Amazon.com: It Happened Here: The Story of Hitler's England [VHS]: Bart Allison, Frank Bennett (II), Nicolette Bernard, Rex Collett, Peter Dineley, Honor Fearson, Frank Gardner, Miles Halliwell, Reginald Marsh, Derek Milburn, Andrew Mollo, Nicholas Moore, Pauline Murray, Michael Passmore, Barrie Pattison, Ronald Phillips, Bertha Russell, Sebastian Shaw, Chris Slaughter: Movies & TV

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It Happened Here: The Story of Hitler's England [VHS]
 
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It Happened Here: The Story of Hitler's England [VHS] (1966)

Bart Allison , Frank Bennett (II) , Andrew Mollo  |  NR |  VHS Tape
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Actors: Bart Allison, Frank Bennett (II), Nicolette Bernard, Rex Collett, Peter Dineley
  • Directors: Andrew Mollo
  • Format: Black & White, Special Edition, NTSC
  • Language: English, German
  • Rated: NR (Not Rated)
  • Number of tapes: 1
  • Studio: Milestone Video
  • VHS Release Date: October 9, 2001
  • Run Time: 93 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: 6305741719
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #150,741 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

British film historian and acclaimed documentarian Kevin Brownlow was only 18 when he teamed up with military history buff Andrew Mollo to make this eerie "what-if" take on WWII. A brief, newsreel-perfect documentary introduction explains that Germany invaded and occupied Britain in 1941. Now, as the war is heating up on the Russian front in 1944, Germany pulls out all but a skeletal force, and the resistance readies itself for an assault. The story is seen from the perspective of an apolitical nurse who all too easily falls under the sway of British Nazi party in an effort to "get Britain on her feet," and we follow her journey from willing collaborator to horrified participant. Brownlow and Mollo use grainy black-and-white footage and hand-held camerawork (courtesy of future David Cronenberg cinematographer Peter Suschitzky) to give a documentary-like reality to the picture, but it's the easy naturalism of German soldiers on London streets and Nazi flags hanging from public buildings that gives the film its unsettling undercurrent. The technique is often primitive and many of the actors show their inexperience with stiff, self-conscious performances, but there's a canny cinematic intelligence behind the camera and the cutting. Produced on a starvation budget over a period of seven years, this is a brave, understated independent production in a time when such cinematic experiments were all but unknown. Brownlow documented the experience in the memoir How It Happened Here. --Sean Axmaker

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Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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29 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A neglected masterpiece, November 24, 2001
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This review is from: It Happened Here: The Story of Hitler's England [VHS] (VHS Tape)
The premise of this most unusual war film is that Britain was invaded and occupied after the Dunkirk retreat, and in a mixture of documentary and narrative styles it sets out to tell the story of the occupation that the country narrowly (some would say, unaccountably) escaped, up to and including the 'liberation', orchestrated by the efforts of local partisans with American assistance, in the war's closing year.

It is hard to believe that this film began its life as the spare-time project of 18-year-old Kevin Brownlow, a film enthusiast working in the cutting-room of a small London production company, and his 16-year-old schoolboy friend Andrew Mollo, who had a passion for military history and a collection of old German uniforms and regalia. Starting without a budget, using a borrowed 16 mm camera, the two doggedly pursued their dream of completing the project for almost eight years, finding actors, actresses, sets and backing as they went along.

This is a low-key, reflective war drama, which follows its central character, an Irish- born district nurse working in a village near Salisbury, through the horrors of a partisan ambush that goes wrong, to a chilling Nazi-dominated vision of London, where she finds herself assimilated into the highly political "Immediate Action Organization" and receives her "political re-education", on to a rural medical centre specializing in euthanasia for "undesirables", through to the final chilling irony of "liberation" and the wholesale slaughter of "collaborators".

The most famous sequence in the work is a six-minute scene in which genuine Neo- Nazis expound their ideas. The Directors were required to cut this sequence at the behest of its first distributor, United Artists, but it has now been reinstated.

I found this film disturbing, unsettling, unforgettable. The scale of the achievement involved in the creation of a work of this quality from such humble beginnings can hardly be overstated.

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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Fine Independent British Film From The 1960's, July 16, 2000
By 
Jesmat (West Midlands, UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: It Happened Here (DVD)
I'll start off by just mentioning a few minor niggles. Firstly, the film is presented in a TV 4:3 aspect ratio. I don't know what print was available to the DVD's producers, but the original aspect ratio (1.85:1 at a guess) would have been more desirable. The movie's ending is also quite abrupt - I had to look twice when the film's end title appeared. And finally, the 1974 follow-up documentary 'It Happened Here Again' which appears on some VHS versions, is sadly missing from this DVD. Now that's out of the way, please ignore what I've just written as the DVD's good points far outweigh the bad. The film was produced at a time when 'warts and all' realism was the driving force behind many films and TV productions. Thus we see British citizens act as willing collaborators to the Nazi invaders, even up to the point of murdering Jews and the massacre of surrendering German soldiers. This is a constantly thought provoking and conscience testing picture produced by two very talented young film makers. On the technical side, picture quality is superb - slightly grainy but far better than you would expect given the independent nature of the production. The DVD does not contain any special features. I imagine that the DVD's producers thought that the limited appeal of this film did not merit the additional costs involved. Still, this is definitely worth a look for anyone interested in gritty British movies from the 1960's.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not just for World War Two buffs, June 8, 2002
By 
Frank Clover (Columbus, OH United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: It Happened Here: The Story of Hitler's England [VHS] (VHS Tape)
I had read about It Happened Here for years before I had a chance to see it and assumed it was created by and for teenaged nerds who make detailed models of Tiger tanks and Stukas. However, what impressed me the most about this film was its adult, complex plot. I would not have expected two young film and military history geeks to choose as their main character a woman faced with making moral compromises to survive in a Nazi- occupied England. The fanatical devotion to period accuracy that Brownlow and Mollo display only serves to enhance the film's depiction of the brutality of life under the Nazis.
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