In 1914,
Vera Brittain wants to escape her traditional family in
Buxton by attending
Oxford University with her younger brother
Edward and his friends at
Uppingham School,
Roland Leighton and
Victor Richardson. Despite her father's opposition, she passes the entrance examination for
Somerville College, Oxford. Before enrolling at Oxford, Vera and Roland, who shares Vera's interest in writing and poetry, begin a romance, although she knows that Victor is in love with her. After the
assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and the start of
World War I, Vera helps convince her father to let Edward join the army instead of studying at Oxford; Roland and Victor also join, and Roland is the first to reach the
Western Front. As long lists of casualties appear in newspapers, Vera leaves Oxford to volunteer for the
Voluntary Aid Detachment as a nurse tending the wounded in a hospital in England. Although his friends still see the war as exciting, Roland tells Vera of his traumatic experiences from
trench warfare at the front. He proposes to Vera; they decide to marry during his next home leave. Roland returns to France, now with Edward. Roland writes in late 1915 that he has been granted leave and is safe away from the front. As Vera awaits his arrival during the Christmas holiday, Roland's mother tells her on the telephone that he has been killed. The army tells Vera and Roland's family that he died "a noble and painless death." After she demands the truth,
George Catlin, who saw the wounded Roland in
Louvencourt, admits that Roland died in agonising pain from his abdominal gunshot wound. When Victor, blind from his injuries, arrives at Vera's hospital, she proposes to him because he is "going to need someone and I... well, Roland would like it," but he gently turns her down before suddenly dying from his head injury. In 1917, Vera asks to transfer to France to be closer to Edward, but her first assignment is to treat wounded Germans. She is reluctant, but learns that they suffer and die like English soldiers. Vera finds Edward among the dying and helps save his life. He shows her a letter from his "dear friend" Geoffrey Thurlow, implying the two men were lovers. After Edward's recovery, she is glad that he is sent to the safer
Italian Front. Edward insists that Vera return to her Oxford studies after the war. Vera returns home after her mother has a nervous breakdown. She sees a telegram being delivered and learns, from her father's weeping, that Edward has died. In 1918, having lost all the young men closest to her, Vera cannot celebrate as crowds cheer the
Armistice with Germany. Back at Oxford, she has nightmares about Roland's and Edward's deaths.
Winifred Holtby, another student at the college, helps Vera cope with her trauma. Vera attends a public meeting where speakers debate
how to punish Germany for the war. Most of the audience is against George Catlin, who warns that "the philosophy of '
an eye for an eye'" could cause another war. Vera confesses her guilt over persuading her father to let Edward join the army, and tells of how she held the hand of a dying German soldier, who was no different from her brother or her fiancé. She says that their deaths have meaning "only if we stand together now and say 'No' to war and revenge." Now a pacifist, Vera promises her dead men that she will not forget them. The film ends with a dedication to the dead. The plot of the film broadly follows the narrative of the book, but it does deviate in two significant ways: George Catlin, who entered the army in 1918, never met Roland, who died in 1915. In addition, Vera did not help save her brother Edward's life after he was wounded at the Somme in 1916; he was simply sent to the First London General Hospital, where she was a volunteer nurse. Also, as Roland departs for the war in 1915, news of the
Spanish flu is mentioned, yet the pandemic was not openly acknowledged until 1918. == Cast & Crew gallery ==