7 reviews
This was a short propaganda film financed by the Ministry of Information and filmed at Ealing with Britain's top comedian at the time the peerless Will Hay in a fine cast of three.
It was the height of WW2 - the Nazis were dropping firebombs on suspecting British citizens houses; this was what you were supposed to do in case such an emergency arose in your own household. Although your time for farcical comedy such as displayed here might be limited if you wanted to save your house from being burned down! But people would have got the message better because Hay was one of the instructors: they knew their seedy schoolmaster. Surely the real firebombs would have been more dangerous than the flares on display here though? Skinny Thora Hird played his rather scathing daughter the same as she was to play his scathing secretary in his next film The Black Sheep Of Whitehall, and Muriel George his rather contemptuous wife - was this was what he was fighting for?
It's a war curio, but it tells you more in 8 minutes about ordinary people living under such conditions and keeping their humour than a whole textbook could. If people could have guessed that not only were they fighting for Freedom they were also fighting for the future freedom of Britons to mass murder Britons in the name of God, would humour have deserted them?
It was the height of WW2 - the Nazis were dropping firebombs on suspecting British citizens houses; this was what you were supposed to do in case such an emergency arose in your own household. Although your time for farcical comedy such as displayed here might be limited if you wanted to save your house from being burned down! But people would have got the message better because Hay was one of the instructors: they knew their seedy schoolmaster. Surely the real firebombs would have been more dangerous than the flares on display here though? Skinny Thora Hird played his rather scathing daughter the same as she was to play his scathing secretary in his next film The Black Sheep Of Whitehall, and Muriel George his rather contemptuous wife - was this was what he was fighting for?
It's a war curio, but it tells you more in 8 minutes about ordinary people living under such conditions and keeping their humour than a whole textbook could. If people could have guessed that not only were they fighting for Freedom they were also fighting for the future freedom of Britons to mass murder Britons in the name of God, would humour have deserted them?
- Spondonman
- Feb 28, 2009
- Permalink
A delightful Ministry of Information short making light of the extremely serious business of dealing with incendiary bombs which conveys the still timely message that practise is always better than simply consulting the instruction manual.
First we see Hay making a complete pig's ear of dealing with one in a manner worthy of Wile E. Coyote (which undercuts his supposedly authoritative narration describing how he would go about it by the book). When a real bomb hits, his wife Muriel George and daughter Thora Hird (in pigtails & school uniform) calmly take the matter in hand because as the missus says, "I go to lectures, I don't give 'em". And the point has been wittily made that preparation is everything.
First we see Hay making a complete pig's ear of dealing with one in a manner worthy of Wile E. Coyote (which undercuts his supposedly authoritative narration describing how he would go about it by the book). When a real bomb hits, his wife Muriel George and daughter Thora Hird (in pigtails & school uniform) calmly take the matter in hand because as the missus says, "I go to lectures, I don't give 'em". And the point has been wittily made that preparation is everything.
- richardchatten
- Oct 10, 2019
- Permalink
When an incendiary bomb strikes a house, the father is so inept that it burns through the floor. When a second lands, his daughter has to show him how to do the job properly.
WW2 short from the Ministry of Information using humour from the English comic actor Will Hay and Thora Hird. More entertainment than information but fans of Hay will enjoy.
WW2 short from the Ministry of Information using humour from the English comic actor Will Hay and Thora Hird. More entertainment than information but fans of Hay will enjoy.
- russjones-80887
- Feb 16, 2021
- Permalink
Will plays the father who comes home and ends up giving us a description of how to deal with incendaries, before his wife shows us the correct way! Fantastic a short but Will's usuall fantastic standard. Comical and worth seeing!
Many of the WWII films designed to disseminate information to the public are rather dry and haven't aged well. However, this dandy little film starring Will Hay is worth seeing and really gets the point across very well.
During WWII, the German incendiary bombs were a serious problem. You couldn't just put them out easily and if you didn't act quickly, the termite bombs would literally burn through floor after floor of flats...destroying them in the process. Hay plays a man who is supposed to deliver a speech to the public on dealing with this menace and he then talks through the correct steps--and you see them acted out. However, this is all straight out of the book and Will never really dealt with one of these bombs. So, moments later, when one of these bombs hits his home, he's not at all prepared...so Mother has to deal with it along with his wife...while Will mostly runs about like an idiot.
Clever, well written, informative and funny...
During WWII, the German incendiary bombs were a serious problem. You couldn't just put them out easily and if you didn't act quickly, the termite bombs would literally burn through floor after floor of flats...destroying them in the process. Hay plays a man who is supposed to deliver a speech to the public on dealing with this menace and he then talks through the correct steps--and you see them acted out. However, this is all straight out of the book and Will never really dealt with one of these bombs. So, moments later, when one of these bombs hits his home, he's not at all prepared...so Mother has to deal with it along with his wife...while Will mostly runs about like an idiot.
Clever, well written, informative and funny...
- planktonrules
- Sep 6, 2016
- Permalink
Will Hay started his performing career in the music halls, as a comedy schoolmaster who is (of course) outsmarted by his schoolboys. Well before Abbott and Costello wondered Who's on First, Will Hay was doing a routine about a schoolboy named Howe in Wye from Ware.
In his film career, Will Hay -- no relation to the American film censor Will Hays -- usually played minor authority figures (a schoolmaster, a stationmaster, a fire chief) who were incompetent, stupid and usually crooked with it. In real life, Will Hay was something of an intellectual. An amateur astronomer of some real significance, he discovered the White Spot on Saturn and a few other items.
Hay was the perfect choice to star in 'Go to Blazes', an extremely interesting oddity from the dark days of the Blitz. This film cleverly manages to be a genuinely funny comedy, an instructional film, and a propaganda piece (assuring Britons to stay brave and calm) all at the same go.
Hay plays a harried husband who comes home to discover his daughter (Thora Hird, a bit too big for her gymslip) studying conic sections. As there's a firewatch in progress, he boasts of his prowess in extinguishing incendiary bombs. We see Hay in action, in flashback: of course, he's bang incompetent. I laughed heartily as an incendiary on Hay's roof proceeds to burn its way down through each storey of his house, eventually settling in the cellar.
It's no surprise, of course, that a genuine incendiary arrives ... and it's also no surprise that Hay's wife and daughter are cool and confident as they extinguish it, while Hay has no idea of what to do. There's a very British closing gag.
I found this short film absolutely fascinating, not merely for its content but also its context: civilians in wartime Britain were being killed in their own homes by German bombs. 'Go to Blazes', in addition to instructing the public on how to protect themselves, also serves as propaganda to assure them that the situation isn't so hopeless after all. This very funny film is black comedy in the true sense of that term, as audiences were encouraged to laugh at a truly lethal situation which could kill them at any moment. Shortly after 'Go to Blazes' was released, most cinemas and theatres in wartime London were shut down: the Home Office wanted to avoid the danger to homefront morale that would result if a doodlebug hit a theatre with hundreds of people in it.
'Go to Blazes' rates a full 10 out of 10. It's hilarious, and it's more relevant than ever in this post-9/11 age.
In his film career, Will Hay -- no relation to the American film censor Will Hays -- usually played minor authority figures (a schoolmaster, a stationmaster, a fire chief) who were incompetent, stupid and usually crooked with it. In real life, Will Hay was something of an intellectual. An amateur astronomer of some real significance, he discovered the White Spot on Saturn and a few other items.
Hay was the perfect choice to star in 'Go to Blazes', an extremely interesting oddity from the dark days of the Blitz. This film cleverly manages to be a genuinely funny comedy, an instructional film, and a propaganda piece (assuring Britons to stay brave and calm) all at the same go.
Hay plays a harried husband who comes home to discover his daughter (Thora Hird, a bit too big for her gymslip) studying conic sections. As there's a firewatch in progress, he boasts of his prowess in extinguishing incendiary bombs. We see Hay in action, in flashback: of course, he's bang incompetent. I laughed heartily as an incendiary on Hay's roof proceeds to burn its way down through each storey of his house, eventually settling in the cellar.
It's no surprise, of course, that a genuine incendiary arrives ... and it's also no surprise that Hay's wife and daughter are cool and confident as they extinguish it, while Hay has no idea of what to do. There's a very British closing gag.
I found this short film absolutely fascinating, not merely for its content but also its context: civilians in wartime Britain were being killed in their own homes by German bombs. 'Go to Blazes', in addition to instructing the public on how to protect themselves, also serves as propaganda to assure them that the situation isn't so hopeless after all. This very funny film is black comedy in the true sense of that term, as audiences were encouraged to laugh at a truly lethal situation which could kill them at any moment. Shortly after 'Go to Blazes' was released, most cinemas and theatres in wartime London were shut down: the Home Office wanted to avoid the danger to homefront morale that would result if a doodlebug hit a theatre with hundreds of people in it.
'Go to Blazes' rates a full 10 out of 10. It's hilarious, and it's more relevant than ever in this post-9/11 age.
- F Gwynplaine MacIntyre
- Jul 4, 2007
- Permalink
- theowinthrop
- Sep 25, 2007
- Permalink