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== Structure ==
 
== Structure ==
In 1940, during the Battle of France, hundreds of thousands of Allied soldiers have retreated to Dunkirk. Tommy, a young British private, is the sole survivor of a German ambush. At the beach, he finds thousands of troops awaiting evacuation and meets soldier Gibson, who is burying a body. After a German dive-bomber attack, they find a wounded man. They rush his stretcher onto a hospital ship, hoping to remain aboard, but are ordered off. The ship is sunk by dive bombers; Tommy saves soldier Alex. They leave at night on a destroyer, but it is torpedoed by a U-boat. Gibson saves Tommy and Alex from the sinking ship, and they are brought ashore by a rowing boat. On the mole, Royal Navy Commander Bolton and Colonel Winnant discuss the situation; British Prime Minister Winston Churchill has committed to evacuating 30,000 soldiers, and with only a single, vulnerable mole available for embarking on deep-draft ships, the Royal Navy requisitions civilian vessels that can get to the beach.
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In 1940, during the Battle of France, hundreds of thousands of Allied soldiers have retreated to Dunkirk awaiting evacuation. Tommy, a young British private, and the sole survivor of a German ambush, arrives at the beach, and meets Gibson, who is burying a body and Alex. After a hospital ship is sunk by a German dive-bomber attack, the three leave on a destroyer, but it is torpedoed by a U-boat. Gibson saves Tommy and Alex from the sinking ship, and they are brought ashore by a rowing boat. On the mole, Royal Navy Commander Bolton and Colonel Winnant discuss the situation; British Prime Minister Winston Churchill has committed to evacuating 30,000 soldiers, and with only a single, vulnerable mole available for embarking on deep-draft ships, the Royal Navy requisitions civilian vessels that can get to the beach.
   
 
In Weymouth, a civilian sailor named Dawson and his son Peter set out on his boat ''Moonstone'' rather than let the Navy commandeer her. Impulsively, their teenage hand George joins them, hoping to do something noteworthy. At sea, they rescue a shivering shell-shocked soldier from a wrecked ship. When he realises that Dawson is sailing for Dunkirk, the soldier demands that they turn back and tries to wrest control of the boat; in the struggle, George falls and suffers a head injury that renders him blind. Elsewhere, three Spitfire aircraft cross the English Channel, heading towards Dunkirk, tasked with defending the evacuation of British and French troops from Dunkirk against attacks by the German Luftwaffe. After their leader is shot down, pilot Farrier assumes command with a shattered fuel gauge. They save a minesweeper from a German bomber, but the other Spitfire is hit and ditches. Its pilot, Collins, is rescued by ''Moonstone''.
 
In Weymouth, a civilian sailor named Dawson and his son Peter set out on his boat ''Moonstone'' rather than let the Navy commandeer her. Impulsively, their teenage hand George joins them, hoping to do something noteworthy. At sea, they rescue a shivering shell-shocked soldier from a wrecked ship. When he realises that Dawson is sailing for Dunkirk, the soldier demands that they turn back and tries to wrest control of the boat; in the struggle, George falls and suffers a head injury that renders him blind. Elsewhere, three Spitfire aircraft cross the English Channel, heading towards Dunkirk, tasked with defending the evacuation of British and French troops from Dunkirk against attacks by the German Luftwaffe. After their leader is shot down, pilot Farrier assumes command with a shattered fuel gauge. They save a minesweeper from a German bomber, but the other Spitfire is hit and ditches. Its pilot, Collins, is rescued by ''Moonstone''.
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Farrier reaches Dunkirk, before his fuel runs out. Gliding over the beach, he shoots down an approaching dive-bomber diving towards the mole, saving ships and troops. Farrier flies over the beach, boosting morale as he receives cheers from the troops below. He cranks his landing gear down and lands beyond the Allied perimeter. He sets fire to his plane and is taken prisoner by the Germans. On the mole, Commander Bolton watches the last British soldiers leave. He notes that nearly 300,000 have been evacuated, ten times more than Churchill had hoped for. He remains to oversee the evacuation of the French.
 
Farrier reaches Dunkirk, before his fuel runs out. Gliding over the beach, he shoots down an approaching dive-bomber diving towards the mole, saving ships and troops. Farrier flies over the beach, boosting morale as he receives cheers from the troops below. He cranks his landing gear down and lands beyond the Allied perimeter. He sets fire to his plane and is taken prisoner by the Germans. On the mole, Commander Bolton watches the last British soldiers leave. He notes that nearly 300,000 have been evacuated, ten times more than Churchill had hoped for. He remains to oversee the evacuation of the French.
   
Arriving back in Weymouth, Dawson is congratulated for having saved so many men. The shell-shocked soldier sees George's body being carried away. Peter goes to the local newspaper; a front-page article later commends George as a hero. Alex and Tommy board a train, and Alex expects public hostility as the train approaches Woking, but they receive a hero's welcome instead. Tommy reads out Churchill's address to the nation from a newspaper.
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Arriving back in Weymouth, Dawson is congratulated for having saved so many men. The shell-shocked soldier sees George's body being carried away. Peter goes to the local newspaper; a front-page article later commends George as a hero. Tommy and Alex board a train, and receive a hero's welcome when the train arrives in Woking.
   
 
== Production ==
 
== Production ==

Revision as of 20:39, 20 January 2019

Dunkirk is Christopher Nolan's tenth film, to be released 21 July 2017. It is written by Nolan and being produced by Nolan and his wife Emma Thomas.

Summary

Set in during the Battle of France in World War II, Allied soldiers from Britain, Belgium and France undertake Operation Dynamo, the miraculous evacuation of the Allied soldiers from the beaches and harbour of Dunkirk between 26 May and 4 June 1940 while surrounded by the German army.

Structure

In 1940, during the Battle of France, hundreds of thousands of Allied soldiers have retreated to Dunkirk awaiting evacuation. Tommy, a young British private, and the sole survivor of a German ambush, arrives at the beach, and meets Gibson, who is burying a body and Alex. After a hospital ship is sunk by a German dive-bomber attack, the three leave on a destroyer, but it is torpedoed by a U-boat. Gibson saves Tommy and Alex from the sinking ship, and they are brought ashore by a rowing boat. On the mole, Royal Navy Commander Bolton and Colonel Winnant discuss the situation; British Prime Minister Winston Churchill has committed to evacuating 30,000 soldiers, and with only a single, vulnerable mole available for embarking on deep-draft ships, the Royal Navy requisitions civilian vessels that can get to the beach.

In Weymouth, a civilian sailor named Dawson and his son Peter set out on his boat Moonstone rather than let the Navy commandeer her. Impulsively, their teenage hand George joins them, hoping to do something noteworthy. At sea, they rescue a shivering shell-shocked soldier from a wrecked ship. When he realises that Dawson is sailing for Dunkirk, the soldier demands that they turn back and tries to wrest control of the boat; in the struggle, George falls and suffers a head injury that renders him blind. Elsewhere, three Spitfire aircraft cross the English Channel, heading towards Dunkirk, tasked with defending the evacuation of British and French troops from Dunkirk against attacks by the German Luftwaffe. After their leader is shot down, pilot Farrier assumes command with a shattered fuel gauge. They save a minesweeper from a German bomber, but the other Spitfire is hit and ditches. Its pilot, Collins, is rescued by Moonstone.

Tommy, Alex and Gibson join some soldiers from a Highlanders regiment and hide inside a fishing trawler that lies beached in the intertidal zone outside of the Allied perimeter, waiting for the rising tide to refloat it. German troops shoot at the boat, and water enters through the bullet holes. Alex, hoping to lighten the boat, accuses Gibson, who has been silent throughout, of being a German spy and demands that he leaves. Gibson reveals he is French; he stole the identity of the dead soldier he buried, hoping to be evacuated with the British. The group then abandon the fishing boat when it begins to sink, but Gibson is entangled in a chain and drowns. Alex and Tommy swim towards a nearby destroyer, but it is hit by bombs from a bomber. Moonstone manoeuvres to take on those in the water, including Alex and Tommy. Peter discovers that George is dead; when asked by the shell-shocked soldier, he lies that George is fine. Farrier shoots down the bomber, which crashes and ignites the oil slick from the sinking destroyer.

Farrier reaches Dunkirk, before his fuel runs out. Gliding over the beach, he shoots down an approaching dive-bomber diving towards the mole, saving ships and troops. Farrier flies over the beach, boosting morale as he receives cheers from the troops below. He cranks his landing gear down and lands beyond the Allied perimeter. He sets fire to his plane and is taken prisoner by the Germans. On the mole, Commander Bolton watches the last British soldiers leave. He notes that nearly 300,000 have been evacuated, ten times more than Churchill had hoped for. He remains to oversee the evacuation of the French.

Arriving back in Weymouth, Dawson is congratulated for having saved so many men. The shell-shocked soldier sees George's body being carried away. Peter goes to the local newspaper; a front-page article later commends George as a hero. Tommy and Alex board a train, and receive a hero's welcome when the train arrives in Woking.

Production

Development

Director Christopher Nolan wrote the screenplay. He decided to make the film as a triptych, told from three perspectives: the air (planes), the land (on the beach) and the sea (the evacuation by the navy).

Cast

  • Simon Ates as British Expeditionary Force Soldier
  • Will Attenborough as Royal Navy Second Lieutenant Howe
  • Constantin Balsan as French Soldier
  • Aneurin Barnard as Gibson
  • Aldo Beqiri as French Soldier
  • Michel Biel as French Soldier
  • Callum Blake as Private Davies
  • Damien Bonnard
  • Kenneth Branagh as Commander Bolton
  • Mikey Collins as Soldier on the Hospital Ship
  • James D'Arcy as Colonel Winnant
  • Brandon Duracher as Soldier
  • Michael Fox as Engineer
  • Paul Riley Fox as British Soldier
  • Tom Gill as Furious Soldier
  • Tom Glynn-Carney as Peter Dawson
  • Jack Gover as British Soldier
  • Bradley Hall as Sailor on Destroyer
  • Tom Hardy as Farrier
  • Sander Huisman as British Expeditionary Force Soldier
  • Samgar Jacobs as Royal Navy
  • Christian Janner as British Soldier
  • Jedediah Jenk as British Expeditionary Force Soldier
  • Luke Kearney as Soldier
  • Barry Keoghan as George
  • Calam Lynch as Sailor from Deal
  • Bobby Lockwood as Seaman on Hospital Ship
  • Adam Long as Sub-Lieutenant
  • Jack Lowden as Collins
  • Valiant Michael said Warrant Officer
  • Thomas Millet as French Soldier
  • Cillian Murphy as Shivering Soldier
  • Miranda Nolan as Nurse on Destroyer
  • Crystal Pereyra as Nurse on Destroyer
  • Robby Prinsen as Royal Navy Officer
  • Jack Riddiford as Private Edwards
  • Christian Roberts as Royal Navy Officer
  • Mark Rylance as Mr. Dawson
  • Richard Sanderson as Heinkel Spotter
  • Nat Shervington
  • Piers Stubbs as British Soldier (Voice)
  • Harry Styles as Alex
  • Jochum ten Haaf as Dutch Trawler Man
  • Luke Thompson as Warrant Officer
  • Elliott Tittensor
  • Niels van 't Dek as Sailor on Destroyer
  • Brian Vernel
  • Bram Vlot as Royal Navy Sailor
  • Olav Vollebregt as Royal Navy Sailor
  • Nick Vorsselman as British Expeditionary Force Soldier
  • Fionn Whitehead as Tommy
  • Merlijn Willemsen as British Soldier on the Sittard
  • Nirman Wolf as Marine

Uncredited Cast

Crew

Videos

Trailers & Clips


Interviews


Featurettes


External links