In 1940 London, jazz musician Spike Milligan joins the Royal Artillery at Bexhill for war training. He and his fellow soldiers experience both humorous and serious situations during their se... Read allIn 1940 London, jazz musician Spike Milligan joins the Royal Artillery at Bexhill for war training. He and his fellow soldiers experience both humorous and serious situations during their service.In 1940 London, jazz musician Spike Milligan joins the Royal Artillery at Bexhill for war training. He and his fellow soldiers experience both humorous and serious situations during their service.
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- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 1 nomination total
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Featured reviews
Desperately boring and unfunny
I recognized some names in the cast, including Spike himself, and Jim Dale, who has reached a whole new audience as narrator for the Harry Potter audio books. So I thought I'd give it a try. I could never watch more than about 10 minutes at a time before my eyes started glazing over. I finally gave up before the half-way mark, and just fast-forwarded to the end to see if anything interesting popped up (it didn't). Maybe if you were part of the UK's "greatest generation" you might like all the slow-as-molasses Army humor, but the rest of mankind will let this dud sink into the dust of history. There are SO many great war comedies; this is not one of them.
Terrible terrible terrible adaptation
Occasionally touches Milligan's humour but mostly just amusing
Spike Milligan was the last goon to go and his unique sense of humour will be greatly missed, although it does live on in many of today's comedians. This is a film version of his memoirs of his time in the second world war. The plot sticks close to the book, focusing on the training rather than later in the war. However the film can't completely bring out the absolute madness inherent in Spike's writing. The film does occasionally have touches of him but mostly this feels a little like a carry on film without the smut.
The comments on the futility of war are OK but they feel like they're heavily thrown into the mix and don't sit well alongside the comedy. MASH did better than this later. This film is more like something between a Carry On film and MASH. It neither manages to do the satire well nor do the laughs as well as you'd hope. It does average with both but never feels comfortable with either.
The characters are quite well drawn. Dale does well as Spike and manages to do a good job without doing an impression but Spike himself is given little to do as his own father. The support cast are all good but don't manage to shine as much as one would have hoped. Maynard, Lowe, Davis and Hughes are all nice surprises but all the best stuff is kept for Dale to use.
Overall Spike fans will feel a little let down by the losses made in transition from page to screen. The comedy aspires to be Milliganesque but only occasionally does his hand shine through. The end result is still entertaining but never as funny as it should be. I suggest you all read the book rather than watching this. RIP Spike happily your legacy is with us everyday and not just in this film.
A slapdash MASH variation, that should have been funnier
The film is about Spike being drafted into the army at the beginning of WWII and covered his basic training. There are some wonderful set pieces like Spike being conned into fighting a much bigger oppenant and when should have been a sidesplitting war games adventure, but the comic payoffs aren't there. It's like director Norman Cohen was influence by two then recent films, "MASH" and "Oh What A Lovely War", both anti war comic looks at war and what he should have done was a Carry On type of film.
The cast had a lot of potential too, We have Arthur Lowe of Dad's Army playing a similar role as the base Commander. There is also Bill Maynard as the sargent and fellow recruits Tony Selby and "Keeping Up Appearences" Onslow, Geoffrey Hughes but they don't do much with them Lowe who know's his character well comes off best of the supporting cast and Dale is wonderfully demented as Spike, but the film doesn't take off. It's just there, going from one situation to another with very little payoff. Like the potentilly funny scene where Spike and his sargent are being chased by a bull but find out that it's really a cow. The director let's on the joke from the beginning so when Spike and the sarge find out it's just not the belly laugh it should be. The direction and lackluster editing really let them down.
It is a pleasent hour and forty minute diversion, thanks to a fine cast, but what unfulfilled potential this film had.
Adolf Hitler - My Part in his Downfall
Nowhere near the laugh out loud experience the book is, with many scenes simply not working. Dale seems rather a strange casting choice, but otherwise there's a decent and familiar British cast delivering their oh so familiar TV personas. It is also badly filmed like an episode of a tv series, poorly framed and edited. Basically it's not awful just disappointing when you've been looking forward to a big laugh if you've read the book.
Did you know
- TriviaSpike Milligan was 21 when he was conscripted into the army in WW2; Jim Dale (I) was 38 when he portrayed Milligan in this film.
- GoofsWhen the platoon are in the field about to start the 5 mile run, as the camera moves around behind the Sgt, several crew members (and boxes of equipment) are briefly visible standing at the front of the lorry.
- Quotes
Spike Milligan: [Having spent all night on sentry duty, Spike hears footsteps] Halt! Who goes there?
Unseen soldier: [In a broad Yorkshire accent] Adolf Bloody 'itler!
Spike Milligan: Pass... friend.
- ConnectionsReferences Dad's Army (1968)
- How long is Adolf Hitler: My Part in His Downfall?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
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- Also known as
- Ware Hitorâ tokaku tatakaeri
- Filming locations
- Bluebell Railway, East Sussex, England, UK(Information from the railway company)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 42m(102 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1

