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Get Some In!

  • Fernsehserie
  • 1975–1978
  • 30 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,9/10
283
IHRE BEWERTUNG
David Janson and Tony Selby in Get Some In! (1975)
Trailer for this comedy show
trailer wiedergeben2:33
1 Video
99+ Fotos
Komödie

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzu1955 called up into R.A.F. a group of young men find it hard to cope,especially with a corporal who is unhappy and takes it out on them.1955 called up into R.A.F. a group of young men find it hard to cope,especially with a corporal who is unhappy and takes it out on them.1955 called up into R.A.F. a group of young men find it hard to cope,especially with a corporal who is unhappy and takes it out on them.

  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Tony Selby
    • Gerard Ryder
    • David Janson
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,9/10
    283
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Tony Selby
      • Gerard Ryder
      • David Janson
    • 22Benutzerrezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Episoden34

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    Videos1

    Get Some In!: The Complete Series
    Trailer 2:33
    Get Some In!: The Complete Series

    Fotos229

    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    + 225
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung99+

    Ändern
    Tony Selby
    Tony Selby
    • Corporal Marsh
    • 1975–1978
    Gerard Ryder
    • Matthew Lilley
    • 1975–1978
    David Janson
    David Janson
    • Ken Richardson
    • 1975–1978
    Brian Pettifer
    Brian Pettifer
    • Bruce Leckie…
    • 1975–1978
    Robert Lindsay
    Robert Lindsay
    • Jakey Smith
    • 1975–1977
    Lori Wells
    • Alice Marsh
    • 1975–1978
    Nigel Pegram
    Nigel Pegram
    • Group-Captain Ruark
    • 1977–1978
    David Quilter
    • Flight-Lieutenant Grant
    • 1975–1977
    Karl Howman
    • Jakey Smith
    • 1978
    John D. Collins
    John D. Collins
    • Squadron-Leader Baker…
    • 1975–1977
    Jenny Cryst
    • Corporal Wendy
    • 1977–1978
    Mark Dunn
    • The Erk
    • 1975–1977
    Robert Fountain
    • The Erk
    • 1975–1977
    Richard Mottau
    • The Erk
    • 1975–1977
    Philip O'Neil
    • The Erk
    • 1975–1977
    Oscar Peck
    • The Erk
    • 1975–1977
    George Innes
    George Innes
    • Flight-Sergeant Wells
    • 1977
    Michael Bunker
    • The Erk
    • 1976–1977
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen22

    6,9283
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    jocelyncarr

    Odd

    I find it odd that people are raving about this show. What I can remember of it was turgid and predictable, but people profess to think it marvellous despite the fact that it has been practically 30 years since they saw it. Good memories or rose tinted spectacles. My guess would be the latter. Also most of the comments on this page are bemoaning the fact that this isn't repeated due to political correctness. It may also not be reproduced on DVD since it isn't exactly Fawlty Towers. They haven't had any problem putting Love Thy Neighbour out on satellite television but you will see that the appalling Mixed Blessings, about an interracial couple and the "hilarious" angry reaction of their families and the general public never sees the light of day. Stuff goes because its rubbish.
    enochsneed

    My old Dad swore by this one

    When this was first broadcast in the mid-1970's it quickly became one of my Dad's favourites. He had completed his own National Service with the RAF at exactly this time so he could sympathise with the 'erks' and what they endured under Corporal Marsh. He said his introduction to service life was arriving at an RAF station in the pouring rain after travelling from one end of England to the other (taking him at the base nearest to his home would, of course, defy service logic). He was given two damp blankets, and shown to an empty hut - and I mean empty, not even a bed. He lay on the floor in his wet clothes and didn't close an eye all night.

    Eventually, after training, he was posted overseas and it is fascinating to look in his photo album and realise these were the dying days of the British Empire: Palestine, South Africa, RAF Khartoum, even Iraq ("Saddam knew my father, father knew Saddam..."). On one occasion he was with a small patrol in the desert. They camped for the night and woke the next morning to find themselves lying on the open sand. Tents, equipment, anything they weren't actually wearing had gone and they never knew a thing. He said they could steal your socks without taking your boots off.

    None of this has anything to do with reviewing the programme, but it does show it was grounded in real life. In its day it seemed very funny but nowadays it would be frowned on to call someone 'poofhouse' week after week on prime-time. I don't know why people can't see this as reflecting the ignorance of the person who uses this type of abuse - they insist it makes the show itself 'homophobic'. It was well-written and acted and there are far worse quality programmes around today.
    6lancer165

    Marmite maybe

    This is perhaps only viewed as a somewhat nostalgic memory. I was a volunteer in the army starting life as a boy soldier engineer at Chepstow but due to being thick moving on to the cavalry in what was then known as the ROYAL SCOTS GREYS. My training was at Catterick and while the live in barracks were new much of our time was spent in the wooden hut like buildings learning things like Guard duty. Yes her we would meet the character represented by Alfred Marks but thankfully not the drunk liable to destroy a career of a just starting soldier. I must admit that I never met a Corporal Marsh type in my training days as a boy soldier or my Catterick days. I was and do not remember a swearing at me or us instructor or a bully so cannot fully appreciate the humour of such comedies other than as a stereotypical effort. corporal Marsh was no Sgt Major Shut up Williams as in 'It Ain't Half Hot Mum'. Perhaps the RAF was not able to conjure up a background such as the army did with here and the ARMY GAME with Bootsie and Snudge. How could a public that had more perceived knowledge of the military as it being the army understand that in Get some in we are historically told is an effeminate old fashioned hair oiled RAF. Do not understand this gel headed perception This is trying to show the RAF doing its best to be animal like its senior arm. A load of Wannabes possibly. Admittedly it does have the RAF Regiment which is effectively the same as the army but in RAF blue. It guards airfields but is not an aggressive arm to my knowledge. Due to this it can spend more hours perfecting those now non essential drill movements making them a most accomplished drill smart unit that can carry out a choreographed movement lasting some time and envied. The real ARMY in times gone by did this under fire. But conversely I was with 23 Parachute Field Ambulance for some time and I can relate that for the parachute period of training the Paras are not entrusted with this but it is carried out by the RAF. Perhaps due to a less aggressive training attitude giving the lie to Marsh's training principles.

    While this has not been a positive review the series did crate a diversion recently for me but in its day due to my service commitments missed so much. I did however see It Ain't half hot mum start and even the last few series as I had left the army by then. Get some in did not match up. Dads army coming from a different viewpoint also was much superior. While I can empathise with any conscript in any part or the services it does not always transfer on to the silver screen. This is a vehicle for making money and not to give history lessons or create nostalgia. I do not think that our actors were notable other than the swine Selby. The turn out in uniform shows that no one had much interest in realism unlike dear Windsor Davies who would not have looked out of place in the real world. Marsh while having been a CORPORAL for 8 years mu have had previous service. Assuming that he worked his way through the ranks I can give him a another three years from joining the RAF. This make surely his entrance at about 1944. Not a ribbon in sight for one entrusted with the moulding of recruits. In truth Marsh should never have been given this task. Training post wartime took on a new and more enlightened role. While I enjoyed this for a little nostalgia and the ability to laugh at idiotic behaviour. It is not a classic as suggested by I suppose Riff Raff veterans. In any case allow me to say that any ex service man who willingly gave his all, I do not mean gave his life, for his unit/ship/etc is to be applauded. May I be able to enjoy a good laugh at all the comedic situations that story tellers can without malicious intent conjure up for our entertainment. My overall thinking is that it showed National service with the RAF as opposed to the usual Army fare. It did introduce some new people into the TV world. Robert Lindsay of course its main export.
    buckaroobanzai50

    Get some in? I would, given a chance.

    Forget your 'Dad's Armys', and 'Aint 'Alf Hot Mum's, this was the business. I fortunately was able to recapture it when the complete series was aired on satellite in the UK. While watching them, I actually found myself utterly embarrassed...Because I was laughing aloud at the Television like an unhinged school boy.

    I guess that's because it was made in the care free days of the 1970s, when sitcoms were actually funny.

    NCO: 'Smiff? Is that spelt wiv one F or two.'

    SMITH: 'No. Three.'
    hernebay

    "Though you're in the RAF, you'll never see a plane"

    If "It Ain't Half Hot Mum" has suffered acutely from Politically Correct retro-censorship, being rarely repeated (and then only the odd episode that gets past the new puritans), "Get Some In!" has been officially airbrushed out of late 70s British sitcom history. The total ban on repeats of this series means that I have not seen it since it was originally aired. Set in the 1950s, when young British men were still obliged to undergo compulsory National Service in one of the armed forces, my recollections of this series take me back, nevertheless, to the late 1970s, when such National Service seemed a dim and remote memory (to teenagers like myself, smugly ineligible). It aired in that bizarre cusp or hinge of time between decadent hippie-dom (concept albums, and rock stars in mansions) and early punk, and sought to demythologise the wizard-prang, pipe-between-the-teeth image of the RAF by showing the lowly, earthbound National Service recruits to the air force ("Though you're in the RAF, you'll never see a plane" went one line of the theme song). The recruits ("erks", if memory serves) were the standard-issue collection of heterogeneous types, running the gamut of the English class system and its miscellaneous sub-categories, most notably including the brilliant David Janson, subsequently much under-used, and the no less brilliant Robert Lindsay, in his first starring role (pre-"Citizen Smith"). Presiding over these raw recruits was the fearsome NCO, Tony Selby, a superb utility actor who had graced "The Avengers", "Ace Of Wands" and many another must-see British series of the late 60s and early 70s. With a strong cast, and what seemed at the time to be funny scripts, it is puzzling that this series has never re-aired, but perhaps it reflected too closely the PC insensitivities of the 50s. Our loss!

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      In some episodes, the credits list various characters as "The Erks". "Erk" is a variation of the abbreviation "airc" which is short for "aircraftsman" - the lowest rank in the RAF and a member of the non-flying ground-crew.
    • Patzer
      When one of the Irks saws through Marsh's caravan leg he uses a modern hacksaw, not available in the 1950s.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Comedy Connections: The Good Life (2003)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 16. Oktober 1975 (Vereinigtes Königreich)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Drehorte
      • Anglesey, Wales, Vereinigtes Königreich
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Thames Television
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 30 Min.
    • Farbe
      • Color

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