Cast

Ursula Jeans
Martha Dacre

Cecil Parker
Geoffrey Radcliffe

Joan Hopkins
Helen Dacre Winan

Derek Bond
Lt. Comdr. Nigel Winan

Thora Hird
Mrs. Gaye

Bill Owen
Soldier with Chicken

Lana Morris
Lolly Dacre McIntyre

John Stone
Roddy McIntyre

Kynaston Reeves
Captain Dishart

Gladys Henson
Woman in Fish Queue

Vi Kaley
Old Woman on Sea Front

Eleanor Summerfield
Clippie

Merle Tottenham
Woman in Fish Queue
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
I found the title of this rather classy wartime drama a bit misleading. Though it is told from the perspective of the widowed "Martha" (Ursula Jeans) and focusses on the stay at home elements of fighting during WWII - there isn't really anything weak about her dedication to her duties; nor of those of her counterparts. She plays her character with poignancy, dealing with the day-to-day trials and tribulations reconciling her work and her home - in which she billets RN commander "Geoffrey" (Cecil Parker) and sailor "Roddy" whilst her own two children are away serving. From a narrative perspective it climaxes with the D-Day landings and, intercut with War Office actuality, conveys a genuine sense of the fraught anticipation of those at home. Once the war has been won, the story rather peters out - a few fun jibes at the pains of rationing, and that most British of all things - the queue; and there is a degree of stoic, stiff upper lip-ness about the attitudes that makes the characterisations plausible and engaging, but it does slip a little into melodrama. There are a few welcome cameos from Thora Hird as their housekeeper (and, briefly, from Bill Owen with whom she starred in "Last of the Summer Wine" some 60-odd years later) and Kynaston Reeves. The story isn't all plain sailing: grim reality raises it's ugly head now and again, but that is handled subtly and isn't dwindled upon - helping the proceedings march along at a decent pace. I expect this went down well with audiences in 1948 - it's good.
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