Britmovie - The home of UK Movies

Freedom Radio

Film stillBuy

Freedom Radio - 1940 | 83 mins | Drama, War, Propaganda | B&W

The Production Team

Director: Anthony Asquith.
Producer: Mario Zampi.
Script: Anatole de Grunwald, Basil Woon and Jeffrey Dell. (from a story by Wolfgang Wilhelm and George Campbell) Scenario contributions from Louis Golding, Gordon Wellesley, Bridget Boland and Roland Pertwee.
Cinematography: Bernard Knowles.
Art Direction: Paul Sheriff.
Editing: Reginald Beck.
Music Direction: Nicholas Brodsky.

The Cast

Clive Brook - Dr. Karl Roder
Diana Wynyard - Irena Roder
Ronald Squire - Spiedler
Derek Farr - Hans Glaser
Joyce Howard - Elly
John Penrose - Otto
Raymond Huntley - Rabenau
Bernard Miles - Muller
Muriel George - Hanna
Hay Petrie - Sebastian

Plot Synopsis

Dr Karl Roder, a Viennese throat specialist, believes in freedom of thought, action and expression and is thus hostile to Nazism. His wife Irena, however, is flattered by the attentions of the Fuhrer and accepts a political post in Berlin. The two of them become estranged. Karl meets Hans, a young wireless engineer, whose fiancée has been raped by a Gestapo officer. Hans builds a transmitter so that Karl can broadcast the truth on a secret radio station to the German people. The Freedom Radio is born, and with it an underground group of anti-Nazis who regard Karl as their leader.

Meanwhile, Irena continues to believe in the Fuhrer and his pronouncements on peace, but when Karl denounces Hitler on the Freedom Radio for preparing for war with Poland, she is disillusioned. They are reconciled and Irena helps him to run the radio station while continuing her political work. Her brother, Otto, is an ardent Nazi. He begins to suspect his sister of being a spy and through his intervention the Gestapo discovers the Freedom Radio Station. Karl and Irena die together. But that night Hans rigs up a transmitter in another part of Berlin. While the Nazis announce that the radio has been silenced, a new anti-Hitler broadcast is being made. The station lives on.
Excerpt© 'Puffin Asquith' by R.J. Minney.