Neutral Port (1940) Poster

(1940)

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6/10
A silly plot but oddly entertaining
Paularoc23 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The action takes place in the neutral port of Esperanto in 1939. Will Fyffe plays the cantankerous Captain Ferguson whose ship is sunk by a German u-boat. He then becomes obsessed with getting another ship; he and his crew steal a German ship, that ship too is sunk and Ferguson ends up in jail. He breaks out of jail, steals another ship - it is sunk too but this time the ship is sunk by British planes (that also sink three German u- boats.) There is a secondary plot line of a young man (the boyfriend of the Phyllis Calvert character) who at first declines a dangerous mission but later accepts it. It's all rather convoluted. After getting used to Fyffe's accent, I found him to be quite entertaining and appreciate seeing on film such a renown music hall performer. There is an interesting scene in a bar when at one point German sailors, giving the Nazi salute, break into song. One young woman interrupts with a different song. Even though it wasn't nearly as well done, it did remind me of the famous scene in Casablanca. And later in the movie, a British woman puts on record on a player - it's La Marseillaise. Another fight breaks out with the Germans. The production values (especially the ship model scenes) are poor, and the plot is absurd but nonetheless it is worth watching because of Fyffe, Banks and Calvert.
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6/10
Will Fyffe Gone Mad
boblipton26 February 2020
Skipper Will Fyffe and most of his crew row their lifeboat into the neutral port of Esperanto, where the local officials wear comic-opera uniforms and the language is probably Interlingua. He explains to British consul Leslie Banks that the Germans sank his ship before war was declared, and they're going to provide him a new one. Meanwhile, Banks is distracted by daughter Phyllis Calvert's cowardly commando boyfriend, Hugh McDermott. Besides a sunk ship, Fyffe has the problem of bar owner Yvonne Arnaud, who wants him for her sixth husband, and the fact the locals throw him in jail every time he steals a German ship, which seems to happen every ten or fifteen minutes.

This comedy-drama is ably directed by cut-glass farce expert Marcel Varnel, who takes the script and keeps the gags to a minimum, allowing the actors the chance to play comedy the best way: absolutely straight.

See if you can spot 28-year-old Hugh Griffith in his uncredited screen debut. I couldn't.
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4/10
What A Hopeless Mess
malcolmgsw26 November 2011
Will Fyffe was a well established music hall performer who like many in his profession made some films but with very little success.His acting is far too broad for the cinema and he comes over as a caricature Scotsman.He is not helped by a truly awful script,poor direction and model shots which appear to have been filmed in someones bathtub.I know that many of the films at the time had a propaganda element but this was really taking matters to an extreme.the plot was incoherent,badly developed and improbably resolved.The acting was uneven.Leslie Banks was fairly laid back.However despite a reasonable cast nothing could save this mish mash from disaster.Clearly at this point in the war the British film industry was in rather a trough from which it would soon recover.
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3/10
Everyone Comes to Rosa's
richardchatten10 April 2021
Despite being produced & directed by the team that also gave posterity 'Oh,Mr Porter!' for Gainsborough, this is a lifeless and laughless business which obviously never leaves Shepherd's Bush, typical of early films attempting to keep spirits up during the grim early years of the war.

Set in the neutral port of 'Esperanto' (probably the best joke in the film), most of the action takes place at 'The Hotel Adolf' (probably the second best joke in the film). The basic situation anticipates 'Casablanca', complete with competing factions singing at each other, with Frederick Valk as the ugly face of the Hun later personified by Conrad Veidt.

Instead of Humphrey Bogart as Rick, however, we get Yvonne Arnaud as Rosa Pirenti, who raises the prices the moment war is declared.
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3/10
My brief review of the film
sol-17 September 2005
Marcel Varnel, a talented director of pure comedies (he directed quite a few Will Hay and Arthur Askey films) unevenly mixes comedy with drama here, and the results are somewhat messy. It is however the screenplay more so than Varnel's directing that is the film's main problem. The plot develops in quite a haphazard fashion, boasting two loosely connected story lines, each with useless charismatic supporting characters. With a few amusing scenes in the mix, this is not a complete disaster, but it is not a very good film either, nor anything even near the level of Marcel Varnel's weakest pure comedy work, let alone his masterpieces, such as 'Oh, Mr. Porter!' and 'Ask a Policeman'. It is strange to think that he directed this film after, and not before, those two gems.
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4/10
Light comedy of Esperanto is lost in translation
timwestcott11 May 2020
It's 3 September 1939 in the Mediterranean port of Esperanto. Anxious civilians besiege the British consulate trying to get on a boat, but the consul (Leslie Banks) is busy playing a game of chess against his German counterpart (Sigurd Lohde) at the club. When war is declared, his assistant Jim (Hugh McDermott, for once not playing an American) brings him the news and the game is put to one side. Esperanto declares its neutrality, and the Hotel Adolf hedges its bets - displaying a portrait of the Fuhrer beneath a Union flag.

It's a nice opening scene, and Esperanto, where the police strut about in comic opera uniforms, is a little bit Wes Anderson. For a film released in 1940, the propaganda message is light touch and the Germans are not demonised. A developing storyline surrounds the Scharndorf, a German merchant ship that the British believe (correctly) is actually a covert supply ship for German U Boats. The consul is told to put someone with a radio transmitter on the ship to send its position to the Royal Navy so it can be sunk, and appoints Jim for the highly dangerous job, much to the horror of his daughter Helen (Phyllis Calvert), who is in love with Jim.

Unfortunately, the film does goes downhill from its opening scenes. Yvonne Arnaud's turn as bar owner Rosa Pirenti is a histrionic performance that simply overbears everything else. It's maybe not her fault (Arnaud is fine as Madame Lebouche in Tomorrow We Live). The director, Marcel Varnel, should just have told her to turn herself down from 11.

Things are not much improved by Will Fyffe as Ferguson, the skipper of a ship called the Annie Louise which is sunk offshore almost as soon as war breaks out and who Rosa is determined to marry. His turn as an amusingly cantankerous old sea salt falls just as flat as Arnaud's.
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7/10
It has its moments
calvertfan14 April 2002
  • although painfully few! I gave this a 6/10 which was even a bit of a stretch. I was not at all enamoured with Neutral Port. The story of a crazy sailor whose boat was sunk, who spends all his time trying to steal another boat to get his own back, is just plain silly. The comedy scenes with him and the barmaid were actually funny, though the jokes started to wear thin by the end. The only shining lights in this film were the few scenes with a quite young Phyllis Calvert, and her sweetheart who was to be sent off on a dangerous mission.
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3/10
Lotsa screaming going on.
mark.waltz29 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Some films you can tell from the start are going to be very aggravating, and with lots of hard to understand voices all screaming at each other at the same time so nobody can hear anybody, it gets truly maddening after a while. Perhaps that's why they use the name "Esperanto" as the port as it basically means phony language. All of a sudden in an early scene, there are three groups of people singing their anthems at each other in their own language, and fortunately it doesn't go on to the conclusion like it would in "Casablanca". The poor innkeeper is overwhelmed by this but nothing can stop these rowdy groups from continuing to bray.

And of course, you've got the loud obnoxious British battle-axe calling for the manager in every scene that she walks into, selfishly pushing her way through the crowd even though she's the most likely the last person to have gotten there. The film focuses on U-boat captain Will Fyffe who vows revenge on the Germans for torpedoing his boat, his Scottish accent requiring too much attention to try to interpret. Leslie Banks, Yvonne Arnaud and Phyllis Calvert co-star as others directed to be bellowing their lines. I'm sure deep somewhere within the film is a good story, but it's the type that requires aspirin instead of popcorn in what ended up on screen.
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7/10
Lots of fun, but this comedy is really a plea for Brit unity against a formidable WW II foe
mmipyle12 April 2021
"Neutral Port" (1940) stars Will Fyffe, Leslie Banks, Yvonne Arnaud, Phyllis Calvert, Hugh McDermott, and many others in what can be considered a British WWII propaganda film, this, just post (3 months) the blitz occurring in London. It begins just prior to the declaration of war between Britain and Germany. A German submarine has just sunk Will Fyffe's boat, and now Fyffe comes into a neutral port where he hears of a German boat he can hi-jack as compensation for the one that was sunk. This "neutral" port is one he's been coming to often, as Yvonne Arnaud is now seeking Fyffe to become her fifth husband! This cute little war fluff has very deep underlying motives, but plays like fluff comedy, with Scottish actor Fyffe pulling out all the stops by being a crusty, but somewhat - and that's an operative word - canny Brit sea captain. He couldn't care less that war's been declared; he wants his own boat - again... Period. Oh, what he'll do to get it!

Lots of fun, though it's obvious that this is a plea for Brit unity against a formidable foe. With the year long blitz in progress as this was released, it became obvious, too, that this kind of fluff was not what was needed to win the war. With 1941 the seriousness of what was occurring changed forever the tenor of films about WW II. Will Fyffe shines, and Leslie Banks continues his series of very officious Brit characters (as opposed, say, to his 1932 characterization in "The Most Dangerous Game"! Where he played Zaroff). Yvonne Arnaud, who was already 47 when she made this film, was a French actress who spent her sometime career in films in British films until her last film, Jacques Tati's "Mon Oncle" (1958), the year of her death. She's a pip. Phyllis Calvert and Hugh McDermott have the most serious rôles in "Neutral Port", and though McDermott comes to the ultimate rescue of all involved, still plays lover to Calvert, daughter of Banks, and that love affair keeps an air of normalcy about this raucous play-up of war.

Directed by Marcel Varnel who's possibly best remembered as the director of things like "Chandu the Magician" (1932) and the two Will Hay films, "Oh, Mr. Porter!" (1937) and "Convict 99" (1938), among many others. Look quickly here, too, for Hugh Griffith in his second film. This is the debut film of Anton Diffring who ended up for decades as nasties in Brit and American films, usually as Nazis with nefarious intent.
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3/10
Poor WW2 comedy
Leofwine_draca30 March 2020
Warning: Spoilers
NEUTRAL PORT is a WW2 propaganda movie (complete with rousing anthems and the like) with a crucial difference to most: half the running time is given over to lame and dated comedy that just doesn't gel with the seriousness of the story. It's wartime at sea, with Brits swearing vengeance when their ship is sunk (and getting it too!). I have no idea who Will Fyffe was but he comes across as overbearing here while others like Leslie Banks are stiff and formal. Marcel Varnel did some good Will Hay vehicles back in the day so it's a surprise to see him making such a pig's ear of this one.
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10/10
A perfect 10
PlasticActor15 November 2021
For a movie that has that classic scene stolen for Casablanca in Rick's Americaine between Germans singing Deutschland Uber Alles and French supporters singing the Internationale.
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