Movie Reviews
Sink the Bismarck
Sink The Bismarck-20th Century Fox, 1960, 97 minutes
Starring Kenneth More, Dana Winter, Carl Mohner, Laurence Naismith, Karel Stepanek
Screen story and screenplay by Edmund North
Based on the book by C. S. Forester
Advisor: Lt. Cdr. Peter Peake, R.N. (Rtd)
Produced by John Brabourne
Directed by Lewis Gilbert
After a brief scene showing the launching of Germany’s super battleship Bismarck, we see a report by Edward Murrow in late May 1941 that sets the tone for the movie. Britain’s allies have fallen and it stands alone while Germany tries to force it to submit by bombing its cities and sinking its shipping.
Dangerously overstretched, the Royal Navy is struggling to repel the German invasion of Crete, reinforce Malta, support the Eighth Army in North Africa and guard sixteen convoys in the Atlantic, so news that the Bismarck is about to enter the Atlantic is very unwelcome. The much smaller battleships Scharnhorst and Guisenau had sunk 22 ships in two months in early 1941, so the Admiralty planners knew all too well what would happen if the Bismarck got loose in the Atlantic.
While the majority of characters are based on real people, the story is told mainly from the point-of-view of a fictional character, Captain Shepherd, who takes command of the Admiralty’s Operations Division on the day that the Bismarck breaks out. The death of his wife during the Blitz made him cold and strict but his love for his son and a budding relationship with his charming assistant show a more human side. While the desire to add a personal element to the story is understandable, turning the hunt for the Bismarck into a personal matter for Shepherd because its commander had sunk his ship trivializes what was perceived as a major threat by the Royal Navy.
Much of the story takes place in the Operations Division’s control room where we see the hard choices that had to be made. Strained for ships, Shepherd takes escorts from a troop convoy to reinforce the Home Fleet in preparation for the hunt for the Bismarck. The scenes in Operations Division have a slightly claustrophobic feel to them and the personnel seem divorced from reality because they are so far underground that they do not even know if an air raid is taking place in the city above them or not.
It is not a subtle film. Admiral Gunther Lutjens, the fleet commander, is constantly talking about his pride in being a Nazi and how he, like Germany, was ignored after WWI. He is very confident and does not mention that the Bismarck was sent to sea with only one heavy cruiser as escort, instead of several battleships and heavy cruisers as was originally planned, because the head of the German navy knew that the surface navy would be ignored if it did not achieve a steady stream of victories. The real Lutjens had protested strongly against sending out the navy teaspoon by teaspoon and had wanted to wait until other ships like the Scharnhorst, Guiseneau or the Tirpitz, the Bismarck’s sister ship, were ready.
Although the efforts of Shepherd’s assistant to thaw out his heart are admittedly charming since Dana Winter could have probably made reading the phone book seem alluring, there is not enough time left over to provide sufficient background. When the Bismarck is found by two British battleships, the Hood and the Prince of Wales, everybody in the Admiralty expects the Hood to end the threat but there is no mention that the Hood was the pride of the British fleet and the German sailors’ nightmare. Nor do we see that the Hood’s commander planned his attack badly and failed to coordinate with the cruisers shadowing the Bismarck. It is not as if there was not a precedent since a similar situation had occurred much earlier in the war when the pocket battleship Graf Spee had been beaten by a British heavy cruiser and two light cruisers that had attacked from both sides.
Lutjens’ reaction to the surprising destruction of the Hood gives a hint of the fierce competition between Germany’s surface navy and the U-boats for the limited resources. His second-in-command wants to return home after their glorious victory but Lutjens knows that all the Fuhrer cares about are sinking convoys.
Oddly enough for a film set at sea, cinematography is not its strong point. However, it gives an accurate portrayal of the long distance nature of combat between battleships, which was essentially an artillery duel at sea where binoculars were needed to see the enemy clearly. Furthermore, we see the agonizing guesswork involved in searching for a tiny speck in the vast ocean and the scenes of carnage that follow each battle are chilling, especially when men are left inside a flooded compartment.
Since the film was made with the active support and assistance of the Admiralty the top leaders are seen through rose tinted glasses. Instead of the worn-out meddler that he was, the First Sea Lord is played as a tough, decisive man, who stands back and lets his subordinates do their jobs. Churchill makes no appearance in the film except for one scene where his voice emerges from a speaker phone like God from Heaven as he says do what is necessary to sink the Bismarck. In reality, Churchill resembled more an annoying, nagging elderly god on the verge of retirement, who frequently popped in with hunches that turned out to be completely wrong.
After all other efforts have failed, Shepherd deduces the Bismarck’s destination, so he sends all available ships on an intercept course. Actually, they would never have found the Bismarck if Lutjens’ fixation on promoting the cause of the surface navy had not driven him to repeatedly send really long messages to Germany, which enabled HF/DF receivers to triangulate his rough position.
In the end, Lutjens’ devotion to Hitler is not reciprocated, so Shepherd gets the ship and the girl. While entertaining, the movie’s main weakness is that the story is mainly presented from the British viewpoint, primarily that of Operations Division. All in all, it is a good movie that just never manages to rise above workmanlike standards.
