Britannic (film)
Britannic | |
---|---|
Directed by | Brian Trenchard-Smith |
Starring | |
Country of origin | United States United Kingdom |
Original languages | English German |
Production | |
Executive producers | David Forrest Stephen P. Jarchow Beau Rogers |
Producer | Paul Colichman |
Running time | 93 minutes |
Production company | Flashpoint |
Distributor | Regent Entertainment |
Release | |
Original network | Fox Family Channel |
Picture format | Color |
Audio format | Dolby |
Original release | 10 January 2000[1] |
Britannic is a 2000 spy television film directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith. The film is a fictional account of the sinking of the ship of the same name off the Greek island of Kea in November 1916; it features a German agent sabotaging her while she is serving as a hospital ship for the British Army during World War I. It stars Edward Atterton and Amanda Ryan, with Jacqueline Bisset, Ben Daniels, John Rhys-Davies, and Bruce Payne as costars. It first premiered on cable network Fox Family and was then broadcast in the United Kingdom on Channel 4.[2]
Trenchard-Smith says the film was the best of the three disaster movies he made around this time. It got him the job directing Megiddo: The Omega Code 2.[3]
Plot[]
In Southampton in 1916, HMHS Britannic, a sister ship of the Titanic, has been refitted as a hospital ship for Allied soldiers fighting in the Gallipoli Campaign. Among the nurses who are to serve aboard her is Lady Lewis (Jacqueline Bisset), mother of Sarah and William, who is being delivered to Greece via Naples, where her husband has become Ambassador for Great Britain. Traveling with her is Vera Campbell (Amanda Ryan), an operative of British Intelligence posing as Sarah and William's governess. She is unnerved by the voyage, having survived the Titanic's sinking four years before, losing her husband in it as well. She reports her mission to Captain Bartlett (John Rhys-Davies) who is dubious that a woman can do such a job.
A German spy has boarded the Britannic posing as her chaplain, Chaplain Reynolds (Edward Atterton), and soon discovers that she is secretly carrying a large amount of small arms and munitions bound for Cairo. Under the articles of war, Reynolds considers his actions against her to be legal and initiates a series of sabotage attempts to either take over or sink her, including inciting the Irish stokers, all members of the Irish Republican Brotherhood, to mutiny, as Reynolds takes a portable telegraph, sending his intel to the Germans.
One morning, a German U-Boat, captained by Captain Kruger (Wolf Kahler) trails Britannic, as Townsend notices its periscope, reporting it to Captain Bartlett, who orders to change course to avoid the submarine, as he alerts the HMS Victoria, their escort ship, and the passengers and crew, as Campbell, Lady Lewis and her children rushes up on deck to prepare for an emergency. Kruger fires two torpedoes, one narrowly misses Britannic's bow, as another trails towards Britannic, As Townsend watches the torpedo trailing with his binoculars, he rushes to the bridge, Campbell anxiously watching, along with Reynolds. Kruger notices Victoria and dives down. Victoria launches two depth charge barrels, one exploding near the submarine, causing minor damage, and another directly hitting the submarine, causing it to sink and crash into the seabed, as the other torpedo continues to approach Britannic, as Townsend retrieves a firearm, and aims at the torpedo, detonating it away from the ship, as everyone cheers in relief.
Each sabotage attempt is foiled by Campbell - with the eventual co-operation of the Britannic's crew. Unaware that she is responsible, Reynolds finds himself growing attracted to her whilst the voyage continues after making a stop at Naples, Italy. As they spend time together, they fall in love and she has sex with him before getting suspicious as he asks the medic about ether and what it does. The medic and Campbell realize his identity, as he shoots the medic and knocks out Campbell, as he grabs a bottle of ether and rushes to the engine room to assemble a bomb, as he runs to a boiler room in the bow, and opens a power circuit on the wall, supplying power to the watertight doors and slashes it with an axe he obtained, causing the watertight doors to remain open, as the crew notice the sudden loss of power to the watertight doors. Campbell wakes up, and rushes to the boiler room to confront him.
Reynolds reveals his true name as Ernst Tillbach, as he drops the bomb in a coal bunker, Campbell shooting him as a result. The bomb explodes as a result of hitting the side of the hull, rupturing a hole, which alerts the crew. Bartlett tells the operator to send distress calls as he tries to beach at Kea island seven miles away but the open portholes cause the beaching operation to be unfeasible, causing Bartlett to stop the ship, as Britannic begins to list to starboard. William, lost in the boiler room, tries to escape, as he is knocked unconscious by a steam burst. Lady Lewis discovers that William has disappeared and complains to Townsend, who forces her on a boat. Campbell goes on a search for William, as Ernst helps her and they manage to wake William, as he flees to a lifeboat with his mother and sister before it is lowered. Another massive explosion in the boiler room causes Ernst to be trapped by a falling metal bar in a flooding room. Campbell jumps in and helps him escape by using a metal rod as a lever and they make their way through the ship, swimming through flooded rooms, vents, as they are trapped in a flooding grate, as Campbell screams desperately, while Ernst breaks the grate open, as they swim through flooded corridors, eventually making it outside by swimming through a porthole and climbing aboard an empty lifeboat that was already lowered into the water, but still attached by its ropes to the davits.
Campbell and Ernst notice a lifeboat filled with 30 people getting pulled into the still spinning propellers. They watch in horror as the boat and its occupants are chopped to pieces by the propeller. A boat nearby, with Townsend aboard, throws them a rope, at their request. Ernst decides to die, despite Campbell's protests that they both can be pulled to safety, he throws her into the sea after kissing her, as she grabs the rope. Soon after, the lifeboat's ropes break and it begins to also get sucked into the propellers, Ernst staying aboard the lifeboat as it is chopped by the blades, killing him, as Townsend comforts a traumatised Campbell. A few moments later, the Britannic rapidly rolls over, causing her funnels and other objects on the decks such as chairs to tumble into the sea as she sinks beneath the waves. HMS Victoria arrives to rescue the survivors. Reflecting on her experience, Campbell quotes the poem "Roll on, Thou Deep Dark Blue Ocean" from Childe Harold's Pilgrimage by Lord Byron.
Cast[]
- Edward Atterton as Chaplain Reynolds/Major Ernst Tillbach
- Amanda Ryan as Vera Campbell
- Jacqueline Bisset as Lady Lewis
- Ben Daniels as Townsend
- John Rhys-Davies as Captain Charles Alfred Bartlett
- Bruce Payne as Doctor Baker
- Alex Ferns as Stoker Evans
- Eleanor Oakley as Sarah Lewis
- Archie Davies as William Lewis
- Ed Stobart as Mayfield
- Adam Bareham as Britannic's Radio Operator
- David Lumsden as German Radio Operator
- Wolf Kahler as Captain Kruger
- Philip Rham as Jurgens
- Daniel Coonan as Seamus
- Daniel Tatatrsky as Martin
- Martin Savage as Sweeney
- Francis Magee as Reilly
- as Captain Helm
- David Begg as Armed Sailor
- John Atkin as Guard
- Sean Baker as Colonel Marston
References[]
- ^ "Britannic - TV Movie". TV Tango. Retrieved 7 September 2012.
- ^ Hope, Nicholas. "Underwater Cameraman Credits". bubblevision.com. Retrieved 22 November 2020.
- ^ Trenchard-Smith, Brian (11 August 2001). "HOLLYWOOD SURVIVOR". Daily Telegraph.
External links[]
- 2000 films
- 2000 television films
- 2000s disaster films
- 2000s historical films
- 2000s mystery thriller films
- 2000s spy thriller films
- American films
- American spy thriller films
- American television films
- British disaster films
- British films
- British mystery thriller films
- British spy thriller films
- British thriller television films
- English-language films
- Films about survivors of seafaring accidents or incidents
- Films directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith
- Films set in 1916
- Films set in Greece
- Films set in the Mediterranean Sea
- Films set in the 1910s
- Films set on ships
- Historical mystery films
- Seafaring films based on actual events
- Spy films based on actual events
- Spy television films
- World War I spy films
- World War I television films