Nine Men | |
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Nine Men UK release poster |
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Directed by | Harry Watt |
Produced by | Michael Balcon |
Written by | Harry Watt (from short story by Gerald Kersh) |
Starring | Jack Lambert Gordon Jackson Frederick Piper |
Music by | John Greenwood |
Cinematography | Roy Kellino |
Editing by | Charles Crichton |
Distributed by | Ealing Studios |
Release date(s) | 22 February 1943 |
Running time | 68 min. |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Nine Men is a 1943 British patriotic war film. The film is an Ealing Studios production, which marked the first fiction film assignment for celebrated documentary film director Harry Watt. In common with many Ealing productions of the time, Nine Men used a largely unknown cast, few of whom were full-time professional actors.
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Sergeant Jack Watson and the eight men under his command are travelling through the Libyan desert in an Allied convoy when their truck is destroyed by Italian forces and they find themselves stranded as the convoy moves on without them. They take refuge in a semi-derelict desert fort, where they must hold out while being besieged by the Italians, with only a limited supply of ammunition and their own wits to help them survive.
Lacking a budget for large-scale battle scenes, Nine Men focuses tightly on psychological tension and the personal interactions between its nine protagonists.
The film's exterior desert sequences were shot on location at Margam Sands, Glamorgan.
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