The Rocket Post

The Rocket Post is a 2004 British drama film directed by Stephen Whittaker and starring Ulrich Thomsen, Shauna Macdonald, Kevin McKidd and Patrick Malahide. It is set on a remote Scottish island during the late 1930s. The arrival of German rocket scientist Gerhard Zucker is not initially welcomed by the inhabitants of the island.

The Rocket Post
Directed byStephen Whittaker
Written byJames MacInnes
William Morrissey
StarringUlrich Thomsen
Shauna Macdonald
Kevin McKidd
Patrick Malahide
CinematographyRichard Greatrex
Distributed byUltimate Pictures
Release date
  • 22 July 2004 (2004-07-22) (Stony Brooks Film Festival)
  • 24 November 2006 (2006-11-24)
Running time
112 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

The film was shot in 2001, but its release was delayed by several years.[1] Additional footage was shot in 2005, and the film was given a limited release in Scotland the following year.

The story is very loosely based on experiments in 1934 by the German inventor Gerhard Zucker to provide a postal service to the island of Scarp by rocket mail.[2] Another fictionalised account of the experiment formed the basis of a 2001 film, also called The Rocket Post, which was filmed on Taransay.[3] The film's original score was composed by Nigel Clarke & Michael Csanyi-Wills and recorded by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in London.

Plot

Two German rocket scientists are unable to obtain funding for their experiments from the German Government, They travel to the Island of Scarp, an island in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland. Their experiments initially end in disastrous failure. Over time one of the scientists, Heinz Dombrowsky is fed up with the primitive living conditions and returns to Germany where rocketry has obtained the interest of the Third Reich. Things look up for the remaining scientist Gerhard Zucker when he falls in love with a local lass and a local handyman improves his rockets to successfully keep them exploding.

Germany desires Gerhard to return to Germany, sending a U-Boat to abduct him.

Cast

gollark: What do you mean "automatically dispose"?
gollark: I just stick the MIT license in so people can use it, assuming I actually remember to.
gollark: My projects are mostly MIT-licensed, and *that* doesn't have that clause.
gollark: I should release some of my private keys so I can crowdsource signing decisions.
gollark: I suppose I'll just have to limit it to a non-legally-binding clause saying "those who use this for bad purposes are to be considered BEES".

References

http://davidnwilkinson.blogspot.co.uk/2017/03/sometimes-getting-money-for-your-film.html


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