WENT THE DAY WELL?
This 1942 wartime drama opens with us the viewer being welcomed tothe peaceful corner of rural southern England that is the fictional village of Bramley End, where the socalled 'Battle of Bramley End' took place. Strikingly, we are casually informed that this 'battle' took place some time ago, before Hitler was defeated. That the War would be won must have been reassuring news for the audience of the day, and is the first hint that what we are watching has a propaganda element to it. Not that it is without artistic merit, far from it given that it is based on a 1940 Graham Greene short story and that it is directed by a decent (if now forgotten) director, Alberto Calvacanti (who rather pretentiously just referred to himself as Calvacanti. The intriguing premise of the story is that the village is taken over by a group of German soldiers masquerading as British, in order to support an imminent full-scale German invasion, their role being to interfere with national rad...