2011 British film
The Most Courageous Raid of WWII | |
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Directed by | Francis Whately |
Based on | Operation Frankton |
Produced by | Francis Whately |
Narrated by | Paddy Ashdown |
Cinematography | Lawrence Gardner |
Edited by | Paul Binns |
Music by | Adrian Williams |
Production company | BBC |
Distributed by | BBC Two |
Release date |
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Running time | 60 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
The Most Courageous Raid of WWII is a 2011 British television docudrama produced and directed by Francis Whately. The film was narrated by former British politician and diplomat Paddy Ashdown, and also features commentary from military historian M.R.D. Foot. It premiered on 1 November 2011, on BBC Two, on the British television series Timewatch.
Synopsis
Paddy Ashdown walks viewers through a dangerous mission carried out by ten Royal Marines who led one of the most daring raids of WWII. The sailors canoed almost seventy miles behind enemy lines to blow up enemy ships. Ashdown reconstructs the events through interviews, commentary and archival footage from British Movietone News, the Imperial War Museum, The National Archives (United Kingdom), The National Archives (Washington D.C.), the Royal Marines Museum, the Royal Navy Archives and the Deutsches U-Boot Museum. Out of the ten sailors, only two survived, while the others died of hypothermia or were executed by the Nazis.
Cast
- Paddy Ashdown
- M.R.D. Foot
- Norman Colley
- Jeanne Baudray
- Nigel Cole
- Giles Maythan
- Olivia Stocker
Archive footage
Background
Main article: Operation FranktonOperation Frankton was a commando raid on ships in the German occupied French port of Bordeaux in southwest France during World War II. The raid was carried out by a small unit of Royal Marines known as the Royal Marines Boom Patrol Detachment, part of Combined Operations, inserted by HMS Tuna, captained by Lieutenant-Commander Dick Raikes.
The plan was for six folding kayaks to be taken to the area of the Gironde estuary by submarine. Twelve men would then paddle by night to Bordeaux. On arrival they would attack the docked cargo ships with limpet mines and then escape overland to Spain. Men from no.1 section were selected for the raid; including the commanding officer, Herbert "Blondie" Hasler, and with the reserve marine Colley the team numbered thirteen in total. One kayak was damaged while being deployed from the submarine, and it and its crew therefore could not take part in the mission. Only two of the ten men who launched from the submarine survived the raid: Hasler, and his number two in the kayak, Bill Sparks. Of the other eight, six were executed by the Germans and two died from hypothermia. Two German vessels were sunk with another four suffering varying degrees of damage.
Ashdown, who narrated the documentary, said "such a raid – men sent out with no backup – would not happen today, the triumph of leadership of the Cockleshell Heroes is that they were ordinary people – a coal merchant's clerk, a milkman, a weaver – but invested in courage and skill by 'Blondie' Hasler, the major who led the raid".
Reception
British author Martin Davidson said "it's a really moving film and hopefully one that honours all of the brave men that devised and carried out the raid". David Chater of The Times notes that "there were 10,000 German troops stationed in the town, and the estuary was so heavily defended that the raid amounted to a suicide mission ... nonetheless, it remains to this day a legendary tale of derring-do". Jonathan Wright wrote in The Guardian, that "a beleaguered Winston Churchill needed to strike against Nazi Germany, yet his options were 'savagely limited' ... this meant the authorities were prepared to listen to leftfield ideas such as those of Blondie Hasler, who believed commandos in canoes could inflict heavy damage, which is how Hasler came to lead a small unit of Royal Marines on 'a suicide mission by any other name', and the legend of the Cockleshell heroes was born".
John Preston wrote in The Sunday Telegraph that the recreation depicted in the film "was extremely well done, with disaster both on foot and in Ashdown's imagination ... as it went on, though, it became increasingly literal and plodding ... nonetheless, the subject cried out for a bolder, more impressionistic approach". Toby Dantzic from The Daily Telegraph said it was a "gripping documentary with dramatic reconstructions that make vivid a mission marked by tragedy, betrayal and bravery".
See also
References
- ^ Chater, David (29 October 2011). "The Most Courageous Raid of WWII". The Times. No. 70403.
- Rees 2008, p. 76.
- Cohen 2005, p. 93.
- Rees 2008, pp. 71, 93–96, 119.
- Jacobs 2015, pp. 146–47.
- Cooper, Glenda (31 October 2011). "Paddy Ashdown: I used to think the party of Gladstone would end with Ashdown". The Telegraph.
- Davidson, Martin (25 October 2011). "Codebreakers, Spies and Double Lives: World War II's Secret Stories". BBC.
- Wright, Jonathan (31 October 2011). "The Most Courageous Raid Of WWII". The Guardian.
- Preston, John (6 November 2011). "Most Courageous Raid of World War II". The Sunday Telegraph. p. 35.
- Dantzic, Toby (1 November 2011). "The Most Courageous Raid Of WWII". The Daily Telegraph. p. 32.
Sources
- Cohen, William A. (2005). Secrets of Special Ops Leadership: Dare the Impossible – Achieve the Extraordinary. Amacom. ISBN 978-0-8144-1350-0.
- Jacobs, Peter (2015). Daring Raids of World War Two: Heroic Land, Sea & Air Attacks. Pen & Sword Books. ISBN 978-1-4738-3863-5.
- Rees, Quentin (2008). The Cockleshell Canoes: British Military Canoes of World War Two. Amberley Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84868-065-4.
Further reading
- Ashdown, Paddy (2013). A Brilliant Little Operation: The Cockleshell Heroes and the Most Courageous Raid of World War 2. Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-78131-083-0.
- David, Saul (2021). SBS – Silent Warriors: The Authorised Wartime History. Harper Collins Publishers. ISBN 978-0-00-839454-7.
- Keene, Tom (2012). Cloak of Enemies: Churchill's SOE, Enemies at Home and the Cockleshell Heroes. History Press. ISBN 978-0-7524-8375-7.
External links
- Operation Frankton: The Story of the Cockleshell Heroes at the National Museum of the Royal Navy
- Cockleshell hero James Conway could get memorial at BBC News
- The Most Courageous Raid of WWII at IMDb
Works directed by Francis Whately | |
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David Bowie triology |
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Documentaries | |
Miniseries |