“Crispin turned my actors into soldiers, which was invaluable for the plausibility of the production.
His period knowledge is excellent.” - Kenneth Brannagh

Adviser: Dunkirk scene 'Atonement' watch: http://www.steadishots.org/shots_detail.cfm?shotID=298
Adviser: 'The Magic Flute' watch: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uEEL-G9dcJU




My name is Crispin Swayne. I am a military historical consultant to the TV and film industry.
From script, through shooting, to project completion, I provide:
- military historical advice from many periods, including contemporary.
- 24/7 phone advice available to writers, producers, directors, art dept and all necessary crew.
- AD coaching and on-set advice on military protocols, weapons and tactics advice, crowd wrangling, marching, contextual behaviour and dress to pricipals and/or background.
Credits include: - Film: 'Dracula Untold', 'Atonement', 'The Golden Age', 'The Magic Flute', 'Children of Men', 'The Da Vinci Code', 'Batman Returns', 'V for Vendetta', 'Shawn of the Dead', 'Shanghai Knights'.
TV: 'Generals at War' (National Geographic 2009),'The Amazing Mrs Pritchard'(BBC), 'People’s War'(BBC), 'Spartacus'(National Geographic), 'Greatest Military Clashes'(5, Discovery), 'Great Battles'(I&II, Discovery).
Radio: 'Where in the World'(x3 with John Simpson, BBCR4).
Print: To read my recent article on military advising published in History Today, see below.
To the right is an article I recently had published in History Today. The articles to the left are selected in order to be a resource and catalyst for creative discussions concerning military history and contemporary military activities, with certain text leading to links. The live news feed is intended to stimulate this process. Please add comments or recommend further links as you see fit. Thanks!

Thursday 6 December 2007

Alfred Hitchcock - Military Advisor

An unreleased film of Nazi atrocities during WW2 - death camps - was worked on by Alfred Hitchcock in 1945, almost as soon as footage of the concentration camps was taken. The film was meant to document beyond question the systematic murder of civilian 'undesireables' accross Europe by the occupying Nazi regime. Hitchcock refused a fee for his work. The film was never released due to the belief that the planned public screenings of the film, in Germany, would already weaken German morale to the point of chaos and anarchy.
Hitchcock Film advisor

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