Showing posts with label Winston Churchill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Winston Churchill. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 September 2018

Film Review: Battle of Britain, 1969



"Never ... was so much owed by so many to so few." Winston Churchill.

A fabulous vintage epic, jam packed with a who's who of British stars of the era - Laurence Olivier, Christopher Plummer, Kenneth More, Michael Caine, Ralph Richardson, Harry Andrews - that does a sterling job of portraying a truly momentous moment in our recent history.


Robert Shaw, Christopher Plummer and... is that Lovejoy? (Ian McShane)

Robert Shaw's 'Skipper' character is based on 'Sailor' Malan.

South African RAF ace Malan.

Of course, given the subject, there's a Brit-o-centric spin, and plenty of the large and stellar cast clearly enjoy hamming it up as plucky plummy RAF types. But for all the cant, propaganda and myth, and despite years of so-called revisionist tweaking regarding the 'facts' of history (as far as they can be known), this remains a hugely compelling story. And it's a story very well told, in this appropriately lengthy and suitably epic production.


Dowding (in wheelchair) visits the production at Duxford. [1]

This image touches a nostalgia nerve for me! [2]

Unlike 633 Squadron, or even Memphis Belle, despite the passing of the years, this has aged remarkably well (except for the ketchup blood!). I would love to have spent ages researching this superb film, and the massive amount of work that went into making it, but whilst doing picture research I found this excellent site, where a guy called Dave has done all the hard work already.

This excellent pic gives one a sense of the grand scale of the production.

Me 109s. Real, or models. Hard to say!

You can read plot prĂ©cis elsewhere online. This post is really just a chance for me to say that this is a truly great film, which I always thoroughly enjoy watching. And it will bear repeated viewing. It's a shame there aren't more films made with this level of passionate attention to detail. And now, what with CGI, we're unlikely to see anything that goes to similar lengths to physically replicate the epic events depicted so well here.

A 'lobby card' for the movie. Very impressive!

Fabulous and fully functional flying large scale models were used in the production.

Another fab lobby card, showing aerial combat. Superb!

The Battle Of Britain belongs in the select and august company of The Longest Day, as a uniquely brilliant example of cinematic homage to key events of WWII. And in this review I'm simpy registering my vote for this as a solid-gold classic. 

UPDATE

It's been pointed out - quite right to - that I've been rather remiss in not making any reference to Susannah York. So, here she is:


In uniform...

under cover...

... and getting out of uniform, soon to be under the covers.

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NOTES:


[1] Visits to RAF Duxford, our 'local' Imperial War Museum and airshow venue, were a feature of my childhood, a tradition I've kept up into adulthood.

[2] I remember getting a postcard form a childhood friend with this picture on it.


Bubblegum trading cards.

A pal of mine has an almost complete set of old 'trading cards' on The Battle of Britain. I'm not sure if these were a movie tie-in or not. They're not mentioned amongst the 'merchandise' section of the Wikipedia entry on the film. I bought a few duplicates off my buddy. 

Dave's excellent site about the movie, already linked to above, also has a compete gallery of these cards (here), but only showing the fronts. A more complete exposition, showing both front and back (the reverse face of each card reproduces topical newspaper excerpts) can be found here.

Monday, 24 September 2018

Book Review: Churchill, Max Arthur



At the time I first drafted this post, I'd just seen a trailer for the movie starring Gary Oldman as Churchill (that came out in the U.K. on 16th June, 2017). I thought then that I'd post this review of a book I was given a while further back, via the Amazon Vine program.


The iconic Churchill, brandishing a 'Tommy Gun', with his trademark cigar...



is frequently cropped thus...

... 'the Hun' also 'Photoshopped' it, so to speak.

If you don't know much about one of England's greatest leaders - Attlee, his wartime deputy (and theoretically, as a lifelong Socialist, an adversary) described him as 'the greatest Englishman of our time - I think the greatest citizen of the world of our time' - this is a great way to learn more about Winston Churchill. At the time of writing my original review the price on Amazon U.K .was just over a fiver. Amazing value! (R.R.P. £25).

Young Churchill, dandy of the Fourth Queen's Own Hussars, 1895.


Beautifully illustrated with a huge number of photos, covering Churchill's whole life, from the a wee bairn dressed like a little dolly girl, as was the fashion of those times, through his adventures in the military and politics, to the romper-suited or machine-gun toting leader of Britain's (and his own) 'finest hour', during WWII. As well as the excellent selection of pictures, many well known, but even more that are seen less often, there are pictures of objects (dispatch boxes, favourite cigars), and lots of his correspondence. The latter material works wonderfully well to complement Max Arthur's straightforward text and all the pictures.


Churchill working on mending a roof at Chartwell.


Amongst these texts is one in which J.F.K. says 'he mobilized [sic] the English language and sent it into battle.' Many of Churchill's prescient insights are alluded to in this telling of his life, and his correspondence gives some flavour of his literary minded tone, and his interest in history. That he was a great orator and leader is widely known and remembered. That he was also a great writer and historian, as witnessed by his Nobel prize for literature, is sometimes forgotten [1]. Churchill himself said of T. E. Lawrence ('of Arabia') 'we shall never see his like again.' Something that could very well be said of Churchill himself.




Churchill at home with his wife Clem. [2]

Certainly this is a celebration of a 'great man'. Is it hagiography? Well, it's fairly rounded, in that we hear of his less successful moments, like his Dardanelles campaign in WWI, and his time in the political wilderness between the wars (he wasn't universally popular: two images are included that refer to attacks upon him by suffragettes!). But, being an 'authorised' biography, it's not surprising that it's more celebration than critique. Nevertheless, it is very informative and enjoyable to read (there's even stuff at the back giving recommended reading and other leads to follow up).

Churchill, Karsh, 1941

Max Arthur's approach is to describe the contents of the numerous individual pictures, contextualising what they depict in the bigger story. It's an approach that works well: I liked the story behind Yosuf Karsh's famous Dec '41 portrait of Churchill (in Canada): Winston's expression was achieved when the then relatively unknown photographer, who wanted to achieve an iconic image of Churchill without his ubiquitous cigar, finally resorted to simply plucking the cigar out of his mouth: 'he looked so belligerent he could have devoured me. It was at that instant I took the photograph.'

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NOTES:

[1] And he was a pretty damned good artist as well!





[2] Dig Winston's pinstripe romper-suit and monogrammed slippers. The guy was a class act!