This Land Is Mine (1943)
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- Approved
- 1h 43min
- Drama, War
- 07 May 1943 (USA)
- Movie
- Won 1 Oscar.
- See more »
Photos and Videos
Cast verified as complete
Charles Laughton | ... |
Albert Lory
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Maureen O'Hara | ... |
Louise Martin
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George Sanders | ... |
George Lambert
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Walter Slezak | ... |
Major Erich von Keller
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Kent Smith | ... |
Paul Martin
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Una O'Connor | ... |
Emma Lory
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Philip Merivale | ... |
Professor Sorel
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Thurston Hall | ... |
Mayor Henry Manville
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George Coulouris | ... |
Prosecutor
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Nancy Gates | ... |
Julie Grant
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Ivan F. Simpson | ... |
Judge
(as Ivan Simpson)
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John Donat | ... |
Edmund Lorraine
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Rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
Philip Ahlm | ... |
German Second Lieutenant (uncredited)
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Frank Alten | ... |
Captain Schwartz (uncredited)
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Louis V. Arco | ... |
German Sergeant (uncredited)
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John Banner | ... |
German Sergeant (uncredited)
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Joan Barclay | ... |
Young Woman (uncredited)
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Trevor Bardette | ... |
Courtroom Guard Who Brings Albert's Notes (uncredited)
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Linda Bieber | ... |
Emily (uncredited)
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Tommy Bond | ... |
Pug-nosed School Bully (uncredited)
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Sven Hugo Borg | ... |
German Soldier (uncredited)
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Leo Bulgakov | ... |
Little Fat Man (uncredited)
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Bobby Burns | ... |
Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)
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George M. Carleton | ... |
Mr. Noble (uncredited)
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Wheaton Chambers | ... |
Mr. Lorraine (uncredited)
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Gordon B. Clarke | ... |
First Lieutenant (uncredited)
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Albert D'Arno | ... |
German Soldier (uncredited)
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John Dilson | ... |
Mayor's Secretary (uncredited)
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Ludwig Donath | ... |
German Captain (uncredited)
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Margaret Fealy | ... |
Old Woman (uncredited)
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Hans Fuerberg | ... |
Kurt (uncredited)
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Babe Green | ... |
Undetermined Role (uncredited)
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Ernest Grooney | ... |
Priest (uncredited)
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Mary Halsey | ... |
Girl (uncredited)
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Mildred Hardy | ... |
Old Woman (uncredited)
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Sam Harris | ... |
Man Knocked Down on Sidewalk / Townsman Shot by Firing Squad (uncredited)
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Ariel Heath | ... |
Undetermined Role (uncredited)
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Hallene Hill | ... |
Woman in Window (uncredited)
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Otto Hoffman | ... |
Victor (uncredited)
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Russell Hoyt | ... |
German Soldier (uncredited)
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Lloyd Ingraham | ... |
Man with Paper on Street (uncredited)
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Elmer Jerome | ... |
Man in Window (uncredited)
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Casey Johnson | ... |
Boy (uncredited)
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Terrellyne Johnson | ... |
Girl (uncredited)
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P.J. Kelly | ... |
Judge (uncredited)
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David Kirkland | ... |
Judge (uncredited)
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Jeanne Lafayette | ... |
Woman on Street (uncredited)
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Gabriel Lenoff | ... |
German First Lieutenant (uncredited)
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Oscar Loraine | ... |
Clerk (uncredited)
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Theodore Lorch | ... |
Juror (uncredited)
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George MacQuarrie | ... |
Chief of Police (uncredited)
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Hal Malone | ... |
Man in Courtroom (uncredited)
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Jack Martin | ... |
German Captain (uncredited)
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Claire McDowell | ... |
Woman in Bathroom (uncredited)
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Ed McNamara | ... |
Policeman (uncredited)
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Edward McNamara | ... |
Officer in Crowd Viewing Arrest of Printers (uncredited)
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Freddie Mercer | ... |
Boy in Classroom (uncredited)
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Hans Moebus | ... |
German Chauffeur (uncredited)
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Barbara Moffett | ... |
Undetermined Role (uncredited)
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Rudolf Myzet | ... |
German Soldier (uncredited)
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O'Neill Nolan | ... |
Henry (uncredited)
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William J. O'Brien | ... |
Night Switchman (uncredited)
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Frank O'Connor | ... |
Juror (uncredited)
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Lillian O'Malley | ... |
Woman in Street (uncredited)
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Paul Parry | ... |
Undetermined Role (uncredited)
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June Pickerell | ... |
Woman in Window (uncredited)
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Lon Poff | ... |
Old Man (uncredited)
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John Rice | ... |
Burly Cop (uncredited)
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Ferdinand Schumann-Heink | ... |
Karl (uncredited)
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Hans Schumm | ... |
German Sergeant Who Pushes Albert (uncredited)
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Lester Sharpe | ... |
German Soldier (uncredited)
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Jack Shea | ... |
Burly Cop (uncredited)
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Ida Shoemaker | ... |
Woman in Street (uncredited)
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George Sorel | ... |
German Sergeant (uncredited)
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Robert R. Stephenson | ... |
German Sergeant on Street (uncredited)
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Gus Taillon | ... |
Newsman (uncredited)
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Walter Thiele | ... |
German Soldier (uncredited)
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Bob Thom | ... |
Undetermined Role (uncredited)
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Nicholas Vehr | ... |
German Soldier (uncredited)
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Hans von Morhart | ... |
Soldier Who Gets Slapped (uncredited)
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Cecil Weston | ... |
Mrs. Lorraine (uncredited)
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William Yetter Sr. | ... |
Otto (uncredited)
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Directed by
Jean Renoir |
Written by
Dudley Nichols | ... | (screen play) |
Jean Renoir | ... | () (uncredited) |
Produced by
Eugène Lourié | ... | associate producer (uncredited) |
Dudley Nichols | ... | producer (uncredited) |
Jean Renoir | ... | producer (uncredited) |
Music by
Lothar Perl |
Cinematography by
Frank Redman | ... | director of photography |
Editing by
Frederic Knudtson |
Production Design by
Eugène Lourié | ... | (as Eugene Lourié) |
Art Direction by
Albert S. D'Agostino | ||
Walter E. Keller |
Set Decoration by
A. Roland Fields | ... | (set decorations) (as Al Fields) |
Darrell Silvera | ... | (set decorations) |
Costume Design by
Renié | ... | (gowns) |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Eddie Donahoe | ... | assistant director (as Edward Donahue) |
Sound Department
James G. Stewart | ... | rerecordist |
John E. Tribby | ... | recordist |
Stephen Dunn | ... | sound recordist (uncredited) |
Terry Kellum | ... | sound (uncredited) |
Special Effects by
Vernon L. Walker | ... | special effects |
Costume and Wardrobe Department
Eugene Joseff | ... | costume jeweller (uncredited) |
Music Department
C. Bakaleinikoff | ... | musical director |
Sidney Cutner | ... | orchestrator (uncredited) |
Leonid Raab | ... | orchestrator (uncredited) |
Additional Crew
Leo Bulgakov | ... | dialogue director |
R. Cassel | ... | stand-in (uncredited) |
E.L. Dale | ... | stand-in (uncredited) |
Heinrich Heine | ... | poet: "Die Lorelei" (uncredited) |
Skeets Noyes | ... | stand-in (uncredited) |
R. Ross | ... | stand-in (uncredited) |
S. Shanon | ... | stand-in (uncredited) |
Mary Stuart | ... | photo double (uncredited) |
Production Companies
Distributors
- RKO Radio Pictures (1943) (United States) (theatrical)
- RKO Distributing Corporation of Canada (1943) (Canada) (theatrical)
- RKO Radio Pictures (1943) (United Kingdom) (theatrical)
- RKO Pictures (Australasia) (1943) (Australia) (theatrical)
- RKO Radio Pictures Argentina (1943) (Argentina) (theatrical)
- RKO Radio Films (1944) (Sweden) (theatrical)
- RKO Radio Films (1946) (France) (theatrical) (as R.K.O. Radio Films S. A.)
- C&C Television Corporation (1955) (United States) (tv)
- Mainostelevisio (MTV3) (1967) (Finland) (tv) (as MTV1)
- Yleisradio (YLE) (1977) (Finland) (tv)
- Turner Home Entertainment (1989) (United States) (VHS)
- Pan Vision (2005) (Finland) (DVD)
- Odeon Entertainment (2012) (United Kingdom) (DVD)
- Warner Archive Collection (2012) (United States) (DVD) (dvdr)
- Warner Home Video (2012) (United States) (DVD) (dvdr)
- Artaire Films (2020) (Spain) (VOD)
Special Effects
Other Companies
- RCA (sound system)
Storyline
Plot Summary |
The Germans have just invaded and are now occupying another town in an Allied country in western Europe and the German district commandant is Major Erich von Keller (Walter Slezak). Like other such occupied towns, the Germans are keeping it a supposed free city in return for citizen cooperation. Some of the town's leading citizens, such as Mayor Henry Manville (Thurston Hall) and the railway station master George Lambert (George Sanders), encourage citizen cooperation outwardly to maintain peace, while such persons are able to profit individually in being in Von Keller's proverbial back pocket. Paul Martin (Kent Smith), a railway switch-man and George's best friend, has gone even further by befriending occupying German soldiers. On the other side, the school headmaster, well-respected Professor Sorel (Philip Merivale), and young schoolteacher Louise Martin (Maureen O'Hara), Paul's sister and George's fiancée, openly but quietly resist although do not totally defy German orders. Louise's fellow schoolteacher, middle-aged Albert Lory (Charles Laughton), is a timid man, his self-admitted cowardice exacerbated by his overbearing mother, Emma Lory (Una O'Connor). Coddling him, she in return expects that he will never leave her. Albert is secretly in love with Louise, which most in town know, it being more of a joke to them than anything as they know he will never admit such in his cowardice. Someone or some faction in town has been clandestinely printing and distributing anti-German leaflets. In addition, an act of sabotage at the railway yard which was intended to thwart the Germans resulted in two German soldiers being killed. As such, Von Keller is determined to find out the person or people behind these acts. If he is unable, he will not hesitate to imprison and execute innocent people to make them examples to the townsfolk. When the supposed saboteur is discovered and shot by the Germans, Albert gets caught in the middle, and his life is on the line. In this situation, the townsfolk may get a true picture of what it means to be a coward or a hero. Written by Huggo |
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Taglines | The screen's great drama of defiance. See more » |
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Parents Guide | Add content advisory for parents » |
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Did You Know?
Trivia | The singing of "Die Lorelei" by the German soldiers was a subtle dig at the anti-semitic regime of the Nazis, since the words were written by banned Jewish poet Heinrich Heine. Many of his books, considered "un-German," were burned in the book-burning episode at Opernplatz, Berlin, Germany, on 10 May 1933. However, his works were so popular that they were still published, but "author unknown" was the listed writer. In his 1821 play "Almansor," Heine also prophetically wrote "Dort, wo man Bücher verbrennt, verbrennt man am Ende auch Menschen" ("Where they burned books, they will in the end burn people"). See more » |
Goofs | When Paul Martin is trying to escape by jumping from car to car in the rail-yard, one of the parked box cars to the side clearly has the Great Northern logo. Whilst Great Northern was a large operation, its rails didn't reach to Nazi-occupied Europe. Another car is clearly marked "SP" for the Southern Pacific railroad. See more » |
Movie Connections | Featured in Charles Laughton (1978). See more » |
Soundtracks | Die Lorelei See more » |
Crazy Credits | Opening credits prologue: "Somewhere in Europe--" See more » |
Quotes |
[At Albert Lory's murder trial, the Prosecutor produces a "suicide note," proving that George Lambert killed himself. But Lory will not have it]
Albert Lory: The letter's forged, Your Honor. Major Von Keller told me last night... The prosecutor wrote that letter himself. I think he's trying to save my life. [laughter ripples through the courtroom] Prosecutor: This is no laughing matter! Your Honor, for the sake of the dignity of this court, I respectfully ask that the man who started that unseemly outburst be forcibly removed from the room! Judge: The court agrees with you, Mr. Prosecutor! Which of you started that laughter? Please stand up. [Silence. No one in the courtroom stands up] Judge: I ask you again, who started that laughter? Albert Lory: Excuse me, Your Honor. I don't know, but I think I can guess. Perhaps it was the Unknown Soldier. See more » |