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Battle of Britain - Second Flight (The fanedit)


An edit which streamlines the original film by removing the tedious and distracting love sub-plot of Colin and Maggie Harvey. Both characters are still featured and are acknowledged to be a couple, but they never get to meet up this time around.

A few additional trims have been made to improve pacing, these include:
Removal of the attack on the French airbase before Dowding meets the Under-Secretary of State for Air, short clips of which now play silently as he walks along the hall.
Extraneous bits of conversation, typically exposition that can be inferred from other bits of dialogue.
Other parts of scenes that feel as if they run too long, mostly parts at the beginnings and ends of scenes.
Some additional stylistic changes have been made too:
Desaturated nearly the entire film, lifting shadows brightness and increasing contrast to make image less flat

This (perhaps counter-intuitively) takes away a layer of artificiality, making the film feel less like a glossy (for 1969) production and a bit more like the contemporary footage one sees of the WWII period, helps also to disguise how lousy the Blu-ray transfer is!
Single exception is the Battle of the Air sequence towards the end, fades into colour (with increased shadow brightness) over the shot of St Paul's and hard cuts to monochrome after the final crash, makes this atypically presented scene stand out even more. It helps that there are no famous faces visible during this time to subconsciously remind one this is a narrative feature, for a few minutes the film becomes pure cinema.
Covered coloured bars (above and below text) during opening credits with solid white equivalents, recoloured "Battle" and "Britain" white too
Mixed together audio from the William Walton and Ron Goodwin soundtracks to my preference (e.g. Walton opening credits but Goodwin end credits). Three soundtrack options, the hybrid, Walton-only and Goodwin-only.

https://fanedit.org/forums/threads/battle-of-britain-second-flight.28558/

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First, full disclosure: I am the one who first suggested the need for a much needed edit of The Battle of Britain, leading to this edit for which we have to be immensely grateful. I made some suggestions as things went along, although the lion's share of the result is entirely down to him (or her). In this edit, as already noted. the film, formerly somewhat draggy and near-fatally slowed by a romantic sub-plot, has been entirely rescued in a sensitive and fastidious fashion. The result now firmly belongs to the pantheon of great British war films in a way which both looks back to a grand cinematic tradition as well as being quite obviously a product of the imminent 70's.. If we lose some of the characterisation of a central couple by the tightening, then that 's no handicap. In fact it can argued that if this movie is more a portrait of community mood and of a whole nation at war, represented by the few, it is right that no one person need dominate the action. Having said that, I am glad that the editor did not cut back on Pilot Andy's (Ian McShane)'s subplot. In discovering how the blitz has had specific consequences, his sequences on the streets successfully 'ground' the main story above in a way I think necessary. The image is very good clear, and sharp. I was first dubious about the decision to desaturate as too drastic (I've seen one or two others which have been done over in this way and which results were, to my mind, unnecessary, unsatisfactory or even represent vandalism) but have since been completely won over in this instance. The majority of the film, now in black and white, inevitably recalls the grand days of 50's British war film, making even more pointed the presence of Squadron Leader Canfield (Caine)'s dog Blackie as a reference back to the canine of Guy Gibson in The Dam Busters (1955). The decision to keep the final aerial battle in bright colour seems to me, absolutely right and inspired, It makes of that standout something distinct and more moving at the same time. helped of course by Walton's inestimable music. At the end of this with the hard cut back to black and white, the viewer, as well as the deflated Nazis, are abruptly bought down to earth. Truly this film's finest few minutes. The score choices in this edit are also noteworthy. Walton famously finished the score for the film but most of it was jettisoned by the producers to be replaced, in all but one case by Ron Goodwin. This edit does the sensible thing and offers three choices on separate tracks: that of Goodwin, Walton or a hybrid version. The important thing for is that at last we have the privilege of hearing a score by one of England's leading composers, complete, back where it was intended. Many will prefer the hybrid, certainly for a first listen. But Goodwin, if he has his moments, is sometimes guilty of being bombastic, and no Walton; purists will want the real thing.

The only thing I disagreed with was the position of the main title. I still prefer the version where it appears at the end, just before the roll call of the distinguished dead. I always felt that it was a visual redundancy up front immediately after the words "the Battle of Britain is to begin". That minor niggle is all I can find in the whole film. The result here is an overwhelming success, never boring, where every cameo brings its own memorable lines. It all certainly makes a change from edits of the DC, Marvel and Star Wars universe.. In short, thoroughly recommended!

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Sounds great! Where can it be watched? Is there a torrent?

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It really is a good watch, couldn't believe how much better it made the film... to get it, visit the link in my first message here and then send a private message to ParanoidAndroid, the editor for a link. There are no charges obviously.

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Thanks, and down with romantic subplots!

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Other than excising the romance subplot, none of this seems like a good idea.

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I wouldn't watch the original again very readily now I have this cut. Why have cider when one can have champagne?

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