DVD: Captured | reviews, news & interviews
DVD: Captured
DVD: Captured
Previously classified film intended to train British troops in resisting interrogation is a powerful POW drama like no other

While it’s impossible to know the effect of Captured on the few who originally saw it, you can be damn sure it packed a punch. It still does. This unforgettable film was made in 1959 for the Army Kinema Corporation to train personnel in resisting interrogation. Classified as “restricted”, it was seen only by a relevant and limited forces audience.
 Its first-time release on DVD comes in the wake of Kathryn Bigelow’s Zero Dark Thirty. That attracted criticism for its depiction of torture, yet Captured shows waterboarding, something barely known before the War on Terror. Drawing from the accounts of members of British forces who had been imprisoned in Korea, Captured shows that what's considered repugnant today in the hands of Western forces was borrowed from their Asian opponents in the 1950s – a trajectory discussed compellingly in the accompanying booklet. Most pertinently for now, with North Korea currently in a sabre rattling mood, the setting is discomfiting.
Its first-time release on DVD comes in the wake of Kathryn Bigelow’s Zero Dark Thirty. That attracted criticism for its depiction of torture, yet Captured shows waterboarding, something barely known before the War on Terror. Drawing from the accounts of members of British forces who had been imprisoned in Korea, Captured shows that what's considered repugnant today in the hands of Western forces was borrowed from their Asian opponents in the 1950s – a trajectory discussed compellingly in the accompanying booklet. Most pertinently for now, with North Korea currently in a sabre rattling mood, the setting is discomfiting.
Captured is certainly resonant, but it’s also an amazing, assured film with – although it is through-and-through British – a hard-boiled American edge. As a lead, Alan Dobie – comparable with Jack Hawkins at his best or even John Mills – is steely, calm and controlled, despite the physical and mental abuse he suffers. Watch out for Wilfred Brambell. The Korean contingent is played by non-actors Krish found in London's Chinese community, and they are all too convincing. The picture restoration is superb.
This shocking film is accompanied by a raft of extras including a fascinating interview with Krish, who discusses his whole career. His flair is revealed by having worked for the Children’s Film Foundation almost concurrent with making Captured. Of his other films seen here, H.M.P. is a sober, yet surprisingly warm-toned, verité-style documentary following newly recruited officers as they explore what it takes to work in prison. Overall, this is a fabulous package but on its own, Captured would have been enough.
Watch the trailer for Captured
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