Top ten war films

A lifetime ago I was a Medic in an East London Hospital.

I had an elderly chap come in for a Barium Meal. This meant swallowing a liquid barium and them me taking loads of X-Rays to try and diagnose his condition.
This was in the mid 1980s so still working with a "Dark Room" to develop the film (all done by computer now).

When I examined his films I was surprised to find four "foreign bodies" showing. It was clear to me what at least one of them was.

"Sir, did you serve in the war?"

"Yes. 8th Army Desert Rats.".

"Did you see any action?"

"Some."


I then showed him his films. They indicated one German bullet and three pieces of shrapnel.

"Some?" - Jesus they really do not make them like that any more.
A breed apart.
Uncle Bert's leg was a real problem to him and after the war, I am told, he often went to a military hospital in Yorkshire for treatment. He'd obviously, though it was not really spoken about, fought like a tiger in three theatres of war before being injured at Arnhem, where he (a lifelong speed freak with a penchant for motorcycles) used a motorbike to move around skirmishing with the Germans. One Sunday, he went for what he thought was yet another routine hospital visit. That night, an orderly who he often saw on these visits said "You all ready for the morning then, Bert?" He replied "What are you on about?"
The orderly told him he was first on the following day's list for surgery- an amputation was booked. He phoned my Grandfather who drove through the night to collect him. Bert never returned to that hospital, managing for the next 4 decades with a stick and a slightly built up shoe. A more pleasant, practical and modest man you couldn't have wished to meet. But something about him just said that he'd closed a door on a few years spent as a very, very hard man indeed.
In fact, when my Grandfather (whose twin brother was already a prisoner of war having been captured at Dunkirk) received his call up papers, Bert was home on leave and marched to the recruiting office where he informed them that his brother would not be taking a frontline role in the ongoing hostilities. Family history does not record what Bert did or threatened to do to the recruiting staff. But it does record that they ensured that my Grandfather spent the war teaching soldiers how to drive lorries.
 
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My English Grandfather had been a pilot in WWI with the Royal Naval Air Service.
He also took a bullet in the leg and had been threatened with an amputation. Somehow or other he avoided it and walked with a slight limp until he died in the 1980s.
His medals and photograph hang in my house to this day. I do recall him telling me of 'hand dropping' bombs onto a moored U-Boat and seeing one of the bombs hit and not explode.
But much like your Uncle Bert - it was a chapter in his life that was only discussed when a young grandson badgered him into doing so.
 

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As an aside we voted for Brexit on 23 June 2016 say almost four years ago so if that was September 3rd 1939 fast forward to September 3rd 1943 where were we? September 8, 1943: Marshal Pietro Badoglio announces the surrender of Italy to the Allies. If this government was running things then, then I think my German would be better now than it is.
 
Last of the Mohicans ( 1992 )
James Fennimore Cooper set his 1826 novel in 1757, just before the French and Indian War in the North American colonies. Lots of native American Indians from all tribes were recruited for this hair-raisng ( and hair removing ) epic. A lot of the scenes were filmed in the Carolinas where I love to fish, hunt and camp, so I used to take my Scout troop there. They got a kick out of walking the same trails, going behind the waterfall, etc. The last 20 minute battle scene was filmed around my cabin in North Carolina.
 
Last of the Mohicans ( 1992 )
James Fennimore Cooper set his 1826 novel in 1757, just before the French and Indian War in the North American colonies. Lots of native American Indians from all tribes were recruited for this hair-raisng ( and hair removing ) epic. A lot of the scenes were filmed in the Carolinas where I love to fish, hunt and camp, so I used to take my Scout troop there. They got a kick out of walking the same trails, going behind the waterfall, etc. The last 20 minute battle scene was filmed around my cabin in North Carolina.
Fantastic Film mate No2 in my all time favourite films list
 
…. continuing with flying, World War I...

Wings (1927)
"Wings" didn't win the first Academy Award for nothing; it set a standard. The director, William Wellman, had been a pilot in the Great War, as were several others involved in crafting what must have been a stunning visual experience for audiences back then. There are no animations here; over 300 real airplanes doing some incredible filming from the air and ground.

The Dawn Patrol ( 1930 and 1938 )
directed by Howard Hawks,
Since then, I’ve found myself often remembering the film, and have been curious to see it and the 1938 remake again, directed by Edmund Goulding and starring Errol Flynn and David Niven as Captain Courtney and Lieutenant Scott, the roles played by Richard Barthelmess and Douglas Fairbanks Jr in the original. The remake is very much identical in plot, characters, and dialogue.


The Blue Max (1966)
The critics ( what do they know about the authenticity of any story setting?) may have ignored or panned this because of the story line, but I think the plot line has a twist which is outside convention. The production, the planes, the filming, is top notch. George Peppard learned to fly and actually had about 20 times as much soloing as the typical British pilot had before going to the front in World War I.
When I was a school kid, I wanted to go see this on a rainy day, and fired up my pickup truck. My father surprised me and my brother by saying he wanted to see it, too. He never went to the movies. But since he cut his teeth on a biplane ahead of WWII, he really liked all the flying scenes.
Just found a really thorough article about the making of this film.
 
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