In 1950, Emeric Pressburger read an extract from 'Ill Met By Moonlight',
Stanley Moss's account of his adventures on occupied Crete during the Second
World War, and immediately optioned its film rights. Michael Powell set off on a
location scouting expedition to Crete, but it was another six years before Ill
Met By Moonlight finally went into production. After leaving the Rank
Organisation in 1949, Powell and Pressburger had briefly returned to producer
Alexander Korda to make films such as The Small Back Room (1949) and Gone to
Earth (1950). They then encountered a period of difficulty in securing financing
for the projects they wanted to make, and by the mid-1950s were willing to
contemplate a return, albeit a short-term one, to John Davis and the Rank
Organisation. The Battle of The River Plate (1956), was a commercial success and
chosen for the Royal Command Performance of that year (an honour that had been
bestowed upon A Matter of Life and Death back in 1946). Davis then offered the
Archers a seven-picture contract, but wary of committing themselves, they signed
for just one picture - Ill Met By Moonlight.
By 1956, the political situation in Crete had made location shooting unviable
and Ill Met was instead filmed in the hills behind Powell's family hotel in the
south of France. However, the poetic use of landscape that characterises earlier
Archers' films such as A Canterbury Tale (1944) and "I Know Where I'm Going!"
(1945) is evident in the atmospheric shots of the mountainous countryside,
beautifully photographed in black and white by Christopher Challis, while Mikos
Thodorakis's rousing score conveys something of the richness of Greek culture,
the patriotism and bravery of its people and the rugged beauty of the Cretan
landscape.
Michael Powell took mischievous delight in tormenting Davis with requests for
actors such as Orson Welles and James Mason to play lead roles, but Dirk Bogarde, one of Rank's contracted stars, was eventually chosen to play Patrick Leigh-Fermor. His portrayal is flamboyant, charming and charismatic, although
Powell later grumbled, "I wanted a flamboyant young murderer, lover, bandit...
and instead I got a picture-postcard hero in fancy dress". Archers' regulars
Marius Goring and Cyril Cusack, as the malignant General and the unwashed
Captain, turn in strong performances that rather obscure David Oxley's adequate but anaemic portrayal of author Stanley Moss.
Nathalie Morris
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