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One of Our Aircraft is Missing

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One of Our Aircraft is Missing - 1942 | 102mins | Drama, War | B&W

The Production Team

Director: Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger.
Producer: John Corfield, Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger.
Associate Producer: Stanley Haynes.
Script: Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger.
Cinematography: Ronald Neame.
Editing: David Lean.
Art Direction: David Rawnsley.
Special Effects: F. Ford and Douglas Woolsey.
Production: Sydney Streeter.
Sound: A.W. Watkins and C.C. Stevens.

The Cast

Eric Portman - Tom Earnshaw
Godfrey Tearle - Sir George Corbett
Hugh Williams - Frank Shelley
Bernard Miles - Geoff Hickman
Hay Petrie - Burgomeister
Pamela Brown - Else Meertens
James B. Carson - Louis
Alec Clunes - Organist
Roland Culver - Naval Officer
William D'Arcy - Officer
Robert Duncan - 2nd Airman
Robert Helpmann - De Jong
Emrys Jones - Bob Ashley
Robert Beatty - Sgt. Hopkins
Joan Akkerman - Maartje
Googie Withers - Jo de Vries

Plot Synopsis

A British bomber crew returning from a raid on Stuttgart bails out over occupied Holland. Aided by a friendly Dutch family, the men are taken to the local church where they are helped by resistance worker Els Meertens, the local schoolteacher. Dutch network helps them to travel, disguised, across the occupied countryside, avoiding the German patrols until, reaching the North Sea coast, they are hidden at the house of Jo de Vries who - although the Germans believe she is loyal to them - is working with the Allies. Undercover of an air raid, the crew escape by rowing boat, finally making a landing on the newly situated 'lobster pots' - floating stages placed to help grounded air crews waiting to he picked up by patrol vessels. Reaching England, they prepare for their next bombing raid over Germany.

An embarrassed Rank was forced to admit a definite error of judgement when One of Our Aircraft is Missing, released by British National in June 1942, met with great public and critical acclaim. Cut by about 20 minutes for US release, it became Powell and Pressburger's second consecutive picture to win a Best Screenplay nomination at the American Academy Awards - the only time in his career that Michael Powell would find his name put forward for an 'Oscar' - the film this time losing out to Casablanca.