Battle of Britain - posters, covers, wallpapers

Lots of posters, covers and wallpapers for the movie "Battle of Britain"
Battle of Britain (1969)
Timing: 2:12 (132 min)
Battle of Britain - TMDB rating
6.8/10
291
Battle of Britain - Kinopoisk rating
6.746/10
676
Battle of Britain - IMDB rating
6.9/10
23997

Backdrops, wallpaper

Backdrop to the movie "Battle of Britain" #140932Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "Battle of Britain" #140933HD Ready 720p
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Backdrop to the movie "Battle of Britain" #363015Full HD 1080p
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Backdrop to the movie "Battle of Britain" #363019Full HD 1080p
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Backdrop to the movie "Battle of Britain" #363022HD Ready 816p
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Backdrop to the movie "Battle of Britain" #363024HD Ready 816p
Backdrop to the movie "Battle of Britain" #363025HD Ready 816p
Backdrop to the movie "Battle of Britain" #5063704K UHD 2160p
Backdrop to the movie "Battle of Britain" #5063744K UHD 2160p
Backdrop to the movie "Battle of Britain" #5063754K UHD 2160p

Posters, covers

Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #1409362K 1500p
Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #140937HD Ready 1050p
Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #1409384K UHD 2559p
Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #1409393K 2100p
Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #1409402K 1500p
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Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #1409422K 1500p
Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #1409434K UHD 2560p
Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #1409442K 1500p
Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #1409455K UHD 3000p
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Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #1409475K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #1409483K 1920p
Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #3630265K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #3630273K 1920p
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Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #4169783K 1681p
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Poster to the movie "Battle of Britain" #4895975K UHD 3000p

What's left behind the scenes

  • Myles Kane was initially afraid that he was too young to play the squadron leader. However, war veterans assured him that he was not too young for the role, but even a bit old.
  • The scene of the first aerial battle of Polish pilots was filmed based on a real event. The 303rd Polish Squadron named after (the military and political figure of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and the United States, the leader of the Polish uprising of 1794, Tadeusz) Kościuszko was conducting training flights under the command of Royal Air Force officer Ronald Kellett (1909-1998) when one of the Poles, Ludwik Witold Paszkiewicz (1907-1940), spotted a Luftwaffe Dornier bomber and requested permission to attack. Kellett forbade him from doing so, but Paszkiewicz shot down the German plane anyway. He subsequently received a reprimand from Kellett in front of the troops, but privately (unofficially) Kellett praised him. Paszkiewicz did not return from a combat mission on September 27, 1940.
  • Many of the actors were actually too old to play pilots. The average age of RAF pilots during the Battle of Britain was 20 years old.
  • 27 Spitfire fighters of varying degrees of airworthiness were found for filming, and only 12 of them were repairable. 6 Hurricane fighters were also found, 3 of which were repairable. All of the Messerschmitt 109 fighters used in the film had recently been withdrawn from service with the Spanish Air Force. The filmmakers purchased around 50 World War II aircraft and repaired 17 of them. These were piloted during filming by personnel from the Spanish Air Force and the so-called Confederate Air Force (the Confederate Air Force is an American non-profit organization dedicated to preserving and showcasing historic military aviation at airshows, primarily in the US and Canada). The filmmakers also leased 32 Heinkel bombers with crews from the Spanish Air Force, which were still used for cargo transport and as aerial targets. Ultimately, the filmmakers bought 2 of these aircraft and, together with 17 Messerschmitt bombers, transported them to England for filming. Two Junkers 52 transports were also leased from the Spanish Air Force.
  • The prototypes for Majors Fen and Falk, flight leaders, were Adolf Galland (1912-1996) and Werner Mölders (1913-1941), two of the most famous German fighter aces of World War II. Galland was present on the film set as a consultant. He became so angered that the Germans were portrayed exclusively within the confines of clichés and stereotypes that he almost left the production. At his insistence, numerous changes were made to the original script.
  • The scene in which Hermann Göring (1893-1946) accuses Albert Kesselring (1885-1960) of treason as the train departs is based on a real event. Göring left in such a hurry that the service personnel did not even have time to disconnect the telephone cables running between the train and the station building. Director Guy Hamilton (1922-2016) wanted to show the severed wires trailing behind the train as it gained speed, but he decided it would look too comical.
  • The first film to use radio-controlled model airplanes during filming. Such models are commonplace now, but at the time it was something special, and experienced specialists were hired to build the models, who left their jobs and spent several months constructing the aircraft models and preparing them for filming.
  • During World War II, Laurence Olivier (1907-1989) volunteered for the Royal Air Force, but he proved to be such a poor pilot that the command decided Olivier would best serve his country by continuing to act in films.
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