Film “Dirt hour” showing Winston Churchill's diplomatic life

The new film “Dur” offers the diplomatic side of another recent action film, “Dunkirk”. So writes American historian Victor Davis Hanson regarding the latest film dedicated to British Prime Minister Winston Churchill during the Nazi invasion of France in May 1940. The film follows Churchill, a role you play [...]
The movie follows Churchill, which Gary Oldman plays in the early World War II.
Churchill's former <x0... His approach to domestication against Adolf Hitler and the first nine catastrophic months of World War II seemed almost to have condemned Great Britain to defeat. Churchill was asked to become Prime Minister, the very day Hitler invaded France, Belgium, and the Netherlands.

The armies of the three democracies -- all three together -- larger than the German Armed Forces -- kneeled within a few days or weeks. Churchill's major problem was not only to save the British army but to face the reality that, with the German occupation of Europe, the British Empire would no longer have allies. The U.S. were determined at all costs to remain neutral.
Within days after Churchill took office, all that is now the European Union would have been in Hitler's hands. The darkest hour takes the title from the depression that had spread throughout the British government.
Chamberlain and conservative politician Edward Wood considered Churchill insane because he believed that Great Britain could survive. “Dirges Hour” are conducted almost exclusively in closed environments at Parliament sessions, private meetings and the scene between Churchill and his brilliant wife, Clementine. But dialogue is compelling, excellent acting.
The great performance that Gary Oldman made of Churchill must be Oscar's winner. Oldman reminds the younger generation that occupied a global amnesia that almost 80 years ago, the stubborn challenge of a 66-year-old Victorian Englishman saved Western civilization from Nazi barbaria.
Americans need to see “We rightly believe that the American industry and the Soviet workforce won World War II. And yet all too often, Americans forget the third basic infection: the British leader, his courage and military professionalism”. /Prepare: The world..












