Tomorrow We Live
Year: 1943
Studio: British Aviation Pictures
Director: George King
Cast: John Clements, Greta Gynt, Hugh Sinclair, Yvonne Arnaud, Godfrey Tearle, Judy Kelley
Crew: George King (Director), Anatole de Grunwald (Screenplay), Dorothy Hope (Story), Nicholas Brodzsky (Original Music Composer), Otto Heller (Director of Photography)
Runtime: 87 minutes
Release: Apr 05, 1943
IMDb: 5.60/10 by 5 users
Popularity: 10
Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
This reminded me a little of "The Silver Fleet"- also made in 1943 - that tackled the thorny issues of collaborators who were really using their position with the occupying Nazi authorities to facilitate the work of the Resistance/escaping British captives. The cast here are solid, not great - led by John Clements and Godfrey Tearle (the Mayor) who alongside his daughter "Marie" (Greta Gynt) treads that dangerous path. It's got some good supporting performances from Yvonne Arnaud and the baddies - Karel Stepanek, Hugh Sinclair and the briefest of appearances from Herbert Lom that all help keep it moving along nicely, if not terribly distinctively, to a perfectly satisfactory ending.