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    • David Niven

      Image courtesy of mrsskeffington.blogspot.com

      mrsskeffington.blogspot.com

      • The driving force behind the film was David Niven, a 1930 graduate of Sandhurst, who at the time was a major in the British Army working with the Army Film Unit and later served in Normandy with GHQ Liaison Regiment. Niven was the executive producer on The Way Ahead.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Way_Ahead
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  2. The Way Ahead (1944) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  3. Niven was the executive producer on The Way Ahead. The last scene in The Way Ahead shows the soldiers advancing in a counter-attack. Instead of the film ending with the words "The End", it concludes with "The Beginning".

  4. The Way Ahead: Directed by Carol Reed. With David Niven, Stanley Holloway, James Donald, John Laurie. World War II drama that follows a group of British draftees, starting with their rigorous basic training, and ending with their deployment in North Africa.

    • (2.2K)
    • Drama, War
    • Carol Reed
    • 1945-06-03
  5. Eric Ambler. Screenplay, Story. A mismatched collection of conscripted civilians find training tough under Lieutenant Jim Perry and Sergeant Ned Fletcher when they are called up to replace an infantry battalion that had suffered casualties at Dunkirk.

  6. Dec 31, 2014 · These three writers, all enlisted men in the British Army Film Unit, had previously worked on the 1943 training film The New Lot, which was produced for the Army Kinematograph Service. The Way Ahead was an expanded remake of their earlier film, this time intended for a commercial audience.

    • 110 min
  7. www.bfi.org.uk › film › c7b65a67-e27a-5c98-9303The Way Ahead (1944) | BFI

    The Way Ahead (1944) 1944 United Kingdom. Directed by. Carol Reed. Produced by. Norman Walker, John Sutro. Written by. Eric Ambler, Peter Ustinov. Featuring.

  8. The Way Ahead was conceived during the 1942 winter, when morale-stiffening in and outside the Army was sorely needed. The Army training film The New Lot (1943) served as inspiration, providing key plot elements, characters, and creative personnel (director Reed , writers Ambler and Ustinov ).

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