Film Review
One of the more remarkable episodes in the Second World War is
related with startling realism in this remarkable Franco-Norwegian
film, originally titled
Kampen om
tungtvannet or
La Bataille
de l'eau lourde but now better known under its English language
title
Operation Swallow: Battle for
Heavy Water. The film was one of the biggest hits at the
French box office in 1948, attracting an audience of 5.4 million,
showing that interest in the war remained high in France, two and half
years after the war had ended. The previous two years, the most
popular films in France had been WWII-related:
Mission spéciale (1946) and
Le Bataillon du ciel
(1947). If the plot of
La
Bataille de l'eau lourde sounds familiar that is probably
because it was later remade as a big budget war movie,
The Heroes of Telemark (1965),
directed by Anthony Mann. Recently, the 'battle for heavy water'
has been dramatised as a six-part television serial for Norwegian
television, first aired in January 2015.
Directed by Jean Dréville (whose previous films included the
phenomenally successful
La Cage aux rossignols) and
Titus Vibe-Müller,
La Bataille
de l'eau lourde achieves its near-documentary realism by
combining archive footage with authentic reconstructions of actual
events. Only a handful of the people who appear on screen are
played by professional actors - most are portrayed by their real-life counterparts,
including leading scientists Frédéric Joliot and Lew
Kowarski. Of the heroic men who were involved in the commando
raid on the Norwegian power plant (and to whom the entire Free World
owes an incalculable debt of gratitude), all but two appear on screen
as themselves; the two others (one who had declined, another who had
died) were played by actors.
By its very nature,
La Bataille de
l'eau lourde could never have ended up a polished
production. The poor quality archive material jars with the
reconstructed scenes, and it's painfully evident that acting was
unlikely to be a career path for most of the individuals who appear on
screen. Rough and ready though the film is, it is one of the most
compelling and authentic of all war films. The locations
sequences filmed in the Telemark mountains have an almost unreal
beauty, more fitting for a fairytale than a war film; the sabotage raid
on the power plant is nerve-rackingly suspenseful, particularly when
you realise what is at stake; and throughout there is a perfect balance
between education and entertainment. Not only does the film
accurately recount one of the most heroic exploits of WWII, it also
brings us into direct contact with those who participated in it, and
above all it is their ordinariness that makes watching them re-enact
their great adventure so humbling. These are not the synthetic
heroes we encounter in Hollywood blockbusters. These are just
ordinary men doing what they can to prevent the Nazis from obtaining
the means to build an atomic bomb. You wonder why their names are
not engraved on the memories of each and every one of us.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean Dréville film:
La Fille au fouet (1952)
Film Synopsis
Not long after Norway comes under Nazi Occupation at the start of World
War II, the Germans commandeer a hydroelectric power plant in the
mountains outside Rjukan. The plant distils heavy water, an
essential ingredient in the production of the atomic bomb with which
Germany hopes to win the war. Realising the threat the plant
poses, the Allies attempt to bomb it, but fail - it is too well
protected by the surrounding mountains. In 1943, the Allies plan
a commando raid to sabotage the plant. To that end, four
Norwegians are parachuted into the Telemark mountains to prepare for
the British-led raid. The operation fails to go as planned, but a
second attempt proves successful. The plant is hastily rebuilt
and it is only a matter of months before the Germans have enough
deuterium to create their first atomic bomb. After another failed
Allied bombing raid on the plant, the Germans attempt to ship the heavy
water out of the country. The Allies have one last chance before
Hitler has the means to build a bomb that will win him the war...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.