Poster of Six Minutes to Midnight

One Mann’s Movies review of Six Minutes to Midnight (2021).

Bob the Movie Man’s Rating:

Plot Summary:

In “Six Minutes to Midnight”, it’s the summer of 1939 (so we are in a parallel time-flow here with the events of “The Dig“). A private girl’s school – the Augusta Victoria College in Bexhill-on-Sea – is run with loving care by the spinster Miss Rocholl (Judi Dench). But the ‘finishing school’ is unusual, in that all its teenage students are German. Indeed, they are the offspring of prominent Nazis.

When half-German English teacher Thomas Miller (Eddie Izzard) applies for a suddenly vacant position, he is taken on to share the teaching duties with Rocholl and Ilse (Carla Juri). But in snooping into the activities going on there, he finds mystery and danger.

"Six Minutes to Midnight" still: Thomas Miller and Miss Rocholl driving in a car.

They knew that Bridgwater services were the worst in the country, but Miss Rocholl was busting for the loo. (Source: Sky Cinema).

Certification:

US: PG-13. UK: 12.

Talent:

StarringEddie Izzard, Judi Dench, Jim Broadbent, Carla Juri.

Directed byAndy Goddard.

Written by: Celyn Jones, Eddie Izzard, Andy Goddard.

"Six Minutes to Midnight" still:  The German school girls line up on the staircase to sing.

“So long, farewell. Auf Wiedersehen. Goodnight” (Source: Sky Cinema)

Review:

Positives:

  • This is a fascinating premise for a movie that will appeal to an older generation, along the lines of “They don’t make them like this anymore”. It has elements of the ‘good guy on the run’ that struck parallels with “The 39 Steps” for me.
  • It’s great that the school is all based on historical fact. Miss Rochol did indeed run the school, as a part of a plan to infiltrate British high-society with pro-Nazi sympathies ahead of an invasion. In real-life, one of the pupils was the god-daughter of Heinrich Himmler and one – Bettina von Ribbentrop – was the daughter of the German foreign minister.
  • After a comic “Family Guy”-style set of production logos to kick off with (for a full one and a half minutes!!), the pre-title sequence is a superb scene-setter. What exactly is going on here? A frantic scrabbling in a bookcase. A pier-end disappearance. The school badge (a genuine reproduction!) with its Union flag and Nazi Swastika insignia. The girls performing a ballet-like ritual on the beach with batons. This looks to be a cracker!
  • Judi Dench. Superb as always.
  • Chris Seager does the cinematography, and impressively so. Most of Seager’s CV has been TV work, so it must be delightful to be given the breadth of a cinema screen to capture landscapes like this.
  • I like the clever title: “Six Minutes to Midnight”. I assumed it was intended solely to reflect the imminence of war. But it actually has another meaning entirely.
  • I should point out as one of my positive bullets that this was a movie that the illustrious Mrs Movie Man absolutely loved…. I asked her for a rating, and (“because I’d definitely watch it again”) she gave it a strong…

"Six Minutes to Midnight" still: The schoolgirls practice posture by walking with books on their heads.

Tijan Marei (very good in the movie) plays the bullied Gretel, befriended by Thomas Miller. (Source: Sky Cinema).

Negatives:

  • For me, was a highly frustrating film. All of the great credibility and atmosphere it builds up in the first 30 minutes, it then squanders by diving off into sub-Hitchcock spy capers.
  • Izzard becomes a ‘man on the run’, and doesn’t seem credible at that. (I appreciate the irony of this statement given that this is the man who ran 32 marathons in 31 days for charity!) But Izzard is built for distance and not for speed, and some of the police chase scenes in the movie strain credibility to breaking point. Another actor might have been able to pull this off better.
  • There’s a lack of continuity in the film: was it perhaps cut down from a much longer running time? At one point, Miller is a wanted murderer with his face plastered on the front pages. The next, kindly bus driver Charlie (Jim Broadbent) is unaccountably aiding him and Rochol seems to have assumed his innocence in later scenes.
  • Various spy caper clichés are mined to extreme – including those old classics ‘swerve to avoid bullets’; ‘gun shot but different gun’; and ‘shot guy seems to live forever’. And there are double-agent ‘twists’ occurring that are utterly predictable.
  • A very specific continuity irritation for me was in an ‘aircraft landing’ scene. Markers are separated by nine paces (I went back and counted them!) yet a view from a plane shows them a ‘runway-width’ apart. This might have escaped scrutiny were it shown just once. But no… we have ground shot; air shot; ground shot; air shot….. repeatedly!
Black and white photo of the original girl's school as portrayed in "Six Minutes to Midnight"

The actual Augusta Victoria college. (Source: express.co.uk)

Summary thoughts:

This was one of the cinema trailers that most appealed to me over a year ago, in those heady days in the sunlit-uplands of life before Covid-19. It’s a movie that showed a great deal of promise, since the history is fascinating. And there is probably a really great TV serial in here: showing the ‘alternate history’ consequences of these high-society German girls penetrating British society and steering the war in a different direction (screenplay idea (C) RJ Mann!) But the potential is squandered with a non-credible spy caper bolted onto the side.

So with “Six Minutes to Midnight”, Downton-director Andy Goddard has made a perfectly watchable ‘rainy Sunday afternoon’ film, that I enjoyed in part for its ‘old-school’ quirkiness. But it’s frustrating that all the promise couldn’t be transitioned into a more satisfying movie.

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Trailer:

The trailer is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Mb-Y-tUZm0.

By bobwp

Dr Bob Mann lives in Hampshire in the UK. Now retired from his job as an IT professional, he is owner of One Mann's Movies and an enthusiastic reviewer of movies as "Bob the Movie Man". Bob is also a regular film reviewer on BBC Radio Solent.

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