A semiautobiographical project by John Boorman about a nine year old boy called Bill as he grows up in London during the blitz of World War 2... Read more
| Starring | Sarah Miles, David Hayman, Derrick O'Connor, Susan Wooldridge |
|---|---|
| Director | John Boorman |
| Genres | Drama |
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A semiautobiographical project by John Boorman about a nine year old boy called Bill as he grows up in London during the blitz of World War 2...
| Starring | Sarah Miles, David Hayman, Derrick O'Connor, Susan Wooldridge, Sammi Davis, Ian Bannen |
|---|---|
| Director | John Boorman |
| Studio | SONY PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 48 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English, French |
| Subtitles | DVD: Arabic, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Italian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish |
| Released | DVD: 05 Sep 2005 Production year: 1987 |
| Format | DVD |
War may be hell if you're a grown-up, but it's a wheeze if you're nine years old and living in suburban London during the Blitz. Anyway, that's how it looks to the young hero of director John Boorman's whimsical, funny, nostalgic, semi-autobiographical memoir of family life in the Second World War. Sebastian Rice-Edwards gives an extraordinarily confident performance in the lead role, and he's matched by Geraldine Muir, playing his five-year-old sister. Sammi Davis as their rebellious elder sibling, meanwhile, gives a poignant portrayal of the teenager caught between sexual awakening and the savage truths of the day, especially in the scene when she informs her mother, Sarah Miles, of her intention to sleep with her Canadian soldier boyfriend. We might all be dead tomorrow; just don't fall in love with him, sighs Miles. Who said anything about love, snaps back Davis. The film is on the episodic side and Miles and Ian Bannen as the grandfather might both have toned down their eccentric portrayals a notch, but these are minor quibbles about a delightful movie. It was a personal triumph for Boorman: he received Oscar nominations for best film (as producer), best director and best original screenplay, while Philippe Rousselot's cinematography and Anthony Pratt and Joan Woollard's art direction/set decoration were also nominated.
Boorman's autobiographical film about family life during the Blitz is subversively light on the blood, sweat, tears and... read more on Time Out
This is a film I remember watching as a family when I was younger and I was delighted when I saw was available here. I think it is a very heart warming and endearing film. It helps us to touch upon what it was like to live through the war although it does not try to take you there deeply it concentrates more on the relationships between a young boy and his family in there poorer social class. A lovely film that is well shot. Would highly reccomend it.
could not make out the name of the cd i got ,i watched it and have sent it back
Maybe it's too early to say it, but I shouldn't be surprised if two of my top ten movies for 2007 turn out to be WWII dramas. Clint Eastwood's grim, compassionate Letters from Iwo Jima is released here Feb 23rd, and supplies a Japanese perspective on the same crucial battle featured in Flags of Our Fathers. I think it's his best film since Unforgiven, and maybe his best film period. But this week we get Black Book, a very different kind of war movie from Paul Verhoeven - the man who gave us... Read more