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Piece of Cake

  • TV Mini Series
  • 1988
  • 5h 12m
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
813
YOUR RATING
Piece of Cake (1988)
DramaWar

Stories of the men of the RAF Hornet Squadron during the early days of World War II.Stories of the men of the RAF Hornet Squadron during the early days of World War II.Stories of the men of the RAF Hornet Squadron during the early days of World War II.

  • Stars
    • Neil Dudgeon
    • George Anton
    • Boyd Gaines
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.1/10
    813
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Neil Dudgeon
      • George Anton
      • Boyd Gaines
    • 27User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes6

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    TopTop-rated1 season1988

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    Top cast53

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    Neil Dudgeon
    Neil Dudgeon
    • 'Moggy' Cattermole
    • 1988
    George Anton
    • 'Pip' Patterson
    • 1988
    Boyd Gaines
    Boyd Gaines
    • Chris Hart
    • 1988
    Jeremy Northam
    Jeremy Northam
    • 'Fitz' Fitzgerald
    • 1988
    Nathaniel Parker
    Nathaniel Parker
    • 'Flash' Gordon
    • 1988
    David Horovitch
    David Horovitch
    • 'Uncle' Kellaway
    • 1988
    Richard Hope
    Richard Hope
    • 'Skull' Skelton
    • 1988
    Michael Elwyn
    Michael Elwyn
    • Air Commodore Bletchley
    • 1988
    Tom Burlinson
    Tom Burlinson
    • 'Fanny' Barton
    • 1988
    Gerard O'Hare
    • 'Flip' Moran
    • 1988
    Tim Woodward
    Tim Woodward
    • Squadron Leader Rex
    • 1988
    Patrick Bailey
    • 'Mother' Cox
    • 1988
    Gordon Lovitt
    • 'Sticky' Stickwell
    • 1988
    Helena Michell
    • Mary
    • 1988
    Stephen MacKenna
    Stephen MacKenna
    • 'Micky' Marriott
    • 1988
    John Bleasdale
    • L.A.C. Gullett
    • 1988
    Corinne Dacla
    • Nicole
    • 1988
    Tom Radcliffe
    • 'Dicky' Starr
    • 1988
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    8.1813
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    Featured reviews

    10hedehad

    Best 300 minutes ever

    I must say I really enjoyed every moment when I watched the whole series after buying the DVD-Box. The Music is beautifully, brilliantly fantastic. The production makes the feeling of a school class where the boys in the group are drawn to certain small gangs within the group. Some of them are really close friends while some seem like sworn enemies. It is so exiting to follow them in their journey from unexperienced boys to become real fighters. They do not really understand the seriousness until they are drawn into real action.

    The American (Boid Gains) does a really good job here, I can't understand why he wasn't used more in Hollywood after his brilliant performance in this successful masterpiece of TV production.

    Neil Dudgeon is fabulous and why didn't Jeremy Northam and Nathaniel Parker get more of their recognition from Piece of Cake I wonder.

    I don't really fancy WW2 war birds and that sort of military stuff but I really loved this mini series. So I suppose you don't have to be a "flyboy freak" to enjoy this mini series.
    10The_Other_Snowman

    The Field of Human Conflict

    I've read several conflicting reports about the accuracy of Derek Robinson's novels. Some veterans claim that the pilots of the RAF never behaved in such a loutish manner, while others say that "Piece of Cake" is closer to the truth than most people would like to admit. Robinson researches all his books, and states that everything in them actually did happen at some point, and that he only dramatized reality by putting all the characters and events into one story. Characters like the cad Moggy Cattermole, the unbalanced Flash Gordon, or the abjectly terrified Pip Patterson are the same kind of people you'd find in an English public school -- just like the real pilots of the Royal Air Force. Robinson's artistic license places them all in the same squadron, but I don't doubt that men like them did exist in the war.

    The behavior of Hornet Squadron's pilots on the ground does not diminish their heroism in the air; the fact that they held off the Luftwaffe is proof enough that they deserve our respect, regardless of what they were like in person. The flawed humanity of its characters makes the sacrifice of the real pilots much easier to understand than if they were portrayed simply as selfless heroes, even if we would be more comfortable remembering them that way.

    The flying scenes in this series are definitely above average and should be enough to recommend it to aviation enthusiasts. A few clips here and there come from 1969's "Battle of Britain", but for the most part the scenes of Spitfires taking off and landing or flying in formation are all brand-new, including some low-level stunts involving bridges. These were real stunts performed by a real pilot -- they found the longest single-span stone bridge in the country, and flew a real Spitfire under it. It's a hell of a scene.

    Apart from all that, the series is very well done. The acting is great all round, particularly Neil Dudgeon as Cattermole and Richard Hope as Skelton. The script is funny and extremely quotable. After the squadron adjutant reads Churchill's speech out loud -- "Never was so much owed by so many to so few" -- one pilot asks, "Does that mean we can go home now?"
    10moggybc

    Jolly good show!

    "Piece of Cake" is a top notch production, excellently adapted from one of my favorite books by Derek Robinson. The acting is superb, the score, set designs, locations and period detail create a wonderfully full viewing experience.

    I first watched this show during its North American release in 1990 and promptly went out and bought the book. I since acquired the DVD set, and watch it a couple of times a year. Yes, there are some discrepancies with the book (such as the switch from Hurricanes to Spitfires) which are likely explained by budgetary and availability issues, and the aerial scenes may look a little dated by now. But despite these minor shortcomings, the series it not diminished in its quality.

    Some detractors (elsewhere on this post) seem hung up on political correctness and 'fact'. Ignore their remarks. "Piece of Cake" is a rousing good story, based on historical circumstances and, as the author states: "Hornet squadron is fiction. The places where it was based do not exist. All the characters in the story are invented. Everything else is a authentic as I could make it." These detractors obviously don't know the difference between documentaries and entertainment. We all know that "Bridge on the River Kwai", "Patton", "Apocalypse Now" and "M*A*S*H" were not representative of typical military 'behavior', but they all stand as excellent films by any standard.

    If you want to watch cold hard fact, watch the documentary series "World at War". If you want something to help put a human face behind the horror and the terror of war, watch "Piece of Cake".

    Apologies for the digression. Ten out of ten for "Piece of Cake".
    woodguy

    Great television

    Very good mini-series, but it falls a bit short of the excellent book by Derek Robinson. Air combat sequences are taken from the film "Battle of Britain". The acting is very good across the board, however, I'd like to see some more character development and lines for a few of the characters. See the film, but read the book as well. Also recommended are Derek Robinson's "Hornet's Sting", "Goshawk Squadron", and "A Good Clean Fight".
    10jessewillis

    Not to be missed, "Piece of Cake" is what makes TV worth watching!

    I first saw this British miniseries when a friend lent me a scratchy EP VHS copy made from its first broadcast on Masterpiece Theatre in 1988. Since then I've watched it several more times. Each time I was astounded at its depth, charm, wit and humanity. Recently I obtained a more servicable version when "Piece of Cake" was rebroadcast on Canada's HistoryTelevision. I will cherish it.

    "Piece of Cake" is the story of Hornet squadron a fictional Spitfire fighter wing flying in France and over Dover during between 1939 & 1940. Beyond its fabulous dogfights "Piece of Cake" is also a wonderful story done the way only the British can do it. Characters like Pilot Officer "Moggy" Cattermoll are both original and compelling (as brilliantly portrayed by Neil Dudgeon). No one charcater here in this story is THE hero, for they are all heroic even the real bastards. No one character here in this story is THE villan, for they all can be villanous. Rather than being simple one note characters these are awesome full blown human people we can hate and love. The music as well, with this production, is truly inspiring, running from tension building, to melodic and beautiful to heartwrenching melancholic. If you wish to see THE definitive piece of televised fiction on the Phony War and The Battle of Britain you want "Piece of Cake" no doubt about it. Top notch entertainment.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Spitfires weren't deployed to France in 1939-40. RAF Fighter Command resisted deploying Spitfires in France, preferring to save them for the defense of Britain; Spitfires were used to cover the evacuation at Dunkirk, but they were based in England. In the novel Hornet Squadron flew Hawker Hurricanes. Hurricanes were more numerous in 1939-40 because they were easier to build and cheaper. Because of their greater numbers it is often said that Hurricanes were the mainstay fighter during the Battle of Britain, not the Spitfire; in reality the two types worked in concert, with Hurricanes deployed to attack the bombers while Spitfires were used counter the Luftwaffe's escorting fighters.
    • Goofs
      All of the Spitfires used had propellers that had 4 blades. During the Battle of Britain (when this series takes place), Spitfires used propellers that had only 3 blades.
    • Quotes

      Air Commodore Bletchley: Didn't somebody say that war is a nasty business? Quite good for promotion, though.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Story of the Costume Drama: The Greatest Stories Ever Told (2008)

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    FAQ16

    • How many seasons does Piece of Cake have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 2, 1988 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Spitfire-piloterna
    • Filming locations
      • Charlton Park, Malmesbury, Wiltshire, England, UK(chateau)
    • Production companies
      • London Weekend Television (LWT)
      • Holmes Associates
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      5 hours 12 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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