Réalisation:
Val GuestPhotographie:
Arthur GrantActeurs·trices:
Stanley Baker, Guy Rolfe, Leo McKern, Gordon Jackson, David Oxley, Bryan Forbes, Timothy Bateson, Burt Kwouk, Barry Foster, Percy Herbert (plus)Résumés(1)
A riposte to the criticisms levelled at The Camp on Blood Island, Hammer's previous war picture, released a year earlier, this stark and often savage examination of how war and conflict can corrupt otherwise good men, Val Guest's Yesterday's Enemy is one of the famed studio's most hard-hitting but underappreciated productions. It posits an impossible moral dilemma - is it ever justifiable to sacrifice a small number of innocent lives in the hope that thousands more will be saved? Headed by the formidable Stanley Baker, Yesterday's Enemy consciously and directly opposed the overwhelmingly patriotic spirit of British war films of the period, and remains a bleak exploration of duty, survival, and the effects of war. (Powerhouse Films)
(plus)Acteurs·trices
Terence Brook
Grande-Bretagne
Meilleurs films :
Goldfinger (1964)
Yesterday's Enemy (1959)
Les Indomptables de Colditz (1955)
Brandon Brady
Afrique du Sud
Meilleurs films :
Patton (1970)
Yesterday's Enemy (1959)
La Griffe (1967)
Graham Lines
Grande-Bretagne
Meilleurs films :
Yesterday's Enemy (1959)
Ulysses (1967)
Smuga cienia (1976)
Barry Steele
Grande-Bretagne
Meilleurs films :
Yesterday's Enemy (1959)
Reach for the Sky (1956)
Atlantique, latitude 41° (1958)
Barry Lowe
Grande-Bretagne
Meilleurs films :
Cléopâtre (1963)
Yesterday's Enemy (1959)
Cash on Demand (1961)