7.3 | / 10 |
Users | 3.6 | |
Reviewer | 4.0 | |
Overall | 3.6 |
The true story of the Battle of Britain during the summer of 1940.
Starring: Harry Andrews, Michael Caine, Trevor Howard, Curd Jürgens, Ian McShaneWar | 100% |
History | 78% |
Drama | 53% |
Action | 32% |
Video codec: MPEG-2
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.35:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
English: Dolby Digital 5.1
English: Dolby Digital Mono
French: Dolby Digital 5.1
English, English SDH, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Cantonese, Korean
25GB Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
Region A (locked)
Movie | 4.0 | |
Video | 3.5 | |
Audio | 3.5 | |
Extras | 0.0 | |
Overall | 4.0 |
If anyone tells you that Hollywood started churning out souless action flicks beginning in the late eighties and early nineties, tell them it’s not true, and give them a copy of Battle for Britain which was made in 1969. It is not that Battle for Britain is a bad movie, it is far from it. What if feels like is a series of spectacular aerial battles glued together by a series of weak vignettes that feature some of the best and brightest British and American stars of two generations. The main problem with this film lies in the script, which lacks cohesion, and does a poor job of tying things together. The romantic interaction between Susannah York and Christopher Plummer feels like I am watching a beginner learning to drive a stick shift, it kind of lurches along in a nonsensical fashion. There were a lot of scenes with pilots sitting around waiting for orders, even more with close-ups of pilots doing battle in the sky, lots of laughter and back patting from German pilots, bombing, a lot of worrying from British top brass, more air fighting, more worry, a brief romantic interlude, more bombing and then the recycling starts again.
The film is known for its spectacular and exciting flying sequences, mimicking those seen in Angels One Five (1952) but on massive amounts of steroids. This made the film's production very expensive, over ten million dollars which by today’s standards is pretty paltry when compared to production costs of over two hundred million for an action movie produced today. This film required a large number of period aircraft, so in September 1965 producers Harry Saltzman and S. Benjamin Fisz contacted former Bomber Command Group Captain Hamish Mahaddie to source the aircraft and arrange for their use. Eventually 100 aircraft were employed, a number whimsically called the "35th largest air force in the world. With Mahaddie's help, the producers located 109 Spitfires in the UK, of which 27 were available for filming, although only 12 were in flyable condition. Furthermore Mahaddie negotiated the use of six Hawker Hurricanes, of which three were in flying condition. The film helped preserve these aircraft, including a rare Spitfire Mk II, which had been a gate guardian at RAF Colerne.
The film endeavored to be an accurate account of the Battle of Britain, when in the summer and autumn of 1940 the British RAF inflicted a strategic defeat on the Luftwaffe and so ensured the cancellation of Operation Sealion – Hitler's plan to invade Britain.
The key strategic victory of the outnumbered British pilots would be best summed up by Winston Churchill in the immortal words: "Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few." For the most part the film is pretty accurate. However some events, and character interactions depicted in the film either did not happen, or did not happen to the degree the film emphasizes.
MGM brings Battle for Britain to Bluray in a 1080p/MPEG-2 encoding that overall is very pleasing and natural, but not without some problems. To the good stuff; the print from which the encoding is derived looks free from blemishes and scratches. This is probably the most natural looking presentation I have reviewed so far, no pumped up colors, no highly polished look, no overly contrasted images, just natural looking images that resemble what we see when we go out doors. For this to be a nearly forty year old film, there is an amazing amount of detail both fine (Look at the detail everywhere in Sir David Kelly's office), and far field detail as well (Look out in the distance of outdoor shorts). The film grain looks coarse, but not objectionable. The aerial scenes looked amazing, so amazing that some of the visual effects just fall apart before your very eyes. Quite frankly, the picture quality is quite good, and looks like film on video, not film turned into video by excessive processing and digital manipulation. Now it's on to the problems.
Right off the bat I saw some variation in picture quality between the opening titles, when subtitles were present, and when they weren't. I noticed that resolution dropped which tells me they used a dup for these instances, and the original negative in the absence of titles and subtitles. There is also an occasional image pulsing and some edge enhancement as well. Not one of these issues effected my enjoyment of the film. MGM deserves a lot of credit for getting this films picture quality as good as it is.
There are three flavors of audio found on Battle of Britain all English language based. The first, a Dts Master Audio Lossless track at 16/48khz, a second Dolby Digital encoded track featuring Sir William Walton's Score (at 448kbps), and the original mono mix at 192kbps. I gave all three a listen, and expectedly the Dts track comes off the best and most spatial sounding of all. I thought this was always a mono mix, but it appears there were some 70mm 6 track prints struck with stereo effects and music mix, with mono dialog. It appears the Dts track comes from this print, and the Dolby Digital with Sir Walton's score comes from the 35mm print with mono dialog and effects, and stereo music tracks. The difference between the two is quite noticeable.
Taking into consideration the age of the entire soundtrack, it sounded pretty darn good with nice analog warmth to it, and some edginess as well. Dialog is always clear, but a little rough and brittle on occasion. Sound effects are directional, limited in dynamic range when compared to today's soundtracks, but sound quite natural nevertherless. When planes take to the skies, the sound field is filled with the sound of aircraft; you can almost smell the fuel. Gun fire and explosions sound natural and directionalized, without the pumped up bass enhancing of today's tracks. Aircraft engines sounded natural and true (the use of authentic aircraft helps tremendously). On the Dts tracks, all of this is spread throughout the frontal soundstage and bled to the rear soundstage giving the mix a nice sense of space. Flyovers and flybys are nicely panned, and move organically through the room.
The music benefits greatly from the higher bitrate Dts track, and is very well recorded. The orchestra is quite small compared to the one hundred and ten piece orchestra's that record film scores today, but it sounds full and warm, and is a nicely balanced 20 piece orchestra that sounds larger than it is. Individual instruments are occasionally positioned in a pretty exaggerated fashion, but not quite enough split the soundfield. The Dolby Digital track is lower in level, constricts everything but the score into the center channel which causes it to lose alot of impact, and sounds somewhat thinner than the Dts encoded soundtrack. All things weighted, this soundtrack sounds quite good, but certainly not great.
There are no extras to be found, which is quite a disappointment.
I really enjoyed Battle of Britain, much more so than I thought I would. Despite the lack of a coherent narrative, stiff and stilted performances by its actors, the visuals manage to keep this an interesting view. The bluray offers great audio and video, but the lack of extra's kills the value of this disc, but would not stop me from highly recommending it. If you like action, it is there by the tons. If you like great visuals, it is here by the tons. If you like great acting and a great script, you will have to look elsewhere for that fix.
Get your popcorn, candy, and soda ready, fire up the tube, pop Battle of Britain in your player, and be prepared for 132 minutes of pure entertainment.
1977
1965
1962
1955
Remastered
1970
2-Disc Special Edition
2006
1967
1970
2006
1989
2017
2017
2012
1977
1964
1961
2002
2012
9 rota | Collector's Edition
2005
Commemorative 20th Anniversary Edition
1998