Development The film was the idea of the Labour Government's
Central Office of Information, who wanted a movie to illustrate co-operation between the three branches of the armed services during World War Two, and thought the Siege of Malta was an ideal background. Producer Peter de Sarigny, director
Thorold Dickinson and writer
William Fairchild set up a company, Theta, to make it. The film was financed through
British Film-Makers, a short lived production scheme that operated in Britain in the early 1950s as a co operative venture between the
Rank Organisation and the
National Film Finance Corporation (NFFC). Rank would provide 70% of the budget with the balance coming from the NFFC. The movie was originally called
The Bright Flame and was about the story of the actual siege with a fictional story about Lt Ross, who falls in love with a Maltese girl, Maria, whose brother Guiseppe is hanged as a spy by the British. Ross is shot down on a mission but survives and is visited by Maria's mother, who remains loyal to Britain. Rank wanted the film to move in a different direction.
Nigel Balchin was hired to rewrite the script, adding a plot line to emphasise the loneliness of command, emphasised the British characters over the Maltese, and having Ross die at the end, but after having obtained information to help the British win at the
Battle of El Alamein. Dickinson was replaced as director by
Brian Desmond Hurst. The Ulster born director
Brian Desmond Hurst was persuaded by his lifelong friend,
John Ford, to direct the
Malta Story. Ford told Hurst, "it's right up your street." Hurst says
Alec Guinness approached him asking to play the role of Ross, saying he wanted a change of pace. Additionally, many scenes were shot in Malta with the real types of aircraft still in operational service at that time, some of which did not exist any longer elsewhere. The production only had the use of three later Supermarine Spitfire Mk XVIs, which had been located in storage. Although a modicum of model work and studio rear projection footage was needed, careful editing of archival newsreel and location photography created an authentic looking, near-documentary style. Guinness had served in the
Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve during the Second World War, joining first as a seaman in 1941 and being commissioned the following year, and actually serving in the
Mediterranean Theatre. During the
Malta Story production, he found that he was drawn to the social life of the large Royal Navy base on the island, often joining with servicemen at the local "watering holes." The Fast Minelaying Cruiser is mentioned by name in the film as bringing Vice-Admiral Payne to Malta to relieve Vice-Admiral Willie Banks. In the film
Manxman is briefly depicted by a
Dido-class cruiser – clearly identifiable from her
5.25-inch gun turrets which were unique to this cruiser class. (HMS
Manxman herself was coincidentally used in another 1953 film which was also shot in Malta. This was
Sailor of the King, in which she depicted the fictional German raider
Essen. This film also used the Dido-class cruiser
HMS Cleopatra, which was then operating as part of the
Mediterranean Fleet). It was one of several war films Anthony Steel made where he played in support of an older male actor. Muriel Pavlov recalled director Brian Desmond Hurst "was very talented and I liked his direction but he was inclined to get a bit bored with a project; towards the end of the film you could see his interest was waning." However she declared the movie "remains a highlight for me, even though it wasn’t a successful film, because of the experience of working with Alec Guinness." ==Reception==