Смотреть онлайн документальный фильм The Real Soldiers Behind It Ain’t Half Hot Mum — A Story BBC Buried в хорошем качестве HD бесплатно
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Смотреть онлайн документальный фильм The Real Soldiers Behind It Ain’t Half Hot Mum — A Story BBC Buried в хорошем качестве HD бесплатно
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A small note from us. This documentary exists because of a viewer suggestion on our Dad's Army film. Thank you — and if there is a forgotten cast you would like us to research next, the comments are open.
Brilliant series.
OUTSTANDING Sincere thanks for this
🇬🇧🫡 That was my favorite show in San Diego CA KPBS channel 15, sincerely SGT Silva from San Diego CA USA thanks.
As a Army cadet I had a SGT like him , "SGT West"😂😅.
The SHOW was a copy of how the NEW ZEALAND military is in the 21st century……..95% of NZ military are only good for sing a long and putting make on themselves or their girlfriends.
😊Your pronunciation sounds odd 😮 😅
Note! no rank shown on Windsor Davies uniform, he displays a campaign ribbon probably denoting his serving in his National Service time, but could it be possible that the British Military Establishment frowned upon someone displaying unearned rank? the Captain and the Colonel both had rank shown so I just can't figure it all out.
You were doing ok, until you said ELSTREE. No it's BOREHAM WOOD NOT ELSTREE
So sad that the WOKE generation have KILLED wonderful entertainment. Michael Bates was BORN In India there was never ANY racist undertone — his character was genuine…….accurate and lasting. My late parents and I loved all of Perry & Crofts work.
Doolaly was in use way before WW2 and probably originated after the British taking India from the French. Michael Bates was an incredible person. To gain respect from Gurkhas is no mean feat. When working with Indian crews for years it is hard not to pick up mannerisms and words and was always well accepted by them. Sad that in the “communication age” we re getting further apart from those that appear to not be like us. Thanks for sharing.
Glad I bought the DVD sets of , it ain't half hot mum and you rang ' m ' lord . TV hasn't the humour anymore .
I HAVE NEVER SEEN SUCH A BLANTANT DISPLAY OF POOFERY IN MY LIFE!!!!!
Very moving tribute to comic genius’s and the those that served and although never actually spoken a scathing attack on those indoctrinated fools that refuse to memorialise out of “political correctness”. Great narrative. I learned something today and that is the origins of “going doolali” I never knew that😂😂
As usual a lot of the photographs don't match the audio in any way.
In the Welsh language, the letter Y, is pronounced as UH.
I never came across anyone in 1974 raise their eyebrows at an actor playing an Indian and sorry but I would not raise an eyebrow today either, it is acting and light entertainment so if someone is offended it is their choice to be so!
Mike Bates…❤ very funny 💔
RIP
The original Sergeant Major was supposed to be a Cockney. Windsor Davies tested so well, they changed the role to a Welshman.
It was a great show and then political correctness took it off our screens. It's also funny how Allo allo was acceptable taking the pis out of the french and germans. I really hate it when society dictates an unreasonable attitude to comedy. IAHHM was a classic that was just funny, thats it. Now sex, drugs and profanity is deemed acceptable viewing even for youth of today. It is really time they put the series back on. In comparison to today it was tame.
Why can’t the story be told by a English acsent
I love British comedies from the past. I grew up with Dad's Army, Mind Your Language and 'Allo 'Allo which were shown on TV in Singapore.
Meet the gang, for the boys are here, the boys to entertain you. 'It Aint Half Hot Mum' Thanks to all involved, it was, I think a bludy rippa.
Ai shite
A program about Actors — narrated by a robot — Waste of time . . . . . . . . It's "Mannering"
AI just can't pronounce words correctly.
My family emigrated from Calcutta in 1960 and we loved this. An Aunt and Uncle of mine lived in Deolali. Michael Bates was from the Anglo-Indian community as are many in entertainment. E.G. the real Anna Leonowens and her nephew, William Henry Pratt, a.k.a. Boris Karloff, Russell Peters, Eden Kane and his brothers, Peter and Robin Sarstedt, Englebert Humperdinck, etc.. Me too, 😂. Everybody from the Anglo-Indian could speak at least one Indian language fluently.
Is. that. right. said. AI. So. A. Real. Person. Does. Not. Need. To. Say. Anything.
In 1974 I was half way through my stint in the RAAF, as the Vietnam conflict was drawing to a close, still, when I saw ‘It Ain’t Half Hot Mum’ and before it, ‘Dad’s Army’ I had a stronger than usual sense that here were two comedy programs that were ‘gently’ satirising those two significant slices of Britain’s WW2 history.
Amid the silly, highly enjoyable material, words and set-ups, here and there kept suggesting to me that these series were not the product of writers who had spent their whole lives in civies.
Then, years later, I read small pieces about Jimmy Perry and David Croft; confirming what I had suspected. Their dialogue and caricatures were, indeed, gleaned from personal experience, serving in uniform.
Your excellent, informative video delved deeper into the history of these two talented, ex-serving, writers. When the video begins talking about the real former military men who made up the bulk of the cast of Perry’s and Croft’s creations, I was so grateful for this information.
For the past 16 years or so I’ve been a military historian, a ‘retirement’ job after a long time as a journalist and radio broadcaster. In truth, I’ve never worked so hard nor had more fulfilling enjoyment out of any task; one I’ve never seen as ‘work’, I truly like deep research and have had a great deal of professional ‘fun’.
On the other hand, your video informed me of a shocking double standard, disguised as the formative years of what is now described as ‘woke’, whatever the heck that word might mean. It disturbed me that even in 1974 there was ‘pushback’ to Michael Bates’ role as an Indian. Worse still, allegedly, due to the character played by that one talented cast member, the BBC will never again screen ‘It Ain’t Half Hot Mum’. You inform us that Michael Bates was, indeed, born in India. Yes, a Caucasian British subject but born outside of Britain.
One can’t help think of another famous UK actor, writer and broadcaster, ‘Spike’ Milligan, another veteran of the British Army, who was, I’m pretty sure, born in India and unlike, Michael Bates, regularly and frequently donned ‘brown face make-up’ and played Indian characters without even a whisper of racism. What an unkind, unfair and incredibly stupid accusation to be levelled at a professional actor.
A British TV show, around the same time was a long running smash hit called ‘The Black and White Minstrel Show’. Should Michael bates have been prosecuted for ‘impersonating’ Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery in the film, ‘Patton’? Similarly, should every British actor who played a Nazi officer in ‘Allo, Allo’ be retrospectively sued, along with the production house, for displaying the now banned Nazi swastika?
Anyway, enough of my time in Hyde Park Corner. I’d like to say that in these days of intelligence insulting A.I., your narration for this video was top-notch. As one who did ‘live-ad-reads’ and presented programs on radio for over 20-years; it is one of the great technological enigmas of our Century that advanced computers can perform ‘miracles’ in the realms of medicine, architecture, ship aircraft and spacecraft building, etc. Yet, no one seems to be able to produce a computer program that can mimic the routine, common yet subtle nuances of English language pronunciation that, routinely, can be learned by most children from the age of 10.
This ‘linguistic atrocity’ has, around the world put untold thousands of professional ‘voice-over-artists’ out of work. I was one of their number. I had to pay an annual fee to be a member of Actors’ Equity but, more importantly, I had to directly interact with the copywriter and the recording producer during a recording session to come up with an acceptable ‘read’ making it as flawless as we possibly could.
These days, what I like to call ‘robo-narrators’, have tossed the recorded, spoken word into the deepest quality abyss on the planet.
Thanks again for this informative, enjoyable video. — Bill H.
The best of the best MADE IN ENGLAND