Dad’s Army
Director Oliver Parker was always going to be up against it when he
took on the idea of making his Dad’s Army
movie. After all, the potential
audience was likely to consist of the many thousands of people who have grown
up with the iconic TV series (diehard fans continue to feed their habit with regular
repeats of the 80 episodes made of the programme). The dilemma? How to convey
the mood of the original without tarnishing what is, let’s face it, a
much-loved British ‘brand’? Fortunately, rather than try to reinvent the
characters, he made the sensible decision to choose actors who closely resemble
the originals… and what inspired choices he made!
Because there’s no doubt that a major strength of the film is the
excellent casting. Bill Nighy (who else?) is suitably louche as Sergeant
Wilson, the role immortalised by that most quintessential of lounge lizards, John
le Mesurier. Michael Gambon is also delightful as the bumbling Private Godfrey
we’ve come to know and love. But I think the plaudits definitely have to go to the
star of the show. Just as Arthur Lowe
was the lynchpin of the TV series, so it is Toby Jones’ performance as Captain
Mainwaring that holds this film together. His is a perfect comic performance
with nice slapstick touches. I loved the scene where he removes his spectacles
in a bid to attract Zeta Jones – my, how we just love to see a man’s vanity
punctured! The only weak link for me is Tom Courtenay. Always at or near the
forefront of the action in the series, Corporal Jones here has a surprisingly
low profile. When he does speak, I feel he doesn’t really capture the boyish
enthusiasm of the original character - just ‘not nearly excitable enough’, as
one critic put it. Catherine Zeta Jones, as undercover German spy Rose Winters,
exudes the requisite degree of 1940s glamour and, though not exactly stretched
in the part, fulfils her role well. The hilarious, if rather predictable,
reaction of the menfolk of Walmington-on-Sea to her arrival provides a rich
seam of humour, though some might find Pike envisioned as Errol Flynn a step
too far into the realms of the surreal!
One of the things I really enjoyed about this film was the higher profile
given to the female characters. Here they were pivotal to the denouement and I
fully approved of this added modern twist, i.e. (hoorah!) the womenfolk saving
the day. A strong cast of female actors includes Alison Steadman (as a
blowsy Mrs Fox) and the ever-reliable Sarah Lancashire (as Mavis Pike), AND we
are treated to an actual, real-life Mrs Mainwaring - never seen in the original
- played doughtily by Felicity Montagu. Some critics have argued that the fact
that we never meet Mrs M in the original series is kind of the point (a bit like
fat Brenda in Coronation Street’s cab
office or Samantha the fictional score-keeper in Radio 4’s I’m Sorry I Haven’t a Clue), but I liked this touch.
Critical response to the film has been generally muted. Some really
don’t like it. Nick de Semlyen of the empire.com website says: “This is karaoke
filmmaking, trading on nostalgia rather than breaking new territory”. My
opinion? No, it’s not a masterpiece of filmmaking, but it does keeps the spirit
of the original alive and, despite the fact that “there isn’t an edgy bone in its body” (Variety critic
Catherine Bray) the film makes enjoyable, undemanding viewing.
For viewers looking out for them, many of the series’ familiar
catchphrases are there (let’s face, we’d have felt short-changed if they hadn’t
been) but they are not laboured. There are a few laugh-out-loud moments, but the
comedy is, as with the original, gentle and understated. Ideal Sunday afternoon
fare!