Red Ensign (film)
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Red Ensign | |
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Red Ensign Video Cover |
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Directed by | Michael Powell |
Produced by | Michael Balcon |
Written by | Jerome Jackson L. du Garde Peach Michael Powell |
Starring | Leslie Banks Carol Goodner Frank Vosper Alfred Drayton Donald Calthrop |
Cinematography | Leslie Rowson |
Editing by | Geoffrey Barkas |
Distributed by | Gaumont British Picture Corporation Ltd |
Release date(s) | June, 1934 UK |
Running time | 66 min |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Budget | £12,000 (estimated) |
IMDb profile |
Red Ensign (1934) is an early work by noted British film-maker Michael Powell.
Contents |
[edit] Story
David Barr is the manager and chief designer of a British shipyard who comes up with a radical new design for ships, at a time when the industry as a whole is in recession. He struggles to find financial backing from his company, banks or investors, and is driven to desperate ends to try to complete the ship. As well as technical and financial difficulties Barr also has to struggle against the machinations of rival shipbuilders and infiltrating militants.
[edit] Production
Powell's 12th film in four years, and perhaps his most memorable one in that period. "It was the first time that Michael Powell himself realised that there was something special about a Michael Powell film, something going on on the screen, or behind the screen, which you couldn't put your finger on, something intriguing, aloof, but in the long run memorable." [1]
[edit] Analysis
The character of David Barr is seen as an early precursor of Powell's own alter-ego in Michael Powell films such as Eric Portman's Colpeper in A Canterbury Tale (1944) and Roger Livesey's Dr Reeves in A Matter of Life and Death (1946). Indeed the whole film is seen as a parallel with the struggles of a young bold film director, and a plea for a strong British film industry. The strong crusading tone of the film prefigures Powell's wartime propaganda films such as 49th Parallel and Contraband. A minor character is pointedly called 'Grierson' after the celebrated documentary maker John Grierson. This character is described as 'the best rivetter in the yard' who 'taught me [Barr] everything I know'. This scene is immediately followed with one of Barr firing a 'militant' worker intent on provoking industrial strife in the yard.
[edit] References
- ^ Powell, Michael (1986). A Life in Movies. London: Heinemann. ISBN 0-434-59945-X.
[edit] External links
- Red Ensign at the Internet Movie Database
- Red Ensign at the Powell & Pressburger Pages
- Red Ensign at the BFI's Screenonline. Full synopsis and film stills (and clips viewable from UK libraries).