Pastor Hall

Pastor Hall is a 1940 British drama film directed by Roy Boulting and starring Wilfrid Lawson, Nova Pilbeam, Marius Goring, Seymour Hicks and Bernard Miles. The film is based on the play of the same title by German author Ernst Toller who had lived as an emigrant in the United States until his suicide in 1939. The U.S. version of the film opened with a prologue by Eleanor Roosevelt denouncing the Nazis, and her son James Roosevelt presented the film in the US through United Artists.

Plot
The film was based on the true story of the German pastor Martin Niemöller who was sent to Dachau concentration camp for criticizing the Nazi Party. In the 1930s, a small German village, Altdorf, is taken over by a platoon of stormtroopers loyal to Hitler. The SS go about teaching and enforcing 'The New Order' but the pastor, a kind and gentle man, will not be intimidated. While some villagers join the Nazi Party avidly, and some just go along with things, hoping for a quiet life, the pastor takes his convictions to the pulpit. Because of his criticism of the Nazis, the pastor is sent to Dachau.

Cast

 * Wilfred Lawson as Pastor Frederick Hall
 * Nova Pilbeam as Christine Hall
 * Seymour Hicks as General von Grotjahn
 * Marius Goring as Fritz Gerte
 * Brian Worth as Werner von Grotjahn
 * Percy Walsh as Herr Veit
 * Lina Barrie as Lina Veit
 * Eliot Makeham as Pippermann
 * Peter Cotes as Erwin Kohn
 * Edmund Willard as Freundlich
 * Hay Petrie as Nazi Pastor
 * Bernard Miles as Heinrich Degan
 * Manning Whiley as Vogel
 * J. Fisher White as Johann Herder
 * Barbara Gott as Frau Kemp

Critical reception
The New York Times reviewer wrote that "not until Pastor Hall opened last night at the Globe has any film come so close to the naked spiritual issues involved in the present conflict or presented them in terms so moving. If it is propaganda, it is also more...In its production the film is mechanically inferior. The sound track is uneven, the lighting occasionally bad. But in its performances it has been well endowed. Much of the film's dignity and cumulative emotion comes from the fine performance of Wilfrid Lawson as the pastor." TV Guide called the film "far less heavy-handed than most wartime films Hollywood cranked out after Pearl Harbor."