The Password Is Courage (1962)

The Password Is Courage
Directed by Andrew L. Stone
Written by Andrew L. Stone based on a biography of Charles Coward by John Castle
1962/UK
Andrew L. Stone Productions
First viewing/YouTube

“I was mentally prepared to sustain serious injury or death, but before that day I never contemplated the reality of being captured by the enemy. I thought, “This is going to be hard on the folks,” only to realize that I actually verbalized my thought out loud. As the English-speaking officer and I walked side by side, he said, “War is terrible, isn’t it?” ― Oliver Omanson, Prisoner of War Number 21860: The World War II Memoirs of Oliver Omanson

Comparisons to other prisoner-of-war escape movies are inevitable.  Unfortunately, despite the presence of my beloved Dirk Bogarde, this one doesn’t quite measure up.

The ironically-named Sergeant-Major Charles Coward (Bogarde) is a brave and audacious leader of men.  He is subordinate to some of the officers at the prison camp but is key to escape plans via a tunnel.  He can play the German prison guards like a violin.

To collect supplies, Coward blackmails a guard into letting him have an unescorted visit to town, where he will be shot on sight if found out.  While there, he meets a lady optometrist.  Naturally, they fall in love.

There is nothing exactly wrong with this picture but the light-hearted moments didn’t work quite the way they should.  It feels like another version of The Great Escape (1963) without much of the suspense.

 

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