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The Brylcreem Boys Poster

The Brylcreem Boys

1996 | 106m | English

(646 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

In 1941, as part of an effort to remain strictly neutral, the Dublin government made a deal with both Berlin and London whereby any soldier, sailor or pilot captured on Irish soil, whether of German or Allied forces, would be interned for the duration of the war. What the Irish failed to tell was that they would intern everybody in the same camp. It is here that Canadian pilot Miles Keogh and German pilot Rudolph Von Stegenbeck meet after a fight in which both their planes were downed.
Release Date: Nov 14, 1996
Director: Terence Ryan
Writer: Terence Ryan, Jamie Brown
Genres: Drama, Romance, War
Keywords
Production Companies
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 03, 2025
Entered: Apr 29, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Angus Macfadyen Rudolph von Stegenbek
Billy Campbell Miles Keogh (as Bill Campbell)
John Gordon Sinclair Richard Lewis
William McNamara Sam Gunn
Chris 'Kit' Ryan Colin Parker (as Christopher Ryan)
Jean Butler Mattie Guerin
Gabriel Byrne Commandant O'Brien
Hal Fowler Bunty Winthrop
Joe McGann Captain Deegan
Oliver Tobias Hans Jorg Wolff
Marc Sinden Senior Allied Officer White
Jérôme Pradon Ricard
Peter Woodward Ernst Stossel
Anders Jillybo Sten Larsen (as J. Anders Jillebo)
Alistair McLeod Sergeant Marshall (as Alister McLeod)
Tim Hayes Sergeant Walsh
B.J. Hogg Sean
Trevor Nelson Seamus (as Colom Doherty)
Gedeon Burkhard Krach
Marek Vašut Krach
Rupert Wickham Preuss
Mathew Idiens Festner
Magnus McLeod Olenski
Matthew Penry-Davey Bauer
Jack O'Dwyer Michael
Áine Ní Mhuirí Nonie
Alan Barry Mr Guerin
Niels-Bruno Schmidt Schmidt
Anthony Madigan Policeman
Conor Breen 1st Guard
Name Job
Terence Ryan Director, Writer
Susan Morrall Additional Writing
Ray Freeborn Production Manager
Jamie Brown Screenplay
Name Title
Kristi Prenn Executive Producer
Terence Ryan Producer
Paul Madigan Producer
Alan Latham Producer
Mohammed Yusef Executive Producer
Bernie Stampfer Producer
Jamie Brown Producer
Gabriel Byrne Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 2 6 1
2024 5 3 7 1
2024 6 2 5 1
2024 7 2 6 1
2024 8 3 8 2
2024 9 2 3 1
2024 10 2 4 1
2024 11 1 3 1
2024 12 1 3 1
2025 1 2 4 1
2025 2 1 2 1
2025 3 1 1 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 0 1 0
2025 9 1 2 0
2025 10 2 2 1

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Reviews

CharlesTatum
2.0

No, "The Brylcreem Boys" is not a documentary about men's hair dressing in the 1940's, nor does it feature actual boys as main characters. It is a poorly done slap in the face of those involved in World War II Europe. Canadian R.A.F. pilot Myles Keogh (Bill Campbell) and his crew are shot down ov ... er what they think is France. They are arrested and transported to the local Irish prisoner of war camp. It seems Ireland is neutral in the war, holding captured British soldiers on one side of the camp, and captured Nazi soldiers on the other side. One of the Nazis is Rudolph (Angus Macfayden), and both Myles and Rudolph fall for local gal Mattie (Jean Butler). Before you ask how Myles and Rudolph could fall for Mattie while locked away in prison, I'll tell you. It seems prison commander O'Brien (Gabriel Byrne, who coproduced this silliness) lets all the prisoners out on day release passes, as long as everyone agrees to return at night. Crazy and nutty, huh? Myles and Mattie, er, discover each other's Blarney Stone, Rudolph turns into one of the really good, nice, polite Nazis, and soon a poorly executed prison break is on. The film makers had such a great opportunity here, it is too bad they squandered it on the sappy Myles/Mattie/Rudy love triangle. An Irish prison containing British and Nazi prisoners? One character calls it a "madhouse," and it should have been. I settled back for some "M*A*S*H"/"Catch-22"-style satire, but by the end of the film I would have been happy with some kicky doofus "Hogan's Heroes"/"Major Dad"-style hi-jinks. Campbell is a blank. He looks good, but is given nothing to do. "Rudolph the Nice Nazi" Macfayden is a villain, then not, then a villain, then not, then... Butler used to be in "Riverdance" so be warned that spontaneous yet flawlessly executed Irish jigging suddenly breaks out midway through the film. William McNamara plays an annoying American movie star, and Byrne just looks dire. The film ends with the most depressing "what ever happened to...?" coda since "American Graffiti," and I was emotionally empty. Sure, you have seen better films about Ireland ("The Quiet Man," "Cowboys & Angels," countless others), but when the British escape plan hinges on getting the Irish guards really drunk, 'cause ALL Irish are a bunch of swarthy alcoholics, you realize one half-baked idea does not make a good film. This story is 80 proof positive of that.

Jan 07, 2025