Naphtali
Practically Family
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- Seeley Lake, Montana
The most difficult sub genre in which to make effective motion pictures is World War II comedy (or should I have written any war comedy?). It is not a venue where humor flows from one's imagination. I specifically do not refer to comedies made during the war years, such as "The Miracle of Morgan's Creek" or the bazillion musical comedies cranked out to entertain during ugly times. However, the home front, whatever country constitutes home, is perfectly acceptable.
To illustrate what I want to isolate, here are three of the most entertaining World War II comedies.
"The Americanization of Emily" - 1964 (James Garner, Julie Andrews, Melvyn Douglas, James Coburn) is a black comedy, screenplay written by Paddy Chayefsky, about the European Theater of Operations during the time surrounding the Normandy invasion.
"Father Goose" - 1964 (Cary Grant, Leslie Caron, Trevor Howard) is an academy award winning (story and screenplay) comedy set in the south Pacific, circa 1942. While 1942 Pacific Theater would not appear to have much room for comedy, trust me. This is almost certainly Cary Grant's most effective performance.
"Hope and Glory" - 1987 (Sarah Miles, Ian Bannen, Sebastian Rice-Edwards) is John Boorman's semi autobiographical movie about his childhood in Great Britain during the war.
Are there other good ones?
To illustrate what I want to isolate, here are three of the most entertaining World War II comedies.
"The Americanization of Emily" - 1964 (James Garner, Julie Andrews, Melvyn Douglas, James Coburn) is a black comedy, screenplay written by Paddy Chayefsky, about the European Theater of Operations during the time surrounding the Normandy invasion.
"Father Goose" - 1964 (Cary Grant, Leslie Caron, Trevor Howard) is an academy award winning (story and screenplay) comedy set in the south Pacific, circa 1942. While 1942 Pacific Theater would not appear to have much room for comedy, trust me. This is almost certainly Cary Grant's most effective performance.
"Hope and Glory" - 1987 (Sarah Miles, Ian Bannen, Sebastian Rice-Edwards) is John Boorman's semi autobiographical movie about his childhood in Great Britain during the war.
Are there other good ones?