- A famous orchestra conductor is captured by the Germans in WW2, and is forced to perform at private concerts for the Nazi generals.
- During a December 1944 German offensive in Belgium, a USO symphonic orchestra entertaining the front-line American troops is captured by the Germans. Initially, the Germans want to execute them, in accordance with orders received from Berlin. However, the orchestra leader, world-famous conductor Lionel Evans, persuades the Germans to spare their lives, arguing that his orchestra members are just civilian non combatants. Taken to the HQ of a German tank division, Lionel Evans and his orchestra members meet the German commanding officer, General Schiller, an avid music lover. General Schiller has respect for the musicians and he's hesitating about the standing order of executing all prisoners. However, the general's second-in-command, Colonel Arndt, is a blood-thirsty, by-the-book, type of fanatical officer who wants the prisoners shot. The general requests that Evans and his orchestra perform one more time, for him personally. Evans, out of pride and patriotism, refuses. But some members of his orchestra feel that performing for the General would keep them alive. A battle of wills between the General and conductor Evans ensues. The prisoners are kept in a castle's chapel, near the division's HQ. In the following days, the prisoners are fed and are allowed to practice their music in the chapel. When an orchestra member panics and tries to run, the German guards kill him. This prompts Evans to agree to perform one last concert for the German general and his officers. In the meantime, 2 American soldiers who had hid among the musicians before their capture, continue to pretend to be musicians, despite suspicions from the part of Colonel Arndt. Evans secretly agrees to allow the 2 soldiers to escape and seek help from the nearest Allied troops. During the escape attempt, one soldier is caught and shot. The other, is found dead in a field by the Belgian resistance. As the day of the concert approaches, one Belgian resistance member, posing as a local peasant, contacts Evans to tell him that an upcoming resistance attack will try to free the orchestra. The resistance attack would coincide with the concert for the Germans. General Schiller's tank division receives fuel and orders to join the offensive. Schiller orders his division out, while he remains behind for the concert. However, Colonel Arndt and a few men also remain behind to dig a mass grave in the castle's courtyard and to prepare the execution, after the concert. Tension builds up as the orchestra members, dressed in their official concert attire, file past the mass grave, to the chapel where the concert is to be performed. Conductor Evans wonders whether General Schiller will really have them executed or freed. Evans also wonders if the Belgian resistance attack will come in time to save them.—nufs68
- December 1944. With the war looking like it is near its end, the USO has resumed entertainment services on the European mainland. One such USO performer is an American symphony orchestra under the direction of famed Lionel Evans who, on their tour, are currently in recently liberated Belgium. They are caught in an ambush under a German counteroffensive and taken into custody to a castle commandeered by the Nazis, that unit under the direction of General Schiller. The primary standoff in this situation is Schiller's want for the orchestra to perform in a concert for him with Evans conducting, which Evans refuses to do. The command structure between the German military and the orchestra has many parallels including dissension among the ranks under their dictatorial leader. Many of the orchestra members want Evans to do what Schiller asks in believing it their best chance of survival, while Evans believes they will be killed regardless and does not want to provide Schiller the satisfaction. Who may be able to influence stubborn Evans is cellist Annabelle Rice, the wife of the concertmaster Victor Rice, she who is Evans' former girlfriend, there still being feelings between the two. On the other side, Schiller's second in command, Colonel Arndt, views the orchestra members as any other prisoners that are to be executed immediately. What influences the decisions on the orchestra's side is the fact that two US Army infantrymen have been able to hide among the orchestra in the melee, some orchestra members who see them as threats to their safety as they being caught means almost certain death for them all, versus others who believe the two are their best chance to escape in getting word to the Allied forces of their captivity.—Huggo
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