Two Thousand Women (1944)
1h 37m
Running Time
November 6, 1944Release Date
Two Thousand Women (1944)
1h 37m
Running Time
November 6, 1944Release Date
Plot.
During the Second World War, three downed English airmen hide out with women's internment camp in France.
Where to Watch.
Free
Currently Two Thousand Women is available for streaming online, rent, buy or watch for free on: BFI Player
Streaming in:🇬🇧 United Kingdom
This Movie Is About.
Cast & Crew.
Phyllis Calvert
Freda Thompson
Flora Robson
Miss Muriel Manningford
Patricia Roc
Rosemary Brown
Renée Houston
Maud Wright
Reginald Purdell
Alec Harvey
Anne Crawford
Margaret Long
Sidney Gilliat
Writer
Jean Kent
Bridie Johnson
James McKechnie
Jimmy Moore
Robert Arden
Dave Kennedy
Muriel Aked
Miss Meredith
Carl Jaffe
Sergt. Hentzner
Frank Launder
Director
Kathleen Boutall
Mrs. Hadfield
Hilda Campbell-Russell
Mrs. Hope Latimer
Michael Pertwee
Writer
Christina Forbes
Frau Holweg
Edward Black
Producer
Thora Hird
Mrs. Burtshaw
Jack E. Cox
Cinematographer
Dulcie Gray
Nellie Skinner
R. E. Dearing
Editor
Joan Ingram
Mrs. Tatmarsh
Betty Jardine
Teresa 'King' Resinger
Christiane De Maurin
Annette
Guy Le Feuvre
Monsieur Boper
Paul Sheridan
French Officer
Louis Levy
Music Director
Elizabeth Haffenden
Costume Design
Hans May
Original Music Composer
Maurice Ostrer
Executive In Charge Of Production
Jack Swinburne
Production Manager
B. C. Sewell
Sound Supervisor
John Bryan
Art Direction
W.T. Partleton
Makeup Designer
Charles Knott
Negative Cutter
Mathilde Epton
Technical Advisor
Edith Nicholson
Technical Advisor
Media.
Details.
Wiki.
Two Thousand Women is a 1944 British comedy-drama war film about a German internment camp in Occupied France which holds British women who have been resident in the country. Three RAF aircrewmen, whose bomber has been shot down, enter the camp and are hidden by the women from the Germans.
The film was released in the United States in 1951 in a severely cut-down version under the title of House of 1,000 Women. Per the British Film Institute database, this is the second in an "unofficial trilogy" by Launder and Gilliat, along with Millions Like Us (1943) and Waterloo Road (1945).