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Don't Look Now... We're Being Shot At!
Overlook Pick

Don't Look Now... We're Being Shot At!

79
User Score1,470 ratings
TMDB 7.916+19662h 12mFrench
ComedyWar

Synopsis

During World War II, two French civilians and a downed British Bomber Crew set out from Paris to cross the demarcation line between Nazi-occupied Northern France and the South. From there they will be able to escape to England. First, they must avoid German troops – and the consequences of their own blunders.

Director
Gérard OuryFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Les Films Corona3 production companies
Release
December 8, 1966Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 60
Bourvil
Bourvil
Augustin Bouvet
Louis de Funès
Louis de Funès
Stanislas Lefort
Terry-Thomas
Terry-Thomas
Reginald Brook
Claudio Brook
Claudio Brook
Peter Cunningham
Mike Marshall
Mike Marshall
Alan MacIntosh
Marie Dubois
Marie Dubois
Juliette
Pierre Bertin
Pierre Bertin
Juliette's Grandfather
Andréa Parisy
Andréa Parisy
Marie-Odile

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Feb 10, 2023

I'd watched this entertainingly farcical French wartime comedy for about half hour before I realised that the chap who looked like Terry-Thomas was, actually, Terry-Thomas! He, like everyone else here, is in his element as an RAF bomber crew find themselves shot down over Paris and dependent on a rather disparate selection of people to try and keep them from the hands of the Gestapo, and to help smuggle them out of the city and to some semblance of safety. It has all the hallmarks of a slightly less bawdy "Carry-On" film with some characterful performances from Bouvril ("Bouvet") and the increasingly amusing Louis de Funès as the suitably over-the-top orchestral maestro "Lefort". Neither gent is really equipped to guide our hapless trio of airmen out of their own bathrooms, much less from the grasp of the Nazis - but with the help of some silk parachutes, cunning disguises, nuns and horses - well who'd bet against them? Unlike many other films of this genre, this is actually funny. Sure, you can readily predict what is likely to happen, and some of the misunderstandings do have you wondering how was that even possible, but the ensemble cast including an on form Andréa Parisy and Benno Sterzenbach as the (no so) menacing "Maj. Achbach" give this just a soupçon of class that belies it's roots. Dated? Well yes, but still surprisingly enjoyable to watch.

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