The Mail on Sunday

NOT (cough!) their finest hour

Biopic of cigar- chomping Churchill carries ludicrous health warning ... on danger of secondhand smoke

- By Chris Hastings ARTS CORRESPOND­ENT

IT’S impossible to think of Winston Churchill without a cigar.

Yet the makers of a new biopic of the wartime leader have still deemed it necessary to warn film-goers that ‘the depictions of tobacco smoking are based solely on artistic considerat­ion’.

The ludicrous health alert comes in the final credits of Darkest Hour, in which Gary Oldman has been acclaimed by critics for his performanc­e as the former Prime Minister.

The movie is already out in the US and will be released in Britain next month.

Churchill is rarely seen without a cigar in the film, set in 1940 when Britain stood alone against Hitler. In the opening scenes his face is lit in a darkened room by a cigar. He continues to puff away when he greets a fivemonth-old baby on the London Undergroun­d. Leading historians last night ridiculed the warning. Professor Mary Beard said: ‘It only adds to the temptation if you ask me.’ Biographer Hugo Vickers said: ‘Perhaps they should have added a line, “Sir Winston Churchill lived to be 90.” ’ And Professor Sir Richard Evans, an expert in European history, said: ‘I don’t suppose the film will prompt many to rush out and buy cigars.’

Universal Pictures, which is distributi­ng the film in the UK, declined to comment.

THE DEPICTIONS OF TOBACCO SMOKING CONTAINED IN THIS FILM ARE BASED SOLELY ON ARTISTIC CONSIDERAT­ION AND ARE NOT INTENDED TO PROMOTE TOBACCO CONSUMPTIO­N. THE SURGEON GENERAL HAS DETERMINED THAT THERE ARE SERIOUS HEALTH RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH SMOKING AND WITH SECONDHAND SMOKE.

 ??  ?? HOT AIR: The warning, above, in the film credits. Left: The ex-PM smokes one of his trademark cigars
HOT AIR: The warning, above, in the film credits. Left: The ex-PM smokes one of his trademark cigars

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