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  • Warning: Spoilers
    The 'Virgin Soldiers' movie was quite a frank piece of theatre. It contained all of the usual pathos of the book, but seemed to go more for a 'straight' piece of entertainment rather than a comedy.

    Nigel Davenport carries a very strong character, enduing his roles with genuine gravitas. Here, he brings a sense of military authority to the often chaotic incursions of the far-east. By the end of the second-world-war, Britain was a spent Imperial force. This was obvious to ordinary squaddies long before it dawned upon the high command. Daveport's jaded but determined character here is perfectly believable as the conscientious sergeant looking-out for his green recruits. In fact, I find the movie far more plausible than many of the American Vietnam war movies, but that may be just a cultural interpretation thing.

    The original novels were a lot more bawdy and a great deal funnier than the events depicted in the movie. In fact, I think 'Onward Virgin Soldiers' is still one of the funniest books I have ever read. Some of the narrative had me in stitches.

    Watch the movie, by all means. But read the books as well.
  • I remember first seeing this as a ten year old in the mid 1970s and being very confused , you see I was under the impression that this was going to be a war film , but was disappointed there wasn`t much fighting in it . I was also utterly confused by the tone of the film as there was bits that I took to be funny but didn`t make me laugh

    I did see THE VIRGIN SOLDIERS a couple of more times when I was much older and understood it better , this is a black comedy , a very black one about the exploits of private Briggs a young soldier doing his national service out in Malaya during the state of emergency in the early 1950s and I guess it`s a fairly good indication of what life was like for a great number of young lads inducted into the British army at the time . If the film has a problem being viewed today it`s down to the fact that it`s difficult not to judge it against Vietnam war films like PLATOON ( Both films feature a plot between two sergeants who hate one another ) and FULL METAL JACKET ( Another black comedy dealing with a conflict in the far east ) , but THE VIRGIN SOLDIERS should be judged on its own merits . I found it as an adult both funny and scathing
  • boblam_6 February 2012
    Having seen this again i must say it gets better. I view it from the perspective of a soldier serving in Malaya, as it was at the time, in the mid-1950's the period in which the film is set. So much of the behaviour is very true to the real thing. In fact i almost see it as a commentary on army life at the time. The plot is almost credible , you would have to have been there. The 'atmosphere' of the period and place is captured in the b+w format. If anyone wants to know what army life was like in mid 1950's Malaya then this film will tell you more than any academic study. It certainly reflects the peculiar fun and horrors of National Service life. The plot thins towards the end but what precedes it makes viewing worth while.
  • Not a normal war movie, this is a well acted study about the unpredictable fortunes of life. A British Army private in Singapore during the Malaysian uprising experiences the boredom of garrison duty, the search for sex and love, and finally the terror of combat. The movie has many interesting twists and turns that illustrate the random quality of luck. The private's girlfriend finally decides to surrender her virginity - only mistakenly offers it to the wrong soldier! Soldiers die accidently, without reason. And when the private panics, and flees combat, he ends up becoming a hero! At the end of the movie the private paraphrases his discoveries - "That's life, isn't it".
  • 'The Virgin Soldiers' concerns a collection of new recruits (in national service) and their exploits in a far-off, exotic Singapore. Deals with the endless boredom, fear of fighting an enemy they had no knowledge or concept of (they were never meant to have seen any action) and the endless pursuit of sexual conquests. Sterling cast of Lynn Redgrave, Hywel Bennett and Nigel Davenport. Based on the highly successful novel of the same name.
  • I am just watching this again, only for the second time, since I first saw it in 1970 as a fresh faced 18 year old. It's on Movies 4 Men, which says something I think. It's amazing how many famous face are here. Hywel Bennett is the star in this movie. He was big in the 60's. The story covers the antics of young men doing their national service out in Singapore, with all of the angst that young men have about their sexuality and life in general. The soldiers are not front line infantry but clerks. Warren Clerk and Christepher Timothy stand out. Disgruntled NCO's and snotty officers are part of the background. It's not a great film but it's well made and interesting. I give it 7/10 because of the memories of sitting in a cinema and being able to smoke a cigarette with normal people. Never see those days again ....
  • So long since seeing this film I can hardly remember it. However, I have since learnt that a very young David Bowie has a tiny cameo. It's on Youtube if you're interested.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I remember well this popular film from 1969, following in the wake of a very popular book by Leslie Thomas.I was just young enough to miss national service so the comic episodes that mingle through the muddled rambling army barracks story now as then sort of fly past me. I remember long queues when this film came out and the howls of laughter from that first screening, somehow time has not been very kind to the film which now seems very false and the tragic moments bad bed fellows with the carry on humour of the gags. Perhaps i just have a very unrealistic impression of army life from seeing to many war films. Perhaps national service was just as up surd as presented here and the book certainly spoke to many,but times and attitudes change with time and 1969 is a long way from Malaya 1951.Yet history tells us 519 British personnel were killed and 2500 wounded during that now forgotten foot note to the twentieth century.
  • kyuujo20 July 2006
    I saw this film on late-night TV in the 1970's, a few years after doing a tour in Vietnam as a 20-year-old GI in the US Army. Even though it's a different time and a different war, I really thought "The Virgin Soldiers" captured a lot of the feeling of a young, western soldier serving in a confusing, brutal, sometimes even humorous Asian war zone. One of the most realistic things was, these guys were young, like most soldiers in most wars, kind of scared, and having to face the reality of shooting the guy in the other uniform before he shoots you. And I definitely recognized a fair number of the characters, especially the sergeants. War movies often stereotype or simplify the NCO's. In reality, and in this movie, some of them are bullies, some are flat-out cowards, and some are competent, quietly heroic people who do their best to keep their troops alive in the combat zone. War is not a good thing, but how people cope (or don't cope) with it will always be a fascinating topic. I highly recommend this film...wish it was on tape or DVD.
  • Let's get the bad stuff out of the way first, shall we? The production values are, at best, mediocre. The film was shot on a very low budget. The characters are severely stereotypical, from the two goof-off buddies always looking to get laid, to the overbearing sergeant, to the bumbling officer in charge. You have seen these characters before in MASH, GOMER PYLE, BILKO, Soldier in the Rain, and others. And did I mention the battle scenes were not as realistic as the ones we used to make up in West Paterson playing in the woods as kids? Despite these shortcomings, the film is a wonderful success because of the writing in the script. The story is not only believable, but actually contained events that many GIs went through in the late 60s and early 70s. It was reminiscent of the film Biloxi Blues, which came much later, but imitated several of the scenes in this film. There are some unforgettable hilarious scenes in this movie; especialy one that I will not spoil for you, that was imitated later by Dustin Hoffman in a famous bedroom scene. A real treat for those who served in the military during the late 60s, early 70s. You will need an interpreter, however, because there are no subtitles for the British form of English. Quite funny, nevertheless.
  • As a piece of semi-biographical history of recent colonial history in Malaya soon after World War II, you could probably do much, much worse than to see this rollicking black comedy. But, this is not a war story to be compared with Platoon (1986) and such like: this a young man's story where war, although present, is something to be avoided, at all costs.

    The film is distinctive for a number of reasons: it deals with a politically painful episode in British history – the communist insurgency in Malaya; it was shot on location – Singapore and Malaysia – barely ten years after the British departed en masse; it has a bevy of experienced actors who fill the roles of tight-lipped colonials with flair and even brilliance; it was fun to spot three bit players who went on to stardom later in life (read through the full cast list); and, above all, it's a very personal story about a young man (Hywel Bennett as Pvt. Brigg) and his coming of age while serving as a National Service conscript.

    Having served, myself, in the Australian colonial administration in Papua-New Guinea in the early 1960s, I can assure viewers that much of what you see in this movie is more or less what I experienced and observed where I was. And, for what it's worth, I can also relate to Pvt. Brigg's story in many ways...

    In a nutshell, Brigg is enamored by the daughter (Phillipa played by Lynn Redgrave) of RSM Raskin (Nigel Patrick, in a standout performance). But, Brigg is also very much interested in a local prostitute, Juicy Lucy (the sublimely effervescent Tsai Chin), mostly as a means to lose his virginity. Phillipa, for her part, is also determined to lose her virginity to whomever – largely as a response to her father's disparaging comments about her sexual orientation. In the wings, so to speak, there is Top Sergeant Driscoll (the ever-so-suave Nigel Davenport), always ready to come to the aid of a female in, er, distress. How the shenanigans of that quartet pan out forms the substance of Brigg's story – a deliciously ironic narrative that guarantees viewer satisfaction.

    As a backdrop to that story, the gradual deterioration of British rule intrudes (riots, communist insurgents, a derailed train, attack and counter-attack) to show (mostly comedic) vignettes of many other characters who form the group of service men within which Brigg serves. For example, I was almost helpless with laughter as I watched the inevitable, drunken deterioration of the men and women at the local mess hall dance: déjà vu, and then some. Be sure to watch and listen carefully as officers carefully navigate the hall, ignoring and stepping over drunken, supine revelers with skill as they discuss coming action. And, quite daring for the times, the antics of two gay recruits throughout this film is a continual comedic delight.

    The full color photography captures the tropics perfectly; the dialog is excellent; the action scenes and editing more than adequate; the acting is, for me, spot on – and redolent of real people I mixed with, long ago; and even the bold, loud marching sound track suited the story.

    If you're getting on in years, like myself, then you'll relate to those times depicted with ease, I would think; if you're young and ready to change the world, see how these young men did it sixty years ago. Either way, this is a movie I recommend highly for young and old adults alike.

    Give this one a good, solid eight, for sure.

    September 30, 2012
  • I had assumed that The Virgin Soldiers would be a light-hearted, bawdy slice of British sexploitation in the vein of the Carry On, Confessions and 'Adventures of…' series, but it turned out to be a far more realistic affair, and actually proved all the better for it. The film stars Hywel Bennett as Brigg, a young conscript in the National Service, stationed in Singapore during the early 1950s. Working as a clerk, Brigg hopes that the only action he will see is with the local ladies and a sergeant's daughter, Phillipa (Lynn Redgrave), but he finds himself in mortal danger when he and his fellow conscripts see active duty against rioters and bandits.

    While there are some mildly funny and a few sexy moments to be had, the film works best as a touching coming of age drama and a poignant anti-war film: as Brigg counts down the days to his return to good old Blighty, he makes the transition from untainted youth to worldly-wise young man, experiencing camaraderie, love (of sorts), fear, and even death, forced to kill or be killed. Bennett is brilliant in his role, displaying just the right amount of wide-eyed innocence, and he is given able support from a raft of familiar British faces, including Nigel Davenport as Sgt. Driscoll, Christopher Timothy (All Creatures Great and Small) as Cpl. Brook, Geoffrey Hughes (Coronation Street) as Lantry, Jack Shepherd (Wycliffe) as Sergeant Wellbeloved, and Wayne Sleep as Villiers, the toughest soldier in the platoon (nah, just kidding).
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Mr H.Bennett is outstanding as the eponymous virgin soldier serving in the British Army during the euphemistically titled "Malayan Emergency". With a group of fine young actors many of whom found subsequent fame he is the eternal "Squaddie",faux - cynical,anxious to find his place in the hierarchy he finds himself him,equally determined to enjoy himself wherever and whenever possible. In 1951 England,few conscripts would have heard of Singapore except perhaps from their relatives who had served in the second world war. Certainly none would ever have found their way there or even point it out on the map. But there they were,old enough to die for their country but not old enough to vote,as they used to say. With messrs Davenport and Patrick as the senior NCO's,the soldiers somehow find their way through the army's labyrinthine structure, customs and mores and most of them end up older and wiser. National Service soldiers weren't wanted by the army as they lacked will and ambition other than to get some in and get out asap,most lockers had a calendar inside the door where days were carefully marked off and time left to serve,first slowly then,miraculously,rather more quickly,passed. Of course the film's title,and it's raison d'etre concerns Mr Bennett's deflowering,not,as you might expect at the hands(if that's the right word) of an Asian sex - worker,but with Miss Redgrave as his superior's daughter,determined to bad a bit of rough in order to upset her pa. But his silliness does not detract from an accurate and piquant look at a long - departed age that sociologists are only just becoming to show an interest in,an age where social differences did not necessarily mean class - hatred from either side of the barriers,where society was not,in fact,as polarised as it is today after over sixty years of liberal enlightenment later. If you don't believe me,try walking around holding hands with a fellow soldier.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Mother and daughter, Rachel Kempson and Lynn Redgrave, play mother and daughter in Virgin Soldiers, a tale about a group of young British soldiers in Malaysia doing their national service at the time of the Communist rebellion there. The Virgin Soldiers are seen through the eyes of Hywel Bennett who narrates the film.

    His crowd are not World War II veterans, they grew up during the war and the blitz and are doing the national service in the hopes they'll never have to do any real fighting. In fact going into battle with this lot worries the hell out of the veteran British army people, the career soldiers such as Nigel Patrick the sergeant major of the regiment who Kempson is married to.

    But in addition to worrying about the quality of his troops, Patrick is worried about his daughter's aloofness from the opposite sex. Her frigid behavior has him concerned so much so he commands her to attend a regimental dance.

    She meets Bennett there, but their inexperience in these matters lead to a disaster. Never mind both of them get over the hump so to speak with another sergeant Nigel Davenport for her and the best whore in Singapore Juicy Lucy played by Tsai Chin.

    In the meantime the Communist guerrillas have come out of the back country and are making some real war on the British. The troops get battle tested and of course some don't make it. Check out the death of Christopher Timothy, a really tragic occurrence, a needless death of an untrained man in a bad situation.

    In the year of Stonewall in the USA, the British cinema acknowledged the presence of gay people in their armed services. Gregory Phillips and Wayne Sleep find each other, in fact we know about them within the first 10 minutes of the film. Funny thing is that it doesn't particularly bother their fellow king and country volunteers and the brass know they have to make due with what they have and can't worry about whom they kanoodle with.

    Virgin Soldiers is a good film, remarkably funny and sad at the same time. You're not sure how you should feel and I can tell you that you will feel both at the same time.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Author Leslie Thomas had a massive selling book in the 1960s with The Virgin Soldiers, a semi-autobiographical recounting of some of his experiences as a conscripted soldier posted unwillingly to the Far East to carry out his National Service. Like all real-life experiences, there was a mixture of the happy and sad, the funny and tragic. And the title served triple duty - it was provocative (and therefore good for sales), it was accurate (and the losing of that virginity forms one of the episodes), and it was metaphorical (for the events of the book also represent a coming of age, a rite of passage for the young conscripts).

    Thomas was known at the time primarily as a comic novelist and it is right that the film, based solidly on his book and featuring some wonderful performances from young British actors (particular Hywel Bennett in the lead), is also often very funny. But there is also great depth to it, and it is well worth a visit. As is the book.
  • I loved both the film and the book of "The Virgin Soldiers", but I personally believe that "The Green Virgin Corporal" is a better book and would make an excellent film. The "Green Virgin Corporal" is a story very similar to the "The Virgin Soldiers" and was about a naïve corporal who served in Malaya about the same time as time described in "The Virgin Soldiers". The book "The Green Virgin Corporal" is available through Amazon Books