With a remarkable cast headlined by Ian Carmichael, Richard Attenborough, Dennis Price and Terry Thomas, WWII army comedy Private's Progress was one of the major British hits of 1956. Carmichael is Stanley Windrush, a naïve young soldier who during training falls in with the streetwise Private Cox (Attenborough). Windrush's uncle is the even more ambitiously corrupt Colonel Tracepurcel (Price), who plans to divert the war effort to liberate art treasures already looted by the Germans. The first half of the film is quite pedestrian, though the pace picks up considerably... once the heist gets underway, and the cheery tone masks a really rather dark and cynical heart. Carmichael's innocent abroad quickly wears thin, but Attenborough and Price steal the film, as well as the paintings, with typically excellent turns. With a nod in the direction of Ealing's The Ladykillers (1955) the film also anticipates the attitudes of both The League of Gentlemen (1959) and Joseph Heller's novel Catch 22 (1961), though lacks the latter's greater sophistication. The cast also contains such British stalwarts as William Hartnell, Peter Jones, Ian Bannen, John Le Mesurier, Christopher Lee and David Lodge, and was sufficiently popular to reunite all the major players for the superior sequel, I'm Alright Jack (1959). On the DVD: Private's Progress is presented in black and white at 4:3 Academy ratio, though the film appears to have been shot full frame and then unmasked for home viewing so there is more top and bottom to the images than at the cinema. The print used shows constant minor damage and is quite grainy, though no more than expected for a low-budget film of the time. The mono sound is average and unremarkable, and there are no special features. --Gary S Dalkin [show more]
Don't like war films? Don't like black and white movies? Cast aside your prejudices and pay attention! This film is very funny indeed and is in the Top 1000 in Halliwell's Film & Video Guide - and so it should be. The cast play their parts as work-dodging soldiers and colonel blimp type officers so seemingly typical of the period of National Service. Anyone who served in WW2 or did National Service will probably have seen this film but it's worth another viewing. For younger folk - those not of retirement age! - the movie affords a glimpse into a time gone by but with much humour. Terry-Thomas should be seen more: he is brilliant and his wincing at the barking of the sergeant-major and his "You lot are an absolute shower - a load of rotters" is priceless. Buy it or hire it - but do see "Private's Progress" and be grateful that the British Army never did bungle quite as much as this troop!
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