Adolf Hitler: My Part in his Downfall | |
Director: | Norman Cohen |
Producer: | Norman Cohen Greg Smith |
Starring: | Jim Dale Arthur Lowe Bill Maynard Tony Selby Geoffrey Hughes John Forgeham Spike Milligan Pat Coombs Windsor Davies Bob Todd Jim Norton |
Music: | Wilfred Burns Ed Welch Spike Milligan |
Cinematography: | Terry Maher |
Editing: | Tony Lenny |
Studio: | Associated London Films |
Distributor: | United Artists |
Runtime: | 102 minutes |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Language: | English |
Adolf Hitler: My Part in His Downfall is a 1973 British comedy film directed by Norman Cohen and starring Jim Dale, Arthur Lowe and Spike Milligan.[1] It was adapted by Milligan, Cohen and Johhny Byrne from the first volume of Milligan's autobiography. Dale was nominated for the 1974 BAFTA Award for Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles for his performance.[2]
Although it broadly follows Milligan's book, some scenes were created specifically for the film and all of the character names (apart from the Milligan family) are fictional.
Aspiring jazz musician Terence "Spike" Milligan reluctantly obeys his call-up and joins the Royal Artillery regiment at Bexhill-on-Sea, where he begins training to take part in World War II. But along the way Spike and his friends get involved in many amusing – and some not-so amusing – scrapes.
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "It was a grave error to cast Spike Milligan as his own father in a screen version of his autobiographical novel of wartime experiences. His two brief appearances throw the rest of the film out of balance like an anarchist's bomb ... Jim Dale makes a brave stab, but his funniness is of a different order. ... Apart from the central weakness, the film has a convincing period shabbiness and sleaziness which are endearing when they're not overstated. ... The blowing up of Gunner Bliss – dubbed "Heavenly" with ironic foresight – is milked for throwaway horror and pathos. ...Tin-hatted silhouettes of anxious men, Jennings-like, contemplate a livid sky. As the bombs fall on London, one gunner remarks, 'I feel so bloody helpless'; to which comes the bitter retort, "Don't worry, mate, those civilians'll fight your war for you": no prizes for guessing that one of them loses his entire family in the bombing that night. There is also a kind of disused quarry which keeps cropping up on manoeuvres and cross-country runs, and which is heavily underlined as a symbolic prefiguring of the battlefield. Apart from these lapses of tone, Adolf Hitler . . . is a decent, anti-war, pro-life film, enriched by the comic gifts of Bill Maynard and Windsor Davies, though with Arthur Lowe's role as a professional Captain Mainwaring sadly underwritten."[3]