A Call for Arms explained

A Call For Arms
Director:Brian Desmond Hurst
Producer:Brian Desmond Hurst
Starring:Jean Gillie
Rene Ray
Kathleen Harrison
Colleen Nolan
Editing:Ralph Kemplen
Runtime:8 min.
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

A Call For Arms is a short propaganda film made for the British Ministry of Information in 1940. It was directed by Brian Desmond Hurst and starred Jean Gillie and Rene Ray as two 'nudes' (showgirls) who do their bit for the war effort by going to work in munition factories.[1] It was co-written by a Sgt. Terence Young who worked for Hurst on many projects before, during and after World War II.

Plot

The film opens with the two showgirls coming across a collapsed munitions worker outside the theatre door. "Twelve hour shifts take it out of some of these young 'uns" observes a nearby news-seller. Alongside a billboard gets the message across "Latest War News. Bigger Arms, Speed up. Go For It". The plots follows one of the showgirls signing up at the Labour Exchange for munitions work and tracks her working day. Seeing her friend exhausted the other showgirl signs up. "We've got to win the war you know".

Cast

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Saunders . Tristram . Betty beats the Nazis: how war propaganda launched a golden age of British film . The Telegraph . 6 September 2020.