The Moon Is Down

6.7
19431h 30m

The story of a small town in Norway that resists German occupation during World War II. Based on a John Steinbeck novel.

Production

Logo for 20th Century Fox

Cast

Photo of Cedric Hardwicke

Cedric Hardwicke

Col. Lanser

Photo of Henry Travers

Henry Travers

Mayor Orden

Photo of Lee J. Cobb

Lee J. Cobb

Dr. Albert Winter

Photo of Dorris Bowdon

Dorris Bowdon

Molly Morden

Photo of Margaret Wycherly

Margaret Wycherly

Mme. Sarah Orden

Photo of Peter van Eyck

Peter van Eyck

Lt. Tonder

Photo of William Post Jr.

William Post Jr.

Alex Morden

Photo of Henry Rowland

Henry Rowland

Capt. Loft

Photo of E.J. Ballantine

E.J. Ballantine

George Corell

Photo of Georgia Backus

Georgia Backus

Villager (uncredited)

Photo of John Banner

John Banner

Lt. Prackle (uncredited)

Photo of Trevor Bardette

Trevor Bardette

Knute Pierson (Foreman) (uncredited)

Photo of Hank Bell

Hank Bell

Villager (uncredited)

Photo of John Bleifer

John Bleifer

Miner (uncredited)

Photo of Sven Hugo Borg

Sven Hugo Borg

Sergeant (uncredited)

Photo of Harry Cording

Harry Cording

Miner (uncredited)

Photo of Jeff Corey

Jeff Corey

Albert (uncredited)

Photo of Edith Evanson

Edith Evanson

Ludwig's Wife (uncredited)

Photo of Gibson Gowland

Gibson Gowland

Villager (uncredited)

Photo of Gertrude Hoffmann

Gertrude Hoffmann

Villager (uncredited)

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

There are only a few period wartime stories told around events in the occupied Kingdom of Norway, and this is one of the better efforts. Sir Cedric Hardwicke is the Nazi colonel sent to supervise a small town that exists to support a nearby iron-ore mine. A sophisticate, of sorts, he initially attempts to deal reasonably with the townspeople led by their Mayor (Henry Travers) but soon realises that these people are not the type to sit idly by, sabotage soon becomes rife - and a battle of wills - and philosophies - ensues. It has some subtly to it, both Hardwicke and Peter van Eyck ("Lt. Tonder") demonstrate some degree of humanity from the occupier's perspective, and both Travers and Lee J. Cobb ("Dr. Winter") deliver well as the peaceful, elderly, men who do not consider themselves to be brave, but they are proud and are determined to see off their murderous guests - even if it costs them their lives. It is plausible, which helps enormously, and the pace from Irving Pichel draws us into their ghastly predicament well. Made mid-WWII, it has a slight tinge of propaganda to it, but the characters have an element of authenticity about them that makes this a decidedly more nuanced watch than many of it's time.

You've reached the end.