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Oh! What a Lovely War

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1969 British musical film by Richard Attenborough
This article is about the 1969 film. For the original 1963 stage musical, seeOh, What a Lovely War!

Oh! What a Lovely War
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRichard Attenborough
Written byLen Deighton (uncredited)
Based onOh, What a Lovely War!
byJoan Littlewood
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyGerry Turpin
Edited byKevin Connor
Production
company
Accord Productions
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • 10 April 1969 (1969-04-10)
Running time
144 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Oh! What a Lovely War is a 1969 Britishepicblack comedyhistoricalmusicalwar film directed byRichard Attenborough (in his directorial debut), with an ensemble cast, includingMaggie Smith,Dirk Bogarde,John Gielgud,John Mills,Kenneth More,Laurence Olivier,Jack Hawkins,Corin Redgrave,Michael Redgrave,Vanessa Redgrave,Ralph Richardson,Ian Holm,Paul Shelley,Malcolm McFee,Jean-Pierre Cassel,Nanette Newman,Edward Fox,Susannah York,John Clements,Phyllis Calvert andMaurice Roëves.

The film is based on the stage musicalOh, What a Lovely War!, originated byCharles Chilton as the radio playThe Long Long Trail in December 1961,[1][2] and transferred to stage by Gerry Raffles in partnership withJoan Littlewood and herTheatre Workshop in 1963.[3]

The title is derived from themusic hall song "Oh! It's a Lovely War", which is one of the major numbers in the film.

Synopsis

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Oh! What a Lovely War is asatirical summary of major events ofthe First World War using popular contemporary songs and allegorical settings such as Brighton'sWest Pier to criticise the conduct of the war.

The diplomatic manoeuvring and events involving those in authority are set in a fantasy location inside the pierhead pavilion. Foreign ministers, generals and heads of state walk over a huge map of Europe, reciting words actually spoken by those historical figures. A photographer takes a picture of Europe's rulers – after handing two red poppies to theArchduke Ferdinand and his wife, theDuchess of Hohenberg, he takes their picture, "assassinating" them as the flash goes off. Many of the heads of state enjoy good personal relations and are reluctant to go to war: a tearfulEmperor Franz Josef declares war onSerbia after being deceived byhis Foreign Minister, andTsar Nicholas II andKaiser Wilhelm II are shown as unable to overrule their countries' military mobilisation schedules. The Germaninvasion of Belgium compelsSir Edward Grey to unwillingly get involved.Italy reneges on itsalliance with the Central Powers (itjoined the Allies in 1915) butTurkey joins them instead.

The optimism of the war's early months is depicted by an archetypal British family of the time, the Smiths, shown entering Brighton's West Pier to purchase tickets fromGeneral Haig. The film follows the young Smith men through their experiences in the trenches. A military band rouses holidaymakers from the beach to rally round and follow – some even literallyboarding a bandwagon. The firstBattle of Mons, presented in realistic style, maintains the cheerful mood of the bandwagon allegory.

When British casualties start to mount, a theatre audience is rallied by singing "Are We Downhearted? No!" A brightly coloured chorus line recruitsa volunteer army with "We don't want to lose you, but we think you ought to go". A music hall star (Maggie Smith) then enters a lone spotlight, and lures the doubtful young men in the audience into "taking theKing's Shilling" and that "On Saturday I'm willing, if you'll only take the shilling, tomake a man of any one of you." The young men pass over the stage into military life, and a close-up reveals the alluring music hall singer is really a coarse, over-made-up harridan. Thered poppy reappears as a symbol of impending death, often handed to a soldier being sent to die. Inside the pavilion, now housing the top military brass, a scoreboard shows the loss of life and "yards gained". Outside,Sylvia Pankhurst (Vanessa Redgrave) addresses a hostile crowd on the futility of war who remains unreceptive to her upbraiding for believing everything printed in the newspapers.

The depiction of the second year of the war contrasts darkly in tone. Wounded men parade past as an endless stream of grim, hopeless faces. Black humour has replaced the enthusiasm of 1914. "There's a Long, Long Trail a-Winding" captures a new mood of despair, with soldiers depicted marching in torrential rain, the only bright colour being the red poppies. British soldiers drink in anestaminet as aSoubrette (Pia Colombo) leads them in a jolly chorus of "The Moon Shines Bright on Charlie Chaplin" then shifts more darkly to the sombre "Adieu la vie". At the end of the year, amidst manoeuvres in the pavilion,Douglas Haig replacesSir John French as Commander-in-Chief of the British forces in France. Haig is mocked by Australian troops while he inspects British soldiers with the song "They were only playing Leapfrog" to the tune of "John Brown's Body".

At an interfaith religious service in a ruined abbey soldiers are told each religion has endorsed the war: Jewish soldiers are permitted to eat pork if Jewish, Catholics have dispensation for meat on Fridays, and all religions have put the sabbath in abeyance. Even theDalai Lama has blessed the war effort.

The film's tone darkens again as 1916 passes and the songs contrast wistfulness, stoicism and resignation, including "The Bells of Hell Go Ting-a-ling-a-ling", "If the Sergeant Steals Your Rum, Never Mind" and "Hanging on the Old Barbed Wire". The wounded are laid out in ranks at a dressing station, a stark contrast to the healthy rows of young men who entered the war. The camera often lingers on Harry Smith's silently suffering face.

The Americansarrive as a "disconnected reality" of the pavilion, interrupting the deliberations of the British generals by singing "Over There" with the altered final line: "And we won't come back – we'll be buried over there!" The resolute-looking American captain seizes the map from an astonished Haig.

Jack notices with disgust that after three years of fighting, he is literally back where he started, at Mons. As theArmistice is sounding, Jack is the last one to die. A splash of red, at first glance blood, comes into focus as a poppy. Jack's spirit wanders the battlefield, first into the room where the elder statesmen of Europe aredrafting the coming peace, oblivious to his presence, and finally on a tranquil hillside, where he lies with his brothers on the grass before their figures morph into crosses. The film closes with a long slow pan out over a giant cemetery with countless soldiers' graves as the voices of the dead sing "We'll Never Tell Them" (a parody of theJerome Kern song "They Didn't Believe Me").

Cast (in credits order)

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Smith family

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At the time,the Beatles were interested in making an anti-war film. AtBertrand Russell's suggestion,Paul McCartney met with the producerLen Deighton to discuss the opportunity of the band portraying the Smith family, although in the end it was not possible to arrange their appearance.[4]

Also starring

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Guest stars

[edit]

Production

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The producers were the novelistLen Deighton, photographerBrian Duffy[5] and Richard Attenborough, who was making his directorial debut.[6] The Deighton Duffy production company had produced the film adaptation of Deighton'sOnly When I Larf starring Richard Attenborough.[7] Deighton wrote the screenplay forOh! What a Lovely War and the opening title sequence was created by Len Deighton's lifelong friendRaymond Hawkey, the designer responsible for many of Deighton's book covers in the 1960s.[8] In an attempt to shame other people who he thought were claiming credit for things they hadn't actually done, Deighton decided not to be listed in the film credits, a gesture he later described as "stupid and infantile".[5]

The 1969 film transferred themise-en-scène completely into the cinematic domain, with elaborate sequences shot at West Pier in Brighton, elsewhere in Brighton and on theSouth Downs, interspersed with motifs from the stage production. These included the 'cricket' scoreboards showing the number of dead, but Deighton did not use the pierrot costumes. However, as many critics, includingPauline Kael,[9] noted, the treatment diminished the effect of the numbers of deaths, which appear only fleetingly. Nonetheless, Deighton's final sequence, ending in a helicopter shot of thousands of war graves is regarded as one of the most memorable moments of the film. According to Attenborough, 16,000 white crosses had to be hammered into individually dug holes due to the hardness of the soil. Although this is effective in symbolising the scale of death, the number of crosses was in fact fewer than the number of deaths in a single battle: depicting the actual number killed in the entire war would have required the scale to have beenreplicated more than 1000 times.

The film was shot in the summer of 1968 in Sussex, mostly in the Brighton area. Many of the extras were local people, but a great many were students from theUniversity of Sussex,Falmer, on the outskirts of the town. The film's locations included the West Pier (now gutted by fire and wrecked),Ditchling Beacon, Sheepcote Valley (the trench sequences), OldBayham Abbey, nearFrant (the church parade),Brighton station andOvingdean (where thousands of crosses were erected for the classic finale).[citation needed]

The song

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The song was written by J. P. Long and Maurice Scott in 1917 and was part of the repertoire of music hall star and male impersonatorElla Shields.[10] The first verse and the chorus follow:

Up to your waist in water,
Up to your eyes in slush –
Using the kind of language,
That makes the sergeant blush;
Who wouldn't join the army?
That's what we all inquire,
Don't we pity the poor civilians sitting beside the fire.

Chorus:
Oh! Oh! Oh! it's a lovely war,
Who wouldn't be a soldier eh?
Oh! It's a shame to take the pay.
As soon as reveille is gone
We feel just as heavy as lead,
But we never get up till the sergeant brings
Our breakfast up to bed
Oh! Oh! Oh! it's a lovely war,
What do we want with eggs and ham
When we've got plum and apple jam?
Form fours! Right turn!
How shall we spend the money we earn?
Oh! Oh! Oh! it's a lovely war.

Two pre-musical renditions, one from 1918, can be found at Firstworldwar.com.[11] Almost all of the songs featured in the film also appear on the CD41 album seriesOh! It's a Lovely War (four volumes).[12]

Release

[edit]

The film had its premiere at the Paramount Theatre onPiccadilly Circus in London on 10 April 1969 before opening to the public the following day.[13]

Reception

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Vincent Canby ofThe New York Times called it "a big, elaborate, sometimes realistic film whose elephantine physical proportions and often brilliant all-star cast simply overwhelm the material with a surfeit of good intentions."[14]Variety called the film "dedicated, exhilarating, shrewd, mocking, funny, emotional, witty, poignant and technically brilliant."[15]Roger Ebert of theChicago Sun Times gave the film 4 stars out of 4, writing that it was not a movie but "an elaborately staged tableau, a dazzling use of the camera to achieve essentially theatrical effects. And judged on that basis, Richard Attenborough has given us a breathtaking evening."[16]Gene Siskel of theChicago Tribune also gave the film a perfect grade of 4 stars and wrote it "deserves an Academy Award nomination for the best picture of the year ... You can sit back and enjoy this film on any one of many levels. The songs are good, the lyrics are biting; the staging and costuming blend with the story rather than overshadow it. The acting seems effortless."[17] Kevin Thomas of theLos Angeles Times wrote: "What noted British actor Richard Attenborough, in a dazzling directorial debut, and his principal writers Len Deighton and Brian Duffy have done is to transform the highly political and one-dimensional Joan Littlewood theatre piece into timeless—and painfully timely—tragic allegory."[18] Gary Arnold ofThe Washington Post wrote: "The conception is intriguing, but the film turns into an infernal, precision machine. As one big production number succeeded the other and one perfectly measured and symmetrical tableau faded into the next, I began to feel stupefied rather than touched. The physical production was rolling over the songs, the characters and the vignettes."[19] David Wilson ofThe Monthly Film Bulletin wrote that "one is simply left admiring a worthy mosaic of bits and pieces, full of good ideas but nowhere near to being a self-contained dramatic entity."[20]

The film presently has a score of 75% onRotten Tomatoes based on 16 reviews, with an average grade of 8.2 out of 10.[21]

TheToronto Star received complaints from veteran organizations about the advertisement for the film that featured cemetery crosses and later ran the adverts without the image.[22]

Box office

[edit]

It ranked the 16th film at the UK box office in 1969.[23]

Accolades

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AwardCategoryNominee(s)ResultRef.
British Academy Film AwardsBest FilmRichard AttenboroughNominated[24]
Best DirectionNominated
Best Actor in a Supporting RoleLaurence OlivierWon
Best Actress in a Supporting RoleMary WimbushNominated
Best Art DirectionDonald M. AshtonWon
Best CinematographyGerry TurpinWon
Best Costume DesignAnthony MendlesonWon
Best EditingKevin ConnorNominated
Best SoundtrackDon Challis andSimon KayeWon
United Nations AwardRichard AttenboroughWon
British Society of Cinematographers AwardsBest Cinematography in a Theatrical Feature FilmGerry TurpinWon[25]
Directors Guild of America AwardsOutstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion PicturesRichard AttenboroughNominated[26]
Golden Globe AwardsBest English-Language Foreign FilmWon[27]
Mar del Plata International Film FestivalBest Feature FilmRichard AttenboroughNominated[28]
New York Film Critics Circle AwardsBest FilmRunner-up[29]
Best DirectorRichard AttenboroughRunner-up

References in popular culture

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  • English rock bandColonel Bagshot released an anti-war album of the same name in 1971, their first and only LP.
  • BBC Radio 4's15 Minute Musical portrayedTony Blair's premiership in the style ofOh! What a Lovely War in a September 2006 episode entitled "Oh! What a Lovely Blair".
  • At a Google Talks event, James Rado, one of the original writers and creators ofHair, stated thatOh! What a Lovely War was what made him want to work on a musical dealing with war. Archived atGhostarchive and theWayback Machine:"@Google: The Public Theatre's Revival of Hair". 22 August 2008. Retrieved26 August 2008 – via YouTube.
  • The song "The Bells of Hell Go Ting-a-ling-a-ling" was used as the play-out music for Ned Sherrin's 1964 BBC-TV showNot So Much a Programme, More a Way of Life.
  • Babyshambles named their live albumOh! What a Lovely Tour after this film.

See also

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References

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Citations

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  1. ^The Cambridge History of Twentieth-Century English Literature, ed Laura Marcus & Peter Nicholls, page 478. Cambridge University Press, 2004.ISBN 0-521-82077-4,ISBN 978-0-521-82077-6.
  2. ^Vincent Dowd (11 November 2011). "Witness: Oh what a lovely war".Witness. London.BBC World Service.
  3. ^Banham (1998, 645), Brockett and Hildy (2003, 493), and Eyre and Wright (2000, 266–69).
  4. ^"Len Deighton: The spy and I".The Independent. London. 4 January 2006. Retrieved8 August 2015.
  5. ^abScott, Robert Dawson (4 January 2006)."Len Deighton: The spy and I".The Independent. UK. Retrieved14 January 2014.
  6. ^Dempsey, Mike (14 December 2001)."Immaculate conception".Design Week. Archived fromthe original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved6 December 2007.Alt URL
  7. ^Nikkhah, Roya (5 June 2010)."Fashion and portrait photographer Brian Duffy dies aged 76".The Telegraph. London. Retrieved5 June 2010.
  8. ^"Books Obituaries: Raymond Hawkey".The Daily Telegraph. London. 30 August 2010. Retrieved14 January 2014.
  9. ^Kael, Pauline (1971) 'Off with the statues' heads!' inDeeper into Movies, Calder Boyars
  10. ^Max Arthur (2001)When This Bloody War Is Over. London, Piatkus: 47
  11. ^firstworldwar.com
  12. ^"Automatic Redirect".
  13. ^"Entertainment Guide".Evening Standard. London. 2 April 1969. p. 19.
  14. ^Canby, Vincent (3 October 1969). "Film Festival: Jolly Satire".The New York Times. p. 34.
  15. ^"Oh! What a Lovely War".Variety. 16 April 1969. p. 6.
  16. ^Ebert, Roger (30 October 1969)."Oh! What a Lovely War".Chicago Sun Times. Retrieved7 October 2020 – viaRogerEbert.com.StarStarStarStar
  17. ^Siskel, Gene (31 October 1969). "O! what a lovely motion picture!".Chicago Tribune. p. 17, Section 2.StarStarStarStar
  18. ^Thomas, Kevin (17 September 1969). "'Lovely War' Accomplishes a Difficult Artistic Task".Los Angeles Times. p. 1, Part IV.
  19. ^Arnold, Gary (17 October 1969). "Lovely War".The Washington Post. p. B13.
  20. ^Wilson, David (May 1969). "Oh! What A Lovely War".The Monthly Film Bulletin.36 (424): 94.
  21. ^"Oh! What A Lovely War".Rotten Tomatoes. 22 September 2015. Retrieved6 February 2024.
  22. ^"Toronto Star 'Censors' Ads For 'Lovely War'; 'Cemetery' Irks Vets".Variety. 15 October 1969. p. 22.
  23. ^"The World's Top Twenty Films." Sunday Times [London, England] 27 Sept. 1970: 27. The Sunday Times Digital Archive. accessed 5 April 2014
  24. ^"BAFTA Awards (1970)".British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Retrieved23 November 2013.
  25. ^"Best Cinematography in Feature Film"(PDF). Retrieved3 June 2021.
  26. ^"22nd DGA Awards".Directors Guild of America Awards. Retrieved5 July 2021.
  27. ^"Oh! What a Lovely War – Golden Globes".HFPA. Retrieved5 July 2021.
  28. ^"37th Mar del Plata International Film Festival".Mar del Plata International Film Festival. 26 December 2022. Retrieved26 December 2022.
  29. ^"1969 New York Film Critics Circle Awards".New York Film Critics Circle. Retrieved3 June 2021.

Sources

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External links

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