Showing posts with label John Laurie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Laurie. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 January 2021

Dad's Army

 Year of Release:  1971

Director:  Norman Cohen

Screenplay:  Jimmy Perry and David Croft, from an idea by Jimmy Perry, based on the television series Dad's Army created by Jimmy Perry and David Croft

Starring:  Arthur Lowe, John Le Mesurier, Clive Dunn, John Laurie, James Beck, Arnold Ridley, Ian Lavender

Running Time:  95 minutes

Genre:  Comedy, war


During World War II it looks increasingly likely that the Nazis will invade Britain, and so the British Government create a volunteer militia made up of those men who are unsuitable for drafting into the regular Army, mostly due to age (hence they were nicknamed "Dad's Army" by regular troops).  They were originally dubbed the Local Defence Volunteers, and later the Home Guard.  Their job was basically to be a last line of defence in the event of an invasion.  At the small town of Walmington-on-Sea, on the south-east coast of England, the local Home Guard, under the command of pompous bank manager George Mainwaring (Lowe) make up in enthusiasm what they lack in equipment, skills and common sense.

The television sitcom Dad's Army ran for nine seasons between 1968 and 1977 totalling 80 episodes, and to this today is still one of Britain's most beloved TV shows, and is repeated regularly.  It was inevitable that it would be brought into the 1970s vogue for adapting popular sitcoms as low-budget feature films.  This fares better than most, mainly because it doesn't stray too far from it's TV origins.  In fact the early part of the film is almost a remake of the first episode, and the things that fans expect are largely present and correct.  The main difference between this and the TV series is that there is a planned Nazi invasion of Walmington-on-Sea, which really only comes into play in the last quarter of an hour, and seems to be there just to give the film an ending.  The film is very episodic and feels like a kind of TV special rather than a feature film.  However the cast are all talented comedy actors and by this time their roles fit them like gloves.    Fans of the TV series will enjoy it, and if you've never seen the show than it is a good introduction.  The film was very popular, and as equal was planned but never made.  However the series was again adapted into a film in 2016 called Dad's Army, with a mostly completely different cast.


Don't panic, Mr. Mainwaring: Arthur Lowe and John Le Mesurier in Dad's Army
 


Saturday, 11 July 2020

The 39 Steps

Year:  1935
Director:  Alfred Hitchcock
Screenplay:  Charles Bennett and Ian Hay, based on the novel The Thirty-Nine Steps by John Buchan
Starring:  Robert Donat, Madeleine Carroll, Lucie Mannheim, Godfrey Tearle
Running Time:  86 minutes
Genre:  Thriller

Richard Hannay (Donat), a Canadian living in London, meets a mysterious woman, Annabella Smith (Mannheim), who identifies herself as a secret agent and tells him that she is being targeted by a group of ruthless killers, part of a conspiracy to steal British military secrets.  When she is killed by an intruder in Hannay's flat, Hannay is immediately accused of the murder, and finds himself on the run. Hannay finds himself fleeing across Scotland, handcuffed to Pamela (Carroll), who believes he is guilty, and pursued by police and spies alike.

This film, while inevitably dated, still stands up as a hugely enjoyable espionage thriller.  Full of action, twists, suspense and a strong thread of humour, it moves from incident to incident and rarely slackens it's pace.  It is a classic piece of early Hitchcock, and anyone who is familiar with his later works will recognise several Hitchcock tropes (the man accused of a crime he didn't commit, the glamorous blonde lead actress, the Hitchcock cameo - about seven minutes into the film he can be seen crossing the street in front of a bus and important plot points conveyed in small details in intricate wordless sequences, and seemingly minor things turning out to have a huge significance).  The centrepiece of the film, Hannay handcuffed to Pamela while they are pursued across country, is comparatively brief and doesn't occur until quite late into the film.  In fact Madeleine Carroll isn't really in the film much at all, until the last half hour.  Which is a pity because she is really good, and there is real chemistry between herself and Robert Donat.  Donat himself, makes for an engaging leading man.  It isn't a perfect film by any means, it is dated, and there are some of the problems of early sound recording that you find a lot in films of this period, and it has to be said some of the Scottish accents are not very convincing.  In terms of plotting it's very old-fashioned, the supposedly ordinary Richard Hannay seems to be able to get out of any situation no matter how difficult with apparent ease, and without ever once losing his stiff upper lip.  The sequence between the crofter (played by John Laurie, who would later find fame in the television series Dad's Army (1968-1977)) and his wife (played by Peggy Ashcroft) is surprisingly dark.  The film was loosely based on a 1915 adventure novel by Scottish author John Buchan, which has been adapted several times since.     

Madeleine Carroll and Robert Donat in The 39 Steps