Episode one: Retreat Day 1: Captain
Bill Tennant,
Royal Navy, at the
Admiralty receives reports of the
British Expeditionary Force's retreat and prepares to oversee
Operation Dynamo. Private Alf Tombs and his decimated company rest at
Wormhoudt on the western end of the corridor to
Dunkirk. New Prime Minister
Winston Churchill chairs a briefing of the
War Cabinet where Foreign Secretary
Lord Halifax presses for peace negotiations.
Adolf Hitler has halted the
Blitzkrieg, giving Tombs's company time to consolidate their position and Signalmen Clive Tonry and
Wilf Saunders return to offer support.
Day 2: Tennant sails from
Dover on to find the Port of Dunkirk wrecked by enemy bombardment. Divisions between Churchill and Halifax deepen over the proposed mediation of
Fascist Italy, threatening a
leadership crisis. Embarkation progresses slowly and Tennant signals the
Queen of the Channel to come alongside the eastern breakwater to speed up the process.
Day 3: Tonry and Saunders intercept enemy orders for a
pincer movement on Dunkirk. Tombs's company is forced to pull back as it comes under fire and Tonry and Saunders head into the front line in a last-ditch attempt to hold open the corridor. After nine hours of fighting, the line breaks as Tombs's company surrenders to the advancing enemy and Tonry and Saunders retreat to Dunkirk. Tombs narrowly escapes as the rest of his company is
massacred but is later recaptured and spends the rest of the war in a
POW camp.
Day 4: Tennant orders all vessels to be brought up to the eastern breakwater at once for embarkation as numbers on the beach swell. Churchill decrees that the wounded should be left behind to speed up the retreat. The enemy launch aerial attacks on the beaches from captured
Royal Air Force airfields south of Dunkirk, sinking 30 British ships and leaving 400,000 allied troops stranded on the beach.
Episode two: Evacuation Day 5: Vice-Admiral
Bertram Ramsay and Captain
Michael Denny at Dover issue the request for more inshore craft. Captain
Tom Halsey and navigator David Mellis hold their
destroyer, , off the coast while small boats ferry troops to her. BEF commander
Lord Gort, contemplating his unauthorised order to retreat from a villa overlooking the beach and organises a final defensive perimeter. French Admiral
Jean Abrial first learns of the British evacuation from Tennant as
French troops swell the numbers on the beach. Lieutenant-General Sir
Henry Pownall reports the problem to Churchill. When the cockleboat
Renown is amongst those small boats requisitioned, Captain Harry Noakes and his crew volunteer to stay on for the mission to France. With a large percentage of the British fleet tied up in the rescue operation, Churchill orders the gassing of Britain's south coast to ward off invasion. Gort and Tennant argue over the evacuation strategy as the HQ comes under artillery fire. Churchill, refusing to send support to the beleaguered French at the
Somme, agrees instead that their troops will be evacuated from Dunkirk on an equal basis.
Day 6: The
Renown joins the hundreds of small craft that narrowly avoid running aground in order to rescue the troops from the French beaches. HMS
Malcolm collects her passengers from the eastern breakwater, where she comes under bombardment. Major-General
Harold Alexander takes command after Gort is ordered back to
London. HMS
Malcolm returns to Dover where Holsey and Mellis contemplate the friends that they have lost on other ships. The
Renown safely delivers its passengers to Dover but is destroyed by a mine on its way home. Tonry and Saunders are amongst the two-thirds of the BEF evacuated safely back to England but 200,000 allied troops remain on the beach as the perimeter comes under attack from advancing enemy forces.
Episode three: Deliverance Day 6: Lieutenant
Jimmy Langley and Major Angus McCorquodale of the
Coldstream Guards receive orders to hold the perimeter for one last night. Abrial, learning from Alexander of the imminent British pullout that will leave many French troops still on the beach, threatens to close the port. Philip Newman cares for the wounded left behind at the casualty clearing station in an abandoned château on the outskirts of Dunkirk. Alexander and Tennant promise Abrial one last day to evacuate the French troops.
Day 7: Langley's company engages the enemy at dawn as an exhausted Newman struggles to get the wounded to safety. Tennant informs Newman of the policy to de-prioritise the wounded and asks him to hold out for one more day. Enemy troops advancing on the perimeter use civilians as a shield and Langley has to rely on rifle fire to hold them back. Holsey and Mellis arrive on board HMS
Malcolm on their fifth rescue mission under heavy fire. Newman remains to care for the wounded with a skeleton staff as the rest of the station staff withdraw. As the rearguard pull out, leaving the perimeter to be defended by the French, a badly wounded Langley is abandoned on the beach.
Day 8: Desmond Thorogood arrives in Dunkirk but must wait until nightfall for rescue. Ramsay meticulously plans the night's operations. When it is over, Tennant sends his last signal from Dunkirk and embarks for home; he gets his first sleep on the train to London.
Day 9: Newman discovers the abandoned Langley and takes him into the station. The French troops covering the evacuation did not make it out in time so another night's operations are required to pull them out. HMS
Malcolm sets out on her ninth mission to Dunkirk.
Day 10: Returning safely to Dover, the
Malcolms crew are granted three days leave. The operation is deemed a success, Churchill looks to the skies for what will be the next threat of total war. Dunkirk finally falls to the enemy but the rescued troops of the BEF make up the core of Britain's wartime army. ==Cast==