Freedom Comes High
{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}
{{More citations needed|date=June 2019}}
{{Infobox film
| name = Freedom Comes High
| image = Freedom Comes High title.jpg
| alt =
| caption =
| native_name =
| director = Lewis Allen
| producer =
| writer =
| screenplay =
| story =
| based_on =
| narrator =
| starring = James Craig
Barbara Britton
| music =
| cinematography = Stuart Thompson
| editing =
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| released = {{Film date|1944}}
| runtime = 13 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
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Freedom Comes High is a 1944 dramatic short film commissioned by the United States Government during World War II and directed by Lewis Allen.
Synopsis
The playlet involves a young woman coming home, tired, after a busy day at a war plant. Each time she comes in there is a letter from her husband overseas, and she remembers their conversations before he went off to war. She was concerned about him, because she felt it was a "young man's war" and he should stay home with her and the baby. However he was insistent that his country needed him. The plot then turns to the husband trying to manage his ship while it is being attacked by a submarine. The next day, the woman receives another letter from her husband, who is shown in double exposure, reminding her that freedom comes high, often at the price of human lives. The door bell rings, and it is a Western Union telegram, saying that her husband died.
The point of the film was to communicate to the American people that many of their sons and husbands who were going overseas, would not be coming back, and that they would have to understand they would be sacrificing their loved ones to secure freedom. Given the extraordinary sensitivity of the subject matter, the government short is notable both as propaganda and as a meditation on what has to be sacrificed for the maintenance of freedom.
Cast
- James Craig as Steve Blanding
- Barbara Britton as Ellen Blanding
- Donald Cook as The Captain
- Cecil Kellaway as Father
- Mabel Paige as Rhoda
- Charles Quigley as Jacobs
See also
External links
- {{Internet Archive short film|id=FreedomC1944|name=Freedom Comes High}}
- {{IMDb title|id=0126311|title=Freedom Comes High}}
{{Lewis Allen}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Freedom Comes High}}
Category:American World War II propaganda shorts
Category:Films directed by Lewis Allen
Category:American black-and-white films
Category:American war drama films
Category:1940s war drama films
Category:1940s English-language films
Category:English-language drama short films
Category:English-language war drama films
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