tavernier wrote:Ah, dragging in Mein Fuhrer -- the ultimate insult!
The
Telegraph usually goes hilariously over the top when it comes to films about the Irish-British conflict that might possibly be perceived as being sympathetic to the Irish. They were so outraged by
Michael Collins (or, I suspect, the idea of
Michael Collins rather than the actual film) that they ran two leading articles calling for it to be banned.
Amusingly enough, its then film critic Quentin Curtis admired it enormously, and said so (in the same edition that featured the second "ban this pro-terrorist filth" leader) - which, unsurprisingly, meant that all the ads were headed with a prominent rave from the
Telegraph. And I bet the publicists at Warner Bros had a good laugh about it when they signed off the proofs!
(The late Alexander Walker - a native Ulster Protestant - could also generally be relied on to foam at the mouth in similar circumstances. That said,
Michael Collins was one of the rare exceptions!)