfare and real-life operations. The cast do little other than display the usual stiff-upper-lip attitudes although there are the usual youthful familiar faces here and the pacing moves at a fair clip. The film has a couple of decent suspense scenes (one involving a minefield) that make it worth a look.
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7/10
"Yes. I knew him..."
richardchatten7 February 2020
Shot in the summer of 1943, at 67 minutes this dramatisation of the contribution of the Air Sea Rescue service to the war effort shot with the cooperation of both the Air Ministry and the Admiralty is technically director Charles Crichton's first feature.

The sound is obviously post-synced but it uses professional actors (wartime audiences were probably already familiar with David Farrar, Ralph Michael & John Slater) and builds up to a suspenseful climax that anticipates by a year 'Western Approaches' (whose long and involved gestation meant that although already well into production still wouldn't be hitting cinemas for several more months to come).
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Writer was Spitfire fighter pilot
tonyspencer4 July 2007
Even more interesting is that Richard Hillary, who wrote the original short story, was a Spitfire pilot during the Battle of Britain who was shot down in 1940, and bailed out with extensive burns and was rescued by the Margate lifeboat.

He is better known for his book The Last Enemy, published in 1942 (filmed 1956), which describes his call up, experience, and recovery. He was killed on active service in 1943.

After three months of skin grafts, he was sent to the US in 1941 on a promotional tour to garner war interest, and did many radio talks, and had an affair with Merle Oberon. In the late 1990s, recordings of those talks (often quoting from the book) surfaced, and were included in a Channel 4 drama/documentary (Oxford Film and Television) in 2000 called Richard Hillary: A Fighter Pilot's Story.
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8/10
Tribute to air sea rescue
malcolmgsw13 April 2019
This is a typical understated tribute to the Air Sea rescue service.David Farrer is the Captain who doesn't have to bark out orders.There is a lot of exciting action,notwithstanding the use of unconvincing models.
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An Air Sea Rescue Semi-Documentary
MIKE-WILSON617 July 2001
Another story along the same lines as 'The Sea Shall Not Have Them' The big difference in this film ,is that it was made during the war, with several real life sailors participating as crew members of the M.T.B. and so has an authentic feel about it. The film follows launch 183 and the skipper (David Farrar) who has to teach a new crew member,who has been rejected by the R.A.F. and is feeling bitter, the skills of handling the launch in all sorts of adverse conditions. Then when a British bomber crash lands in a minefield, 183 is sent to retrieve the crew in the face of the German shore guns. While certain scenes are not as dramatic as 'Sea Shall Not Have Them', the fact that it was shot in 1944, makes it interesting to watch.
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Action With Air/Sea Rescue.
rmax30482317 September 2011
Warning: Spoilers
The Brits put out some first-class movies during the war years and for a decade afterward, including gems like "The Cruel Sea" and "The Dam Busters." They were an exhilarating blend of stiff-upper-lip sentiment and thrills. "For Those in Peril" doesn't rank among the best but it has its moments.

Ralph Michael is a Pilot Officer in the RAF assigned to the fast, lightly armed Motor Torpedo Boats that were used to pluck downed fliers out of the English Channel. His Commanding Officer is David Farrar. I can't think of why the RAF mans the boats instead of the Navy or the Coastguard but it doesn't matter.

The plot accommodates itself to the facts. Michael had flight experience before the war and is filled with chagrin at being assigned to a flightless post. He's a little too candid about his disappointment until Farrar finally brings him up short.

After the introduction to one of the boats, its mission and its capabilities, the film takes us out to bring back the crew of a downed British bomber. The crew is in a life raft sitting in the middle of a mine field.

The mission takes Farrar's boat and its companion boat through just about all the dangers that a boat on such a mission might encounter. ("The Memphis Belle" does the same thing with a B-17.) If it can happen to an MTB, it happens to this one. They're strafed by two German fighters, suffer an engagement with an armed German trawler, shelled by shore batteries, blinded by fog, and menaced by mines.

The photography and the model work are impeccable, considering the period. But the events during this single mission seem rushed and sometimes adventitious. I'll give one example. Two MTBs are more or less trapped in the mine field by that German trawler, which out guns them. At the last moment, a ship of the Royal Navy rushes in, demolishes the trawler, and disappears at once. What the hell was THAT? What kind of ship was it? How did the Navy know the MTBs were in hot water? What kind of armament did she carry? Why did she zip away without waiting to provide cover against air attack? The combat scenes, though exciting, are also confusing.

Not to bash the movie. It's informative and exciting. If only David Lean had been able to get his hands on it.
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