Habebty
Well-Known Member
Down at my Mums in Plymouth at the mo. Watching the Amethyst Incident On the TV. Rivers Stour and Orwell doubling for the Yangtze! Thought it looked familiar so I looked up the film on Wikipedia.
Down at my Mums in Plymouth at the mo. Watching the Amethyst Incident On the TV. Rivers Stour and Orwell doubling for the Yangtze! Thought it looked familiar so I looked up the film on Wikipedia.
Yes, there were some suspiciously European looking Chinese thereThe Chinese guns were firing from HMS Ganges
what anchor was it deployingYes, there were some suspiciously European looking Chinese thereAnd i wouldn’t like to try landing a Sunderland off Shotley these days?
Dunno...but they got it up PDQwhat anchor was it deploying
Dunno...but they got it up PDQ![]()
Does East Coast mud resemble Chinese mud i wonder?
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Apparently yes, as the Amethyst appeared to hit the putty in the same place as me once![]()
The film "The battle of the River Plate" was also filmed in Stour and Orwell in about 1960Down at my Mums in Plymouth at the mo. Watching the Amethyst Incident On the TV. Rivers Stour and Orwell doubling for the Yangtze! Thought it looked familiar so I looked up the film on Wikipedia.
Are you sure? ...The film "The battle of the River Plate" was also filmed in Stour and Orwell in about 1960
Are you sure? ...
Production[edit]
The Battle of the River Plate had its genesis in an invitation to Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger to attend a film festival in Argentina in 1954. They decided they could not afford to take the time from their schedules unless it was a working holiday, and used the trip to research the defeat of Admiral Graf Spee. They came across the "hook" for their story when one of the surviving British naval officers gave Pressburger a copy of Captain Patrick Dove's book I Was A Prisoner on the Graf Spee, which became the basis of the human story of the film.[8]
Principal photography began on 13 December 1955, the sixteenth anniversary of the battle. The HMS Ajax and River Plate Association reportedly sent a message to the producers: "Hope your shooting will be as successful as ours". Location shooting for the arrival and departure of Admiral Graf Spee took place at the port of Montevideo, using thousands of locals as extras.[8] However, the scenes showing Admiral Graf Spee sailing from Montevideo were shot in the Grand Harbour at Valletta in Malta, and the launch taking McCall out to HMS Ajax was filmed in Gozo harbour on Malta's northern island.[citation needed]
No, I am not 100% sure it was The Battle of the River Plate, but I recall there was a navel battle film, (or part of) filmed in the Orwell/Stour in about 1960, and many of the cast stayed in a hotel in DedhamAre you sure? ...
Production[edit]
The Battle of the River Plate had its genesis in an invitation to Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger to attend a film festival in Argentina in 1954. They decided they could not afford to take the time from their schedules unless it was a working holiday, and used the trip to research the defeat of Admiral Graf Spee. They came across the "hook" for their story when one of the surviving British naval officers gave Pressburger a copy of Captain Patrick Dove's book I Was A Prisoner on the Graf Spee, which became the basis of the human story of the film.[8]
Principal photography began on 13 December 1955, the sixteenth anniversary of the battle. The HMS Ajax and River Plate Association reportedly sent a message to the producers: "Hope your shooting will be as successful as ours". Location shooting for the arrival and departure of Admiral Graf Spee took place at the port of Montevideo, using thousands of locals as extras.[8] However, the scenes showing Admiral Graf Spee sailing from Montevideo were shot in the Grand Harbour at Valletta in Malta, and the launch taking McCall out to HMS Ajax was filmed in Gozo harbour on Malta's northern island.[citation needed]
That is nasty. at least I know who I am, and I am not so ashamed of myself, that I feel the need to keep changing to hide my identityDoM is always sure - but not often correct.![]()
I thought the film was called the "Yangtse Incident" which was certainly filmed around Harwich Haven
You are of course absolutely correct.I thought the film was called the "Yangtse Incident" which was certainly filmed around Harwich Haven
That is nasty. at least I know who I am, and I am not so ashamed of myself, that I feel the need to keep changing to hide my identity
The Amethyst Capt lived in my village.Walking the dog in the park not long ago, I met an old lady who’s husband had been a petty officer on HMS Amethyst. She later showed me his bosun‘s call and cap tally. As an aficionado of old British war films, especially naval ones, this gave me a great deal of pleasure. I hadn’t clocked the Stour/Orwell connection with the Yangsee Incident; but will watch it again with renewed interest.