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Caius-4
Reviews
Home Alone (1990)
Another Christmas miracle?
The only fact which should make this feature a holiday season movie is a "Christmas miracle" that must have happened to the two burglars. In real life, the treatment which they received from the little boy home alone would have resulted in multiple injuries, and they would have been simply not capable to walk away.
TV shows are known to have been banned for showing violence much milder than in this movie; however, this movie continues to be shown at holiday seasons as a classic piece of family entertainment. Something must be wrong here.
Operation Crossbow (1965)
Suspense, not history...
Interest in the history of German rocket development is not recommended for enjoying this movie, as many details are presented wrongly. SPOILER ALERT! Please correct me if I am wrong, but I have not seen another reference of the famous German female test pilot Hanna Reitsch participating in the Fieseler Fi 103 (V-1) development program, nor heard of a manned V-1 prototype before Otto Skorzeny proposed the Fi 103R (which was not used), the German analog to the Yokosuka Ohka kamikaze aircraft.
Most people who were killed in the RAF Bomber Command raid to Peenemünde in August 1943 were prisoners of war and forced labour, but the movie suggests all were top German officials who received a military burial. RAF Bomber Command was a huge mass and was easily detected by German air defence radars, so that its attacks were preceded by air raid warnings a couple of hours in advance, and they could not make a surprise attack as shown in the movie.
The huge underground plant to where the production (but not testing) of V-2 rockets was transferred later, existed in reality, indeed, but it was never seriously bombed. The first V-2 used in action was aimed at Paris, not London.
On the positive side, however, the movie shows rather accurately what the impact of a V-2 looked and sounded like, its supersonic approach rumble arriving only after the explosion.
Gaas! Gaas! Gaas! (1931)
Background information and plot
In the late 1920's and early 1930's, a discussion about the nature of the inevitable new war appeared in Estonian press. As elsewhere, it was considered that the two most important weapons in the new war would be aircraft and war gases. This estimate was based on the bitter experiences of World War I. There was a need to inform people about the importance and means of gas protection, and so this movie was conceived.
At first, a chemist holds a brief lecture about different war gases, their effects and means of protection. The viewer can see gas masks of various kinds and how to use them. Then we see the gas-protection organization practising: giving medical aid to gas casualties, degassing countryside, and even a sports competition in gas masks and protective clothing.
Most of the movie is a vivid "what if" scenario about a gas attack in the new war. Enemy airplanes penetrate Estonian airspace and head to the larger towns. At the same time, enemy troops cross the border and launch a gas attack on land. Defensive battles break out, in which the enemy gasses the defenders, but in vain as the latter use gas protection measures and, not affected by the poisons, they stop the enemy advance.
At the same time, Estonian airplanes take off for the defence. An air battle follows, in which several enemy planes are shot down. Anti-aircraft artillery and machine guns (their crew properly protected against gas) take their toll, too, but still three planes manage to break through and drop gas bombs to Tallinn, the capital.
The effects of gas and various countermeasures are shown graphically. We see how a simple respirator made of moist cloth and earth can save lives; how hurrying in a gas-rich air brings quick suffocation; how firefighters, army and gas-protection force evacuate people, give medical aid and degas the town.
Citing the concluding caption, "Finally, the enemy was chased away by our brave air force. But, unfortunately, there were victims among those people who had not been prepared against a gas attack."
As a final remark it must be said that war gases were not used in the World War II, though all nations were prepared against it, and that one of the streets shown several times in the movie (Niguliste St.) was burnt out 13 years later in a Soviet incendiary raid.