Guns at Batasi

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Guns at Batasi

Cinema poster
Directed by John Guillermin
Produced by George H. Brown
Written by Screenplay:
Robert Holles
Original Adaptation:
Leo Marks
Marshall Pugh
C.M. Pennington-Richards
Based on The Siege of Battersea 
by Robert Holles
Starring Richard Attenborough
Jack Hawkins
Flora Robson
Music by John Addison
Cinematography Douglas Slocombe
Editing by Max Benedict
Distributed by Twentieth Century Fox
Release dates September 1964 (UK)
16 November 1964 (US)
Running time 103 min
Country United Kingdom
Language English

Guns at Batasi is a 1964 drama CinemaScope film starring Richard Attenborough, Jack Hawkins, Flora Robson, John Leyton and Mia Farrow. It is set in an overseas colonial military outpost during the last days of the British Empire in East Africa.

The film, which is based on the 1962 novel The Siege of Battersea by Robert Holles, was directed by John Guillermin and filmed at Pinewood Studios despite being set in Africa.

Plot

A group of veteran British sergeants, headed by an ultra-correct, order-barking Regimental Sergeant Major, are caught between two dissident factions in an unnamed newly created African state (most likely Kenya, since the character of RSM Lauderdale mentions that the Turkana people live in the north, which is where they live in Kenya. The African soldiers also speak amongst themselves in Kiswahili, the lingua franca of the region). The story neatly exposes the feelings of the professional NCOs, their officers and the African soldiers and officers, who are still painfully new to both guns and political slogans. When the post-colonial government of the unnamed African country is overthrown by a populist uprising, troops loyal to the new administration take over the barracks, arrest the commanding officer and seize weapons. With the British NCOs cut off in the Sergeants' mess during the mutiny, the action boils down to the initiative and confusion of the griping, duty-hardened British soldiers in defending Captain Abraham (a wounded African officer), and themselves, against their former allies. The mess situation is further complicated by having to temporarily accommodate a female British MP and a UN secretary, the latter providing some love interest.

Eventually the minor action comes to anti-climactic end when the country's new administration allows the senior British officers to return to the barracks at Batasi and end the siege, but not before the RSM and a private involve themselves in some 'action'. The film concludes with the news that a new government is in power. The film illustrates an erupting new world where the so-called common man, both black and white, no longer has a clear idea of the realpolik due to the social revolutions in a post-colonial world.

Cast

  • Richard Attenborough as Regimental Sergeant Major Lauderdale. Attenborough won a BAFTA Film Award for his performance as the R.S.M.. He is a traditional hero, albeit a boring one with an unblinking dedication to the letter of military law. In the face of attack by African troops with a Bofors gun or a showdown with the African leader of the revolt, he proves his mettle in unflinching, steely style
  • Jack Hawkins as Colonel Deal, a traditional "old school" officer whose values are becoming anachronistic within a changing colonial world.
  • Flora Robson as Miss Barker-Wise MP, as a visiting Member of Parliament, provides a restrained performance as the shocked and confused politician caught up in the sudden turn of events. Robson's sympathetic portrayal balances the action with the political motivations. Her character states the film's theme precisely when she says to Attenborough's character: "I disapprove of their methods as I do of yours"; the character appears to share (at least in theory) the revolutionary objectives of the rebels while not understanding what the means such objectives entail.
  • John Leyton as Private Wilkes, and Mia Farrow as Karen Eriksson, United Nations secretary, provide a youthful perspective on the proceedings.
  • Cecil Parker as Fletcher
  • Errol John as Lieutenant Boniface, John plays the mutinous officer as a hard and relentless man who is acting on ideologies.
  • Graham Stark as Sergeant 'Dodger' Brown
  • Earl Cameron as Captain Abraham
  • Percy Herbert as Colour Sergeant Ben Parkin, David Lodge as Sergeant 'Muscles' Dunn, John Meillon as Sergeant 'Aussie' Drake, and Bernard Horsfall as Sergeant 'Schoolie' Prideaux all portray tough, efficient and wise-cracking British NCOs. Jack Hawkins contributes typical British restraint as the commandant of Batasi.
  • Patrick Holt as Captain
  • Alan Browning as Adjutant
  • Richard Bidlake as Lieutenant
  • Horace James as Corporal Abou
  • Joseph Layode as Archibong Shaw
  • Ric Hutton as Russell

Production notes

The film, although set in Africa, was shot entirely at Pinewood Studios (at the same time as Goldfinger). The exterior night scenes were filmed on a sound stage and opening scenes were done on Salisbury Plain.

Britt Ekland was originally cast as Karen Eriksson.[1] Shortly after filming began, she went to Los Angeles. She had just married Peter Sellers who apparently was afraid she would have an affair with Leyton: her role was recast and completed by Farrow.

Three-packs-a-day smoker Jack Hawkins' voice is audibly fraying: it was almost the last film he made before surgery for throat cancer removed his vocal cords and left him with little more than a whisper as a voice.

John Leyton provides the DVD commentary on the making of the film.

Music was recorded by the Sinfonia of London orchestra.

References

  1. "He proposes to his wife eight times a week.". The Australian Women's Weekly (1933 - 1982) (1933 - 1982: National Library of Australia). 29 July 1964. p. 15. Retrieved 18 December 2013. 

External links

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