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Millions Like Us: How Cinema Won the War for Britain

Millions Like Us: How Cinema Won the War for Britain

By Will Robinson

1940, and Britain stands alone. Now more than ever, the country had to be united.

How did film kick down class boundaries? How did it shine a light on gender equality? How did it make us laugh, when we needed laughter more than ever before?

75 years on, discover for the first time how film inspired unity, humour, and defiance when we needed it most, and how, at a time of unparalleled national crisis, this, was their finest hour.
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3: The 'Stiff Upper Lip'

Millions Like Us: How Cinema Won the War for BritainMay 22, 2020

00:00
26:29
3: The 'Stiff Upper Lip'

3: The 'Stiff Upper Lip'

The British stiff upper lip. Be it fact or fiction, it became a defining characteristic for Brits during the war.

In this final episode, hear how cinema dealt with the brutal realities of war, and how the public were convinced that their sacrifices were worth making.

Films include: Diary for Timothy (1945, Crown Film Unit); Fires Were Started (1943, Crown Film Unit); In Which We Serve (1944, Two Cities Films); Millions Like Us (1943, Gainsborough Pictures); One of Our Aircraft is Missing (1942, Archers Film Productions); The Way Ahead (1944, Two Cities Films); The Way to the Stars (1945, Two Cities Films) and more.

Twitter: @WillRobinsonUK

Title music:

For the Fallen by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3772-for-the-fallen

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

May 22, 202026:29
2: WHY we fight

2: WHY we fight

With no end to the war in sight, how did cinema convince the public that it was a war worth fighting? 

Cinema turned its focus towards Nazism, dismissing any desire for compromise. It retold the great historical victories of Britain, and eulogised the countryside, but with one clear underlying message: Nazism must be stopped, and Britain was the nation to do it. 

Films include but not limited to: 49th Parallel (1941, Ortus Films); In Which We Serve (1942, Two Cities Films); Millions Like Us (1943, Gainsborough Pictures); The Gentle Sex (1943, Two Cities Films); The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943, Archers Film Productions); The Way Ahead (1944, Two Cities Films); Went the Day Well? (1942, Ealing Studios) and more.

Twitter: @WillRobinsonUK

Title music: 

For the Fallen by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3772-for-the-fallen

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/



May 15, 202026:45
1: HOW we fight

1: HOW we fight

In this first episode, hear how Britain fought.

How did members of the public, men and women of all classes and backgrounds, become the stars of a new golden age of British cinema?

Film bridged class divides and highlighted gender equality, while British humour became a weapon which instilled defiance in the population.

In the ‘People’s War’, it was cinema that brought the British people together.

Films include: Millions Like Us (1943); One of Our Aircraft is Missing (1942); The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp (1943); The Way Ahead (1944); The Gentle Sex (1943); In Which We Serve (1942); Went the Day Well? (1942); The Demi-Paradise (1943) etc.

Twitter: @WillRobinsonUK

Title music:

For the Fallen by Kevin MacLeod

Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3772-for-the-fallen

License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

May 08, 202029:13
Millions Like Us: Trailer

Millions Like Us: Trailer

It’s 1940. Forced to retreat from Dunkirk as Europe fell to the Nazi advance, Britain stands alone.

With no old-fashioned heroes to look to, British cinema turned to a new type of leading man – the general public at home.

75 years on, discover for the first time how film inspired unity, humour, and defiance when we needed it most, and how, at a time of unparalleled national crisis, this, was their finest hour.

May 06, 202001:27