The Great Escaper (2023) Poster

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8/10
Goodbye to a magnificent actress
davidgee22 October 2023
This is mainly going to be remembered as Glenda Jackson's last movie, and what a glorious swansong it is. Her ancient, heavily lined face - far removed from the face of Elizabeth the First, the role that sealed her stardom in 1971 - conveys shades of emotion that not all actresses can hint at. She's playing Irene Jordan, the wife of Bernard (Michael Caine) who has gone AWOL from the care home in which they live, taking himself off to Normandy to attend the 70th anniversary commemoration of the D-Day landings.

This is another of those small movies with a big heart. Nothing very dramatic happens (apart from brief flashbacks to D-Day which Bernard's best pal did not survive). John Standing has a nice supporting role as another veteran who takes Bernard under his wing; there was a hint of camp in Standing's performance, which made me think an LGBT 'attitude' moment could and should have been shoe-horned in.

Michael Caine has weathered the years better than Jackson (or he's had some work done, which Glenda very clearly has not). His performance is not quite as subtle as hers, but this is a beguiling and totally believable reconstruction of an episode which made the papers back in 2014. A couple who have loved each other for seventy years are two people you have to take your heart.

RIP Glenda, one of the finest actresses Britain ever produced. And Happy Retirement to Sir Michael, who has given us a great deal of pleasure in a long and splendidly wide-ranging screen career.
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7/10
You're only supposed to go as far as the bloody seafront
TomTalksFilms8 October 2023
The great escaper is a new release this week and is based on the true story of Bernard Jordan played by the iconic Michael Caine. Whilst living in his care home in Hove, England with his wife Irene played brilliantly by Glenda Jackson (RIP) WW2 veteran Bernie wishes to attend the 70th anniversary D day event in France. Unfortunately though he misses the deadline to go with the other veterans and due to being 90 years of age he would perhaps be ill advised to go on his own. That is until Irene convinces him that it's something he must do and so off he embarks on his adventure.

This film is exactly what you'd expect it to be an at times emotional and yet heartwarming story about not letting age stop you from living your life helmed by two icons of cinema. Michael Caine for me is up there in a class of legendary British acting talents like Jim Broadbent and Maggie Smith. It's such a difficult industry to get into to even appear on one film but to have the longevity in this industry that those actors have made for themselves is nothing short of remarkable and should be commended. That being said however it is Glenda Jackson who steals this film. Her character stays behind at the care home whilst Bernie goes off on his adventure and some of the witty lines she has can't help but bring a smile to your face. Whilst at home she reminisces about the past and how she met Bernie and we get flashbacks to the young couple. Whilst away Michael Caines character is still struggling with PTSD like symptoms from the Second World War and whilst I think it's important to remember how horrific war is and the impact it has on peoples lives for years in the future it is perhaps Irene's story that gives us hope. It's the fact that after all these years they've stayed together and looked after eachother. There's a lot of lines of dialogue in this film that I loved but one of my favourites was when Irene says something along the lines of 'we haven't done extravagant things, we've done simple things but we did them bloody well'. Sometimes just finding that right person and getting to spend your entire life with them is enough.

A great film with a lesson of love not war that should be seen on the big screen by people of all ages.

Rating: 7/10.
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7/10
The Great Escaper
CinemaSerf8 October 2023
This is one of those contemporary, really quite touching, dramas that we won't be able to make for too much longer. It centres around an elderly couple, who have been together for seventy years, and live a semi-independent life in a care home. During a routine chat with their nurses, "Rene" (Glenda Jackson) discovers that her husband "Bernie" (Sir Michael Caine) had wanted to go to the impending celebrations for the 70th anniversary of the D-Day landings, but that all the tickets had gone. She makes it pretty clear that if he wants to go, well then he ought to just go! Armed with a only a carrier bag and a few quid, he takes a ferry and heads off on a trip that is going to induce some fairly horrific memories of events in 1945 - which we sparingly see in flashback - but is also going to provide him with a degree of fulfilment and closure on issues that have dogged him ever since. Snag? Well he didn't actually tell anyone he was going, so the home are worried, the police are looking and the media soon get hold of his tale of determination and a degree of celebrity beckons. It's a very characterful story, this, with a gentle chemistry between Jackson and Caine, and also between Caine and his newfound travelling companion "Arthur" (a proud performance from John Standing) as they both have to face their demons past and present. There's plenty of humour - a decent soupçon of sarcasm; along with a spirit of optimism and reconciliation that works well, without drifting into cheesy sentiment, for ninety minutes. It reminded me of the equally poignant BBC drama "A Foreign Field" (1993) and is a good, at times thought-provoking watch.
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Proud to be English, don't change the past
S3pt3m63r13 October 2023
Warning: Spoilers
This is one of those films where it feels good to be able to express pride in the history of this country. It feels good to see a film that exemplifies this and honours Bernard and the veterans who fought in the war and follows his journey to France to commemorate the D day landings. It's poignant that it was Glenda Jackson's last film and also a reminder that this remarkable generation is aging and their lifetime experiences and sacrifices are being remembered.

I appreciated the film although felt that it didn't truly reflect the past appropriately in dress and language. Modern attitudes towards use of swear words and also different racial groups at the time were different during the period.

Another thing is the portrayal of the care home, I've been in lots of care homes and never seen one like this before where people can have twin rooms and the staff actually care and talk to their residents!

Don't let us change how we see and feel about the past and this generation as it's only 80 years ago.
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7/10
Love and War
redpupp6 October 2023
An absolutely beautiful film about the thrilling true story of Bernard Jordan, a veteran who travelled alone to the beaches of Normandy in order to pay respects to his fallen comrades. He meets some fellow veterans on his way, an unknowingly becomes a news icon!

The stunning visuals and cinematography are choreographed in such a way to bring out a deep emotional response. I often don't cry at films, but there were a handful of scenes in The Great Escaper that made me shed tears.

There are elements of romance, war drama, and comedy throughout the film, as well as brilliant performances all around, which makes for an enjoyable watch for many.

However, the pacing was way too fast in my opinion. The film is about an hour and a half long, but I feel it would've been better suited to be two hours or two and a half hours.

If you fancy a trip to the cinema, The Great Escaper should be high on your priority list!
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7/10
A difficult topic sensitively done
Lambiecatlady6 October 2023
A fabulous cast with amazing performances demonstrating why Jackson and Caine are so highly regarded. Covers many difficult topics - longevity, friendship, guilt, trauma, illness, alcoholism, forgiveness and redemption. My husband and I both cried on a number of occasions, but there was also some great humour - we laughed, we cried, we enjoyed the cinematography. I'm not sure it was a true reflection of the average care home, it all seemed a bit too lovely. An effective juxtaposition with the couple as their younger selves, which was well cast. My only criticism was I felt the shoe horning into the plot of the traumatised much younger modern soldier didn't really work and for some reason those scenes jarred. It felt like an editor had requested the writers add them in later and it didn't quite work. A lovely film, but take some tissues.
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7/10
Emotional film showcasing some great actors maybe one last time.
tonypeacock-112 October 2023
A film that is quite emotional as a D-Day veteran 'escapes' the confines (not in a jailbreak sense) of his care home to attend the 70th anniversary in France, causing a media frenzy in the process!

Michael Caine and the late Glenda Jackson give wonderful performances as the elderly couple in the care home, Caine playing Bernie the veteran in question and Jackson, Rene his devoted wife who covers up for him as much as possible and encourages him to follow his destiny.

I am used to seeing the two actors in their pomp in sixties and seventies films so this is quite a change.

Look out for good supporting performances from the care home staff and fellow D-Day veterans some with their own demons.

The film uses brief flashback timelines to show the horrors of the D-Day events in the Second World War. However the film is not all excising demons and dwelling on past stressful events. There is plenty of humour as Bernie (Caine) makes the trip and meets up with fellow vets both Allied and German.
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10/10
Film making at its very best.
Sleepin_Dragon15 October 2023
Having missed an organised trip to the 70th anniversary of The D-Day landings, 90 year old Bernard John makes his own way to France, leaving behind his wife and care home.

I suppose I'd start by saying that I didn't want this film to end, magical from beginning to end. Bernard's story touched many people, I remember it being on The BBC news back in 2014.

They could have made the film overly sentimental or too sobre, but they struck the perfect mix, it's heartfelt, touching, inspiring and amusing, it's such a moving, real life story.

Several times it tugged away at the heart strings, the most powerful moment for me where Bernard say with The Germans, I had a lump in my throat.

The acting was truly incredible, it's the best I've seen from Michael Caine for many years, the emotion he put into this was quite something. What a send of for the late, great Glenda Jackson, again, a superb performance, the chemistry between her and Caine was noticeable.

John Standing also added to the mix, another actor who'd graced our screens for so long, wonderful.

One I'll happily watch over.

10/10.
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6/10
The Great Escaper
Prismark1029 November 2023
The title is a riff on the classic The Great Escape. It also marks the end of an acting era.

Glenda Jackson died just before the release of the movie. Eight years after second triumphant return to acting after a 23 years detour to politics.

While Michael Caine claimed this would be his last movie at the age of 90.

Inspired by the true story of Royal Navy veteran Bernard Jordan. Caine plays Bernie who in 2014 sneaked out of his seaside care home. He was on a secret mission to attend the 70th anniversary celebrations of the D-day landings in Normandy. He left it too late for the official organised group tour.

Back at the care home. His wife Rene (Glenda Jackson) cheerfully covers up for him. The staff at the care home do not want her to know that Bernie is missing. Until she lets the cat out of the back over a fish and chips supper.

While on his excursion. Bernie meets another old soldier, the posh Arthur (John Standing.) His liver is shot to pieces over a lifetime of booze, covering up a secret of a bombing mission he was engaged in.

Bernie also wants to confront his past over the D-day landings. He even gets to help out a modern soldier suffering from PTSD.

Director Oliver Parker knows what works from his actors is to keep things subtle. Caine does a lot of acting with his eyes. Jackson is sardonic. Standing almost steals the show.

The story is charming and small scale. It does come across like a television movie. A little like A Foreign Field, a BBC television movie from 1993. It was about British and American Second World War veterans returning to the beaches of Normandy as old men and women. That starred Alec Guinness and Lauren Bacall.
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10/10
A 10 because it hit home hard.
ashleywetherall9 October 2023
I've just come back from seeing this beautiful little film and I'm still emotionally connected to it.

The story Bernie and Rene who have been married for 70 years living out they're final years in a care home near Brighton.

Bernie a D- Day veteran wants to visit Normandy for the 70th anniversary of the landings but is also worried about Rene failing health. He also learns that he was too late to take part.

But Rene gives him her blessing to make his own way there.

All this is in the trailer. But the film isn't just about that. The film is about coming to terms with the past and also about a love and devotion and forgiveness. Not just between the leads but also though the wonderful supporting cast.

Michael Caine is wonderful as Bernie but Glenda Jackson is the heart and soul of this film. Both reminded me of my own Grandfather and Grand mother. My grandfather was a D-Day veteran but my grandmother was his rock.

I found tears rolling down my cheeks as I watched this film as memories yesteryear came flooding back..
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7/10
A worthy send off
masonsaul14 October 2023
The Great Escaper is a fitting send off for a pair of screen legends, turning a true story into a heartwarming charmer of a film that celebrates the bravery of a generation without shying away from the pain or horrors of war. Its final moments are the ideal way to end 2 magnificent careers.

Michael Caine brings a disarming wit that always lands and since this is his final performance there's also plenty of emotional heft to it too. Glenda Jackson is equally charming, despite being stuck at home the whole time she still gets plenty of screen time and feels essential to the story.

Other than an excessive amount of WW2 flashbacks interspersed throughout Oliver Parker's direction really works, the use of silence for the heavier moments is really effective. Craig Armstrong's score can get very repetitive however it's still got a lot of easygoing whimsy.
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10/10
"Give me a kiss, or I'll go away again "
ygwerin131 October 2023
I saw this movie with my son Jamie this evening, I hadn't been aware of it but was interested when I heard about it. Particularly so because of Glenda Jackson, as I hadn't seen any of her film performances.

I can't remember anything of the actual events, or people, that the movie is based on. Which may have been as well when I watched it at the cinema, otherwise I would have doubtless been distracted by it.

I found the film to be one of the very best that I have ever seen, there's absolutely no Hollywood histrionics, with nothing blowing up in your face.

Simply two real people with human feelings, that were perfectly personified by these two brilliant actors.

Personally I would recommend people to watch the movie, without bothering to read any of the reviews beforehand.

I say that from browsing through some such, and frankly found them all too predictable. In that they reflect modern notions and attitudes, and take no consideration of the time period being referenced. That may appear a strange observation, but Bernard and Irene Jordan are simply, treated as characters in a tale.

With no real consideration of them as actual human beings, just so many 'Professional Reviews' with no heart and humanity.
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6/10
Good Film
vengeance207 October 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Saw this advertised a while back & knew I had to see given Michael Caine, who is now 90 was in it & it looked like it would be a good watch.

The Film sees Bernard Jordan in 2014, who escapes from his care home to attend the 70th Anniversary of the D-Day Landings in France. At 90, his journey across the world attracts media attention.

I found the film to be good. It's a great story which actually happened & a feel good/heart felt sort of film. Michael Caine, at the age of 90 & still acting, does a great job as an old navy war veteran. The other actors do a great job with their roles too.

The film has a decent runtime of 1 hour & 32 minutes (92 minutes) & has a good ending to a well shot story, it is drama oriented & a bit slow in places, but other than that, it's a good film that's bitter sweet.

Overall, it's a good film you'll enjoy & it's based off of a true story too, so you'll find this an interesting watch.

6/10.
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5/10
The subject matter and Caine make the film
I was super excited about seeing this film. Being based on a true story and having Michael Caine in the main role seemed like a no brained. And as the title of the review suggests both the subject matter and Caine deliver.

However it's feels like the writer and director really dropped the ball on what could have been magnificent.

The real emotional bits are when they meet the Germans and when they go to the cemetery and both feel rushed and almost like they are skirted over.

The side story of the younger vet is also a missed opportunity. A way to show that whilst we have moved on from 1945 the troubles that veterans face is still the same. Caines companion on the trip comes out with a pretty big revelation yet you don't really see this story rounded out.

It's like the story with the young carer, it looks like it is going to have a deeper meaning but never really happens.

And the script is pretty poor. Glenda Jackson's character plays a key role in this story but only in the closing minutes does she recover from having spent the whole film being an annoying old woman pulling odd faces.

A bit gutted is the best way to sum up how I felt at the end, although had run out of tissues.
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Solid, well acted human drama.
dweston-3866911 October 2023
Both Michael Caine(? Last film) and Glenda Jackson (her last film)give touching performances as husband and wife, in this nice, decent drama based on a true story.

I hope both Laura and I see out our days in a residential home by the seafront, like the one they live in here!!!

After a slew of hard going thriller/horrors- Nowhere, The Passenger it's nice to see something light and friendly- like a hot chocolate under the duvet on a cold wet day.

I took Mum to see this at the Curzon and she enjoyed it- seeing it at home with Dad in a fugue of cigarette smoke and heavy atmosphere would have dimmed the experience.

The general consensus of the elderly patrons at the screening was that it was a nice, moving film, well acted- I agree.
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7/10
Fabulous story. Caine is wonderful
stevelivesey-3718318 November 2023
The strengths of this movie are everything you would expect in any good movie. Namely, a good story, competently told with good/great acting performances.

Michael Caine in his his final role is fantastic as the OAP who goes AWOL. Glenda Jackson in her last film role before she died just before the films release is as good as ever. RIP Glenda. 4 Oscars between those two actors.

Some of the additional story points somehow detract from the overall feel of the central relationship. The friendship he strikes up with another troubles veteran, the young vet with one leg, the German veterans.

But let's not quibble about the service when we have such full stomachs after watching this.
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7/10
elderly Caine
SnoopyStyle12 November 2023
Bernard Jordan (Michael Caine) lives in a retirement home with his dying wife Irene (Glenda Jackson). The 70th Anniversary of D-Day is coming up and he's late to join the tour group to France. He decides to make the journey on his own. The retirement home reports the missing senior to the police.

This is based on a true story. The runaway aspect is not the most dramatic, but it is full of emotions. There are some compelling PTSD stories. Most of all, I am taken by Caine's fragility. He is getting up there in age. He is apparently retiring. This may be the last movie for both him and the late Glenda Jackson. If so, this is a fine curtain call for both of these British cinematic legends.
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7/10
Bon Appetit...!!!
PANDIAN12062118 January 2024
Michael Caine and Glenda Jackson are made for each other in heaven, every wrinkle, the look in their aging eyes and dialogue delivery of the script, an accolade to their belief in the story and each other... Especially as the dialogue uttered from one of the character in the film "Life is in the dog yet" makes him immortal until there is a medium called cinema...

Every aspect of this true story on film is captivating. All cast members without exception brilliantly portrayed...Thoughtful direction,moments of reality of war & The scene of a chance meeting with enemy veterans was amongst the most powerful...

"The world is always more palatable when seen through a glass"

"Don't start reading long books"

"Everyone does tidying up"

"All they want is a happy ending" Are the dialogues that connects us to the flick and do remains us the mortality of life... Overall a heartfelt feel good movie to cherish.
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8/10
One of the year's best
glasnost20019 October 2023
So much to enjoy in this film. Caine and Jackson are superb. Glenda died soon after completing work on the film and Michael has more than hinted that this might be his final film. That being the case, what a tremendous film for them both to go out on. The film is beautifully photographed on the English south coast and in France and has a gorgeous score by Craig Armstrong that supports and enhances the narrative. A story of determination, love, life, death and hope. The story is simple but none the worse for that. Set in 2014, Bernie and Rene live in a carehome in Hove. Bernie decides to attend the 70th anniversary of the D-Day landings in Normandy despite missing out on a place on the offical trips. So he gets a bus from Hove to Dover and travels by ferry to france. The film tells the story of the people he meets and places he goes. Poignent and sad but also life affirming this is a fabulous film. However, when we saw it we were the only people in the cinema and I read it has so far failed to find a distributor for the US market. I sense this could find it's audience when shown on TV and it wouldn't surprise if BBC are saving it to show next June as part of the 80th anniversary celebrations.
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7/10
Glenda and Michaels final movie, moving and respectful
cotta002-318-86511919 October 2023
I saw this movie at the cinema not knowing the story and was pleasantly surprised.

This was Michael Caine's final movie and he took the role because it was the story of a man his age and a good script. The other reason was to play alongside Glenda Jackson whom he had performed with her and they had a good friendship.

The movie tells the true story of WW2 naval veteran who missed the 70th D Day commemoration due to the nursing home applying too late. His wife (Glenda) pushes him to go and he packs a plastic carrier bag and off he goes with his walker to the bus stop to head to Normandy.

The movies flashes back to the actual landings and his wife's meeting and early days with him during the war.

The story is well told. It gives respect to the veterans and shows how they deal with the still haunting memories of the war.

Germans and alloed veterans come together sharing their experiences in a moving way.

Glenda Jackson died not long after the movie was shot and her performance was fantastic.

A final curtain for two legends of the screen.

Recommend for all to see.
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8/10
Poignant last performance by Glenda Jackson
dorothybishop-129117 October 2023
Warning: Spoilers
The cinema where I saw this on its opening night had many empty seats, and those that were filled were mostly occupied by people who, like me, appeared 70 or over. For this age group, the pairing of Michael Caine and Glenda Jackson is magical - we remember them as beautiful people in the 1970s, he portraying casually charming rogues, and she as a prickly but strong and beautiful woman. As we've grown older, so have they, and they portray the fragility and limitations of old age unflinchingly. The wrinkles and wobbles are not disguised, and the contrast between the characters now and the scenes when they were young (played by Will Fletcher and Laura Marcus) is striking.

There is a scene where Jackson's character, Rene, who has been having "funny turns" and angina, discusses with her carer her short life expectancy - stressing the difference between how you treat life when you are young and how it feels when you are near the end. This has added poignancy if you know that Jackson died shortly after the film was completed.

The big risk for this film is that it will slide into sentimentality. The plot, based on a true story, is simple enough. 89-year-old Bernard decides to go to France for the 70th anniversary D-day celebrations, leaving Rene alone in the flat they share in a care home by the seaside. He didn't get tickets to join an official group, but decides to set off alone, without telling the staff at the home, leading to some concern at his disappearance. He makes it to Dover, boards a ferry, is helped by another man who is part of a group, and they make a sobering visit to a cemetery where both have a grave to visit. When Bernard's adventure is discovered, he becomes a brief media sensation. This modest tale is supplemented by flashbacks that save the film from mawkishness. They show, on the one hand, the strength of the early relationship between Rene and Bernard, forged in the uncertainty of war, and the demons that Bernard still struggles with from his experience at the D-day landing. Although this could have been a celebration of British heroism in war, it is much more an examination of how the horrors of war leave a mark on young men who were on the battlefield. This comes across most clearly when a young soldier who is helping at the event tells Bernard how much he admires him, and Bernard quietly tells him to stop that, and to get help for himself - recognising that the soldier is still affected by his own traumas.

Finally, the relationship between Rene and Bernard, married for 50 years but still devoted to one another, is heartwarming, and they do make it believable. Jackson and Caine are simply wonderful as old people who know how to live life to the full, despite the depradations of age.
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7/10
Pretty good
martinrobertson30048218 October 2023
Had to see Michael Caines last movie. As he's been so overwelmed by the positive feedback that he's finally calling it a day. And it is a great film to end on. As he's at his best in the movie.

Its a heart warming true story that older viewers and Veterans should love. And it's given that extra boost by Michael Caines genuinely heartfelt performance that had me tearing up at the end.

Unfortunately the journey of Caines character is padded out by half the movie following his characters wife (Glenda Jackson) back in their old folks home. There are way too many of these scenes and they feel like they're only there to make the story movie-length.
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10/10
Simply Wonderful
downsroad15 October 2023
I sobbed throughout for many reasons. The futility of war, especially what's going on currently in the world. Our mortality, the process of aging, the remarkable acting. But best of all the fantastic use of the word Tosser by Caine !. Simple story, 1 big love affair and the terrors that war bring and how they mark people that fought in them. It won't be a success as ppl are enamoured with CGI, block busters and fantasies to give it a go. I'll recommend it to my kids just for the purpose of spending 2 hours of watching 2 artisans at work who have been criminally underused in recent years. Go see.
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7/10
Goof
ianmet-6514826 October 2023
Although Michael Caine reverts to type as a former soldier in real life (he served in Germany and Korea) when he salutes the Germans, he does salute in the correct naval fashion near the end of the film.

One continuity goof I spotted was that the black Afghanistan veteran first appears wearing a blazer with a regimental badge, then later when Bernard advises him (rather harshly) to get help for his PTSD the badge has disappeared from his blazer.

Being picky, I doubt that Bernard's girlfriend would have been allowed to run unchallenged from the armaments factory (where she appears to be packing cartridges) to watch the bombers go in over France - discipline was much stricter in those days and there would have been guards.
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5/10
Near identical in plot to "The Last Rifleman" but nowhere near as warm or charming.
danieljfarthing13 November 2023
By film-industry coincidence, true-tale Brit drama "The Great Escaper" is near identical in plot to the simultaneously released "The Last Rifleman", with Michael Caine (in what he SAYS will be his last role) as the 90+ WWII veteran who leaves his nursing home (and feisty wife Glenda Jackson in this case) to attend landing anniversary celebrations in Normandy - meeting various folk en route (in this case like John Standing) and becoming a news sensation. This one though (directed by Oliver Parker & written by William Ivory) is colder, harder & less charming than the other (and makes old age way less appealing btw). Of the two, "The Last Rifleman" is so much better.
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