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Hope & Glory (1987)

AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
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6,126
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Nebraska
I honestly don't know why I waited so long to watch this movie, but I finally did, and I simply loved it. Lots of great stuff here. I especially loved how the little boys dealt with the war in their own way - playing war, yet being destructive just like the adults were when they'd go and destroy bombed buildings.

Anyone else a fan of this film?

hope_zps920795f4.jpg
 

Worf

I'll Lock Up
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5,207
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Troy, New York, USA
"God Bless you Adolph!!!"

It was a good if not great film. I leaned words like "googly" and how much fun rummaging around bombed out buildings can be. No actually I loved the flick.

Worf
 

AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
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6,126
Location
Nebraska
I love that scene at the school - "It was a stray bomb! Thank you, Adolph." Classic line.

And the grandfather is a hoot.
 
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Doctor Strange

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5,252
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Hudson Valley, NY
I haven't seen it since shortly after its release, but I recall thinking it was a great flick. And it's largely autobiographical - director John Boorman was a kid during the war.

Another excellent European-director-recalls-his-boyhood-during-the-war-torn-30s/40s flick is Franco Zeffirelli's Tea With Mussolini.
 

Warden

One Too Many
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1,336
Location
UK
If you love the 1940s period Hope and Glory should be in everyones DVD collection
 

Capesofwrath

Practically Family
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780
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Somewhere on Earth
Kids running wild in bomb sites in the war was a well documented social problem. They used to loot houses and cause a lot of damage too, and with schools often closed and children having been evacuated to the countryside early in the war and being lost to the system, no one really knew how to deal with it.

Particularly the older ones who were still too young to be conscripted and were running wild. Crime rates were high, and the roots of post war social problems with youth crime began then.

There is a very good Graham Green short story about it called The Destructors, where feral youths on a bomb site pull down an old man's house around him.
 

AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,126
Location
Nebraska
Kids running wild in bomb sites in the war was a well documented social problem. They used to loot houses and cause a lot of damage too, and with schools often closed and children having been evacuated to the countryside early in the war and being lost to the system, no one really knew how to deal with it.

Particularly the older ones who were still too young to be conscripted and were running wild. Crime rates were high, and the roots of post war social problems with youth crime began then.

There is a very good Graham Green short story about it called The Destructors, where feral youths on a bomb site pull down an old man's house around him.

That is a fascinating correlation. Had no idea, though I can certainly see how it would have led to post-war problems.
 

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