I really wonder if the ones obsessed with homosexuality in this movie ever bothered to find out the context of Charters and Caldicott. (I hate admitting it, but most of the nummies who think these two men are gay are dumb, clueless Americans.)
These two men are friends, old school Englishmen who live to watch cricket. Their lives revolve around cricket matches. But they are still very proper Englishmen; notice how they dress in tuxedos for dinner in the inn where they're stuck after the avalanche; they're the only ones all dressed up for it.
Their old school ways include courtesy and modesty. When the maid, whose room they got because the inn was full up via guests of the avalanche, comes in to change her clothes, they're embarrassed. NOT because they are gay, but because the maid, who seems to be a blooming young thing, comes across to the stuffy Englishmen as a bit saucy.
They're embarrassed to be seen in their nightclothes in front of her, because one doesn't do that in front of strangers. They share her single bed because it's the only bed available in the inn due to the overcrowding. They're sharing a newspaper together, looking for cricket scores. They don't think there is anything odd or unusual about two men sharing a bed - this was back in the good ol' days when everything wasn't bizarrely sexualized. Men could be roommates and friends, and share a home without the dimwits automatically assuming it meant they were gay.
Yes, they are two rather odd ducks, but THEY don't think they're odd. In this movie, done while Hitler was in power but before WW2 started, Charters and Caldicott are stand-ins for old fashioned English virtues. Sure that includes some rather eccentric behavior, but that has always been an English tradition. It's part of what's endearing about Britain. Notice that the two men always have funny quips about the oddness of foreigners, while they're pretty obtuse about their own quirks.
The two men throughout represent Britian at its best and most unusual. This makes more sense when you consider the Bavarian type country they're stuck in. Notice also the spies and other underhanded dealings going on around them, then think of Nazi Germany.
Charters and Caldicott are odd, endearing, but singular Englishmen who are close friends bound by their Britishness and their love of cricket. They are FRIENDS. They'd be horrified by the stupid, cloddish assumption that men cannot be friends, but then, this idea probably comes from idiots who have no idea what a close friendship looks like since they never had one themselves.
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