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The McKenzie Break

 
Movies:

The McKenzie Break

  • Director: Lamont Johnson
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: War
  • Movie Type: POW Drama, Escape Film
  • Themes: Escape From Prison
  • Main Cast: Brian Keith, Helmut Griem, Ian Hendry, Patrick O'Connell, Caroline Mortimer
  • Release Year: 1970
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 106 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

The McKenzie Break is an unusual POW escape drama in that the would-be escapees are German prisoners, held in a Scottish camp. When a Luftwaffe pilot is murdered in the compound, British major Ian Hendrey investigates. He suspects that the killing is tied in with a complex escape plan, engineered by German commander Helmut Griem. Before the inevitable break, the prisoners form into the sort of separate factions and pressure groups that fomented the Nazi upheaval in Germany in the first place. Based on a novel by Sidney Shelley, The McKenzie Break was actually filmed in Ireland rather than Scotland. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Horst Janson - Neuchl; John Abineri - Hauptman Kranz; Eric Allan - Hochbauer; Constantin de Goguel - Lt. Hall; Tom Kempinski - Schmidt; Noel Purcell - Ferry Captain; Alexander Allerson - Von Sperrle; Martin Dempsey - Colonel; John Kavanagh - Police Inspector; Mary Larkin - Cpl. Watt; Ingo Mogendorf - Lt. Fullgrabe; Jim Mooney - Guard Foss; Mark Mulholland - Skipper; Gregg Palmer - Lt. Berger; Perry Desmmond - Accomplice; Michael Sheard - Unger; Jack Watson - Gen. Kerr; David Kelly - Adjutant; Alec Doran - Police Official; Frank Hayden - Holtz; Emmet Bergin - Orderly Johnston; Conor Evans - Orderly Joss; Vernon Hayden - Scottish Dispatcher; Des Keogh - Guard; Brendan Mathews - Guard; Joe Pilkington - Police Communications Sergeant; Robert Somerset - Guard; Paul Murphy - Weber

Credit

Tiny Nicholls - Costume Designer, Lamont Johnson - Director, Tom Rolf - Editor, Riz Ortolani - Composer (Music Score), Frank White - Production Designer, Michael Reed - Cinematographer, Arthur Gardner - Producer, Arnold Laven - Producer, Jules Levy - Producer, William W. Norton - Screenwriter, Sidney Shelley - Book Author

Similar Movies

The Great Escape; Grand Illusion; The Bridge on the River Kwai; Stalag 17
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Wikipedia: The McKenzie Break
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The McKenzie Break
Directed by Lamont Johnson
Produced by Arthur Gardner
Jules V. Levy
Written by William W. Norton
Starring Brian Keith
Helmut Griem
Ian Hendry
Jack Watson
Music by Riz Ortolani
Cinematography Michael Reed
Editing by Tom Rolf
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) United States:
October 28, 1970 (New York City premiere)
Running time 108 min.
Country UK
Language English / German

The McKenzie Break is a 1970 British war drama film directed by Lamont Johnson, starring Brian Keith as Jack Connor, an intelligence officer investigating recent disturbances at a German P.O.W. camp in Scotland. The P.O.W's are led by the charismatic, yet ruthless, Willi Schlüter (Helmut Griem).

Plot

Captain Jack Connor is the Irish, hard drinking, womanizing officer and ex-crime reporter detailed to investigate the McKenzie prison camp in Northern Scotland. The Germans under Kapitänleutnant Willi Schlüter - a German submariner - have asserted their own authority in the camp by rising against their captors. The embattled C.O. of the camp, Major Perry (Ian Hendry), is powerless until Connor arrives and lays down the law to the prisoners.

However, Connor is not at the camp merely to suppress the Germans; he is there to find out why it is the only prison camp in Scotland to be causing any problems. He shrewdly deduces that it is a cover for an escape plot, most likely a tunnel, and bases his investigation on this suspicion. During a mass brawl - involving the local fire brigade's water cannon - Connor notices one of the Luftwaffe prisoners, an outcast named Neuchl (Horst Janson), dragged from the barracks and attempting to flee the Germans. He has been badly beaten, and Connor believes, rightly, that Schlüter is responsible. He orders Neuchl to be kept separated from the other injured men in the hospital, but later that night, one of the other patients strangles Neuchl while he is asleep. Crucially, Neuchl is not able to pass on information about the tunnel, though he does tell Connor in a semiconscious state of '28 German submariners', the number who are eventually to escape.

Unnoticed in this brawl, two Germans masquerade as British soldiers, and make their way to meet a contact in a nearby town.

With Connor looking to pin the death of Neuchl on him, and the two escapees now noticed by the British, Schlüter orders the acceleration of the escape project. The prisoners leave the next day, collapsing the barracks roof on some of their comrades as a distraction to the guards. Schlüter also disposes of the engineer responsible for the tunnel with a wrench.

The 28 men who escape make their way to where the two escapees are waiting with a large red lorry marked 'explosives' and a motorcycle 'escort'. They make their way towards the coast, where a German U-boat is due to pick them up. Unknown to Schlüter, Connor is already aware of this arrangement, as he has cracked the code used in letters sent by POWs to Germany. Within hours Connor's superior officer, General Kerr (Jack Watson), has arrived, and the search begins for the fugitives. Eventually, a British reconnaissance plane spots the truck, but loses them when they hide in some trees. While they are hidden, they dispose of the red cover of the truck, and the motorcycle. From then on, they go as delivery men, heading for a local U.S camp.

The Germans finally reach their objective on the North coast, while Capt. Connor takes to the sky with a recon pilot to get a first hand view. Unfortunately for Schlüter, his men ignore his orders to camouflage the truck, and merely drive it into a ditch, setting it on fire, and causing Connor to see the smoke from his aircraft. These scenes were shot in Bonmahon, County Waterford, Ireland at an old disused copper mine shaft. Although he does not say as much, it gives him the first clue as to where the U-boat might surface. After abseiling down the cliffs, Schlüter and the fugitives await the submarine.

As dusk falls, the search has become desperate. If the Germans are not found by nightfall, they will most likely escape. Just as the order comes in to return to base, Connor tells the pilot to do one more sweep of the area that the smoke was in earlier, and is just in time to see the P.O.W.'s frantically paddling towards the surfaced U-boat. Connor calls for a local MTB with depth charges to attend the scene. With only fifty yards to go, Connor orders the pilot to 'buzz' the inflatable dinghies, and although he does no damage, he slows down Schlüter's craft, and inevitably, as the MTB rounds the headland, the U-boat dives, leaving Schlüter and three of his men stranded.

The last shot is of Connor on top of the cliff and facing disciplinary action for not having completed the mission as successfully as the British would have liked, looking down at Schluter in a dinghy. As Schluter looks up at him, Connor says. "Willi, looks like we're both in the shithouse".

Cast

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