This was the latest screening from the BFI’s WWI: The View from the Ground aimed at commemorating the centenary of the Battle of the Somme. It took a look at the lighter side of war… and indeed there always is one even in the darkest of conflicts.
Very few comedy films from the period survive but what we
have illustrates the greatness of Britain: our ability to laugh at and with
ourselves in the face of almost unendurable horror. This is often, as Bryony
Dixon season curator put it in her notes, “conscript humour”; taking the
proverbial whilst not only accepting the possibility that those in charge might
possibly have a plan, but steadfastly counting on it. As Bryony says it’s not
too far from modern satirical humour: Blackadder
with good faith perhaps.
Officers are lampooned but no more than gullible privates, NCOs,
land girls, magistrates and even horses: the country that laughed together
fought together.
Meet the boys... Splinters (1931) |
First up was an extract from proto-It Ain’t Half Hot Mum – Splinters
(1931) an early talkie which was based on an officially-sanctioned
morale-boosting wartime stage show featuring leading drag artiste Reg Stone and
Hal Jones. For soldiers starved of
anything like female company such reviews were a chance to imagine life back
home. In this particular instance two squaddies – Lew Lake and Sydney Howard - are
so dulled by fond hearts and beer that they are completely fooled by Mr Stone’s
expertise…
I’ve seen this film before and would recommend a full
viewing: luckily the BFI are showing the complete film on Monday 12th
September – details here.
Violet Hopson and Johnny Butt |
Next up was a comedy short Tubby’s Rest Cure (1915) which featured some marital comedy from
Johnny Butt as the titular Tubby and his long-suffering missus, Isabelle,
played by Violet Hopson.
Tubby goes for his rest in a village seemingly over-flowing
with Land Girls who, clearly desperate for male company fawn all over him. He
writes to Isabelle complaining of his loneliness only to be caught out when she
pays him a visit. What’s good for the goose is quickly adopted by the gander
and Tubby’s nose is out of joint as handsome officers entertain Mrs T.
Lupino shows his moves... |
The magistrate was joined by four others – a Quin-bunial? –
and had to resort to a magic ring to convince his fellow judges – one of whom
was a Mr Slopsam, sausage maker and horse owner (possible connection inferred).
Funniest of the complainants was a conscientious objector who thrashed the
tribunal until they gave him an exemption.
On screen and on paper: Old Bill |
Lastly… a double helping of Sydney Chaplin along with his
brother… Charles I think?
Syd played cartoonist Bruce Bairnsfather’s famous ‘Old Bill’ character in a film called The Better ‘Ole (1926) reprising a moustache he initially deployed in Shoulder Arms – like three overgrown Charlies on the one upper lip.
Old Bill is a veterans’ veteran who, as Bryony Dixon put it
possesses: “…that comforting old soldier’s instinct for survival and competence
at dodging extra duty.” But he can only dodge so much and here he ends up as
the front end of a pantomime horse trapped on stage with an unconvincing
blacksmith and a German officer who wants him re-shoed for a walk in the Alps.
Mayhem ensues as “Black Beauty” gets too close to the furnace and ends up
soaking cast, crew and audience.
Only an extract was featured but it’s a film worth seeking
out. You can buy it from Warner Archives.
Charlie and Syd entrenched |
The same goes in triplicate for the source of this evening’s
final sequence, Chaplin the Younger’s Shoulder
Arms (1918) – not just the best of the period’s comedies but one of
Charlie’s too. Famously it was an attempt to make up for his not signing up –
although what purpose could that have served? Mr Chaplin surely did far more
good on screen than he could ever have in the trenches and the film clearly
showed how far ahead he was of most other performers.
Charlie’s timing and tone is perfect and he is genuinely
funny in these Hollywood trenches, sleeping under water, opening wine bottles
and lighting cigarettes with German sniper fire and launching an attack using
Limburger cheese – why don’t we fight wars with dairy products and not guns as
my son’s old teacher used to ask…
My previous experience of Shoulder Arms is detailed here…
Fleet-fingered live piano accompaniment was provided
throughout by the eminent Mr Cyrus Gabrysch who’s work can regularly be
experienced at the Kennington Bioscope.
The View from the Ground continues through September,
further details on the BFI site.
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