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Churchill: The Hollywood Years (2004)
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Overview
Release Date:
3 December 2004 (UK) moreTagline:
He's got the tool and he'll finish the job. morePlot:
add synopsisAwards:
1 nomination moreUser Comments:
"God, I wish I was an American." moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Jon Culshaw | ... | Prime Minister | |
| Tom Clarke Hill | ... | Lieutenant Baker (as Tom Clarke-Hill) | |
| Hamish McColl | ... | Captain Davies | |
| Christian Slater | ... | Winston Churchill | |
| Romany Malco | ... | Denzil Eisenhower | |
| Simon Rake | ... | Reporter 1 | |
| James Long | ... | Reporter 2 | |
| James Putnam | ... | Reporter 3 (as James Puttnam) | |
| Bob Mortimer | ... | Potter | |
| Vic Reeves | ... | Bendle | |
| Neve Campbell | ... | Princess Elizabeth | |
| Harry Enfield | ... | King George VI | |
| Jessica Oyelowo | ... | Princess Margaret | |
| Leslie Phillips | ... | Lord W'ruff | |
| Nigel Harrison | ... | Jack |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
84 minCountry:
UKLanguage:
EnglishColour:
ColourAspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 moreCertification:
South Korea:15 | Indonesia:Dewasa | Iceland:12 | Australia:M | Netherlands:12 | Finland:K-11 | UK:15MOVIEmeter: 
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
'Winston Churchill ' receives his first ever "actor" credit in this film, playing the part of Roy Bubbles. However, the role was played unwittingly, as the film uses archive footage of Winston in public to fit the part. moreGoofs:
Crew or equipment visible: A mat can be seen to cushion Jim Charoo's fall onto the railway track. moreSoundtrack:
Colonel Bogey on Parade moreFAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more
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Is it time for a Comic Strip revival? I think so. Peter Richardson's new film is essentially an update of the CS's classic 'The Strike' (1986), but without that film's slightly off-centre approach to satirising Hollywood. Whereas 'The Strike' misguidedly tried to attack Hollywood vulgarity by caricaturing Al Pacino and Meryl Streep probably the two least dumbed-down, vulgar actors in Hollywood today the new film goes all the way by having Winston Churchill portrayed as a young, handsome American GI, patterned after Bruce Willis by a gleeful Christian Slater. His performance is astoundingly game, the work of a man who knows full well that all his bridges have been burnt. Neve Campbell tries to keep up as a similarly bastardised Queen Elizabeth, but can't quite manage it.
The film's main selling point is its who's-who of British comedy, and here's where it gets a bit hit and miss. Vic Reeves, Bob Mortimer and James Dreyfus play camp caricatures who feel a bit out of place in a parody of testosterone-fuelled action movies, and I am sorry to say that those waiting for a return to form for Rik Mayall may have to wait a little longer. On the plus side, Miranda Richardson's randy Eva Braun is a joy, there are splendidly memorable cameos for younger talent like Mackenzie Crook, Steve Pemberton and Mark Heap, and Harry Enfield's King George is absolutely brilliant the kind of hilariously caustic live-action satirical cartoon that I'd nearly given up hope of him managing any more.
You could do a lot worse than see this, not least because, with its jokes about 'U-571' (2000) and 'Pearl Harbor' (2001), not to mention the impossibility of navigating the London transport system and the inanity of Royal public engagements, it represents a rare British comedy for a British market, rather than one with an increasingly desperate eye on the American market.