
Gary Oldman
Winston Churchill
Stephen Dillane
Viscount Halifax
Lily James
Elizabeth Layton
Ronald Pickup
Neville Chamberlain
Ben Mendelsohn
King George VI
Kristin Scott Thomas
Clemmie
Nicholas Jones
Sir John Simon
Samuel West
Sir Anthony Eden
David Schofield
Clement Atlee
Richard Lumsden
General Ismay
Malcolm Storry
General Ironside
Hilton McRae
Arthur Greenwood
Benjamin Whitrow
Sir Samuel Hoare
Joe Armstrong
John Evans
Adrian Rawlins
Air Chief Marshal Dowding
David Bamber
Admiral Ramsay
Paul Leonard
Admiral Dudley Pound
David Strathairn
President Roosevelt (voice)
Eric MacLennan
Tom Leonard
Philip Martin Brown
Sawyers
Demetri Goritsas
Cabinet Secretary Bridges
Jordan Waller
Randolph Churchill
Alex Clatworthy
Diana Churchill
Mary Antony
Mary Churchill
Bethany Muir
Sarah Churchill
Anna Burnett
Pamela Churchill
Jeremy Child
Lord Stanhope
Brian Pettifer
Lord Kingsley Wood
Michael Gould
Lord Londonderry
Paul Ridley
House of Commons Speaker
Robin Pearce
Ernle Hastings
Michael Bott
Equerry
Olivier Broche
Reynaud
Mario Hacquard
Daladier
Pip Torrens
BBC Producer
Edmund Wiseman
Actor
Hannah Steele
Abigail Walker
Nia Gwynne
Alice Simpson
Ade Dee Haastrup
Marcus Peters
James Eeles
Maurice Baker
Flora Nicholson
Jessie Sutton
Bronte Carmichael
Young Girl on Tube
Roisin O'Neill
Agnes Dillon
John Locke
Oliver Wilson
Jo Neary
Margaret Jerome
Richard Glover
Brigadier Nicholson
Tom Ashley
Ramsay Staffer
Joshua Higgott
Reporter
Imogen King
Teenage Girl at Tube Map
Miles Gallant
Naval Map-Room Officer
Faye Marsay
Sybil
John Atterbury
Sir Alexander Cadogan
James Harkness
AD Nicholl (Secretary #1)
Joshua James
W D Wilkinson (Secretary #2)
Charley Palmer Rothwell
Christopher Wilson (Photographer)
Patsy Ferran
Maid
Sarah Flind
Cook
Steffan Donnelly
Back Bencher
Kieran Buckeridge
Cecil Beaton
Johnny Otto
Member of Parliament (uncredited)
Nick Howden-Steenstra
Sentry (uncredited)













Released
en
$30,000,000.00
$150,847,207.00
- #world war ii
- #biography
- #based on true story
- #london underground
- #british politics
- #british prime minister
- #british history
- #autobiographical
- #dunkirk
- #1940s
- #winston churchill
- #based on real person
- #biographical drama
Reviews

A tour de force from Gary Oldman as he portrays Winston Churchill in his first few months of office at the start of WWII. Oddly enough though, aside from a few brief appearances from Kristin Scott-Thomas, the rest of the cast in this historical biopic are really quite unremarkable. The speeches are delivered magnificently; but there are too many speculative machinations going on - not least those

I thought I might have seen this a couple pf years ago, but I still enjoyed it. There have been a few movies about Churchill’s rise to power at the outset of World War II. This one seems to cover the least amount of ground, focusing on his thought processes, the political climate and his personal life leading only up to the beginning of the Dunkirk evacuation. I thought there were two things th
Gary Oldman was superb as Churchill.
I saw this film at TIFF on the big screen and loved it. There's not a weak member of the cast. I really loved the way the photography reflected the sense of gloom that would have been felt by the people facing a new war. Big thumbs up, gives a strong sense of the time and place.

It's 1940, and Hitler is attempting to take over Europe. The film takes an interesting look at Winston Churchill's first five weeks as Prime Minister. The acting in this movie is quite accomplished; good actors bring insight and depth to the characters. Overall, it's a well-done, engrossing film. Gary Oldman's performance as Winston Churchill was very good indeed, and his delivery of Churchill

As with many of the biopics I've seen recently, _Darkest Hour_ is more focussed on delivering you the facts than getting you involved with the characters. It is an interesting idea to have the majority of the story revolve around the of whether or not to sue for peace. That as a core concept in so much as the question of "Do I take the guarantee of saving my country or do I take the risk of saving

I have no idea why people are raving about this film, it's a bit crap, it's probably Oldman weakest performance to date, and the cinematography is terrible. Churchill with Brian Cox in the lead role is a FAR superior film on the subject.












