Chicago Sun-Times

‘Ministry’ credits real World War II rule-breakers with unreal adventures

- BY RICHARD ROEPER, MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com @RichardERo­eper

We’re told Guy Ritchie’s slam-bang WWII thriller “The Ministry of Ungentlema­nly Warfare” is “based on recently declassifi­ed files of the British War Department, and inspired by true events,” and there’s further confirmati­on of that when we see black-and-white photos of the real-life heroes portrayed in the story. All well and terrific.

Still, I’m going to go out on a particular­ly sturdy limb and guess that the actual ultra-secret combat group brought to cinematic glory by some of the most attractive humans on the planet, including Eiza Gonzalez, Henry Cavill, Alan Ritchson and Henry Golding, were most likely not offering constant comedic banter while they were pulling off a mission so insanely unconventi­onal, so incredibly daring, so madcap in its mad-cappery (I know that’s not a word but it should be), that they could make a movie about it. This is a Guy Ritchie action-comedy through and through, which means it’s going to be a stylish, cartoonish­ly violent, slick and relatively mindless popcorn movie. We’ll take it.

Adapted from Damien Lewis’ book “Churchill’s Secret Warriors: The Explosive True Story of the Special Forces Desperadoe­s of World War II” and featuring stunning visuals from the location shooting in the beautiful city of Antalya, Turkey, “The Ministry of Ungentlema­nly Warfare” is a fantastic blending of some basic facts and a whole lot of fictionali­zation, including shuffling of the timeline.

In the “Ministry” world, a beleaguere­d Winston Churchill (Rory Kinnear) approves an off-the-books Naval Intelligen­ce Operation designed to sink the cargo ships that are providing essential supplies to the German U-boats that are destroying the Brits, controllin­g the North Atlantic and essentiall­y blocking the Americans from joining the Allied Forces at sea. Dubbed “Operation Postmaster,” it’s so risky and so outside the normal rules of warfare that if the recruits for the mission are caught, they’re going to prison.

The Naval Intelligen­ce division is headed by Brigadier Gubbins, aka “M” (Cary Elwes), who is aided by Freddie Fox’s Ian Fleming — yes, that Ian Fleming. They enlist the services of the notorious and quite dangerous Gus MarchPhill­ipps (Henry Cavill), who assembles a squad that includes the actress-singermark­swoman Marjorie Stewart (Eiza Gonzalez); the Nazi-despising, oneman wrecking crew Anders Lassen, aka “The Danish Hammer” (Alan Ritchson); the Irish sailor Henry Hayes (Hero Fiennes Tiffin), the crafty master planner Geoffrey Appleyard (Alex Pettyfer) and the demolition­s expert Freddy Alvarez (Henry Golding).

Off they go on their “Mission: Impossible” meets “Inglorious Basterds,” which lands them in the Spanish port of Fernando Po, off West Africa, where the Italian supply ship the Duchessa is moored. That’s the target. In Fernando Po, we meet the undercover comms expert Richard Heron (Babs Olusanmoku­n), who runs the casino where all are welcome (namecheck to “Casablanca”), and the obligatory Sweating Sneering Loathsome Nazi

Commandant, one Heinrich Luhr (Til Schweiger). It’s a terrific cast, and everyone seems to be having a great time assuming clichéd but quite entertaini­ng roles.

With a justifie running time of two hours, “The Ministry of Ungentlema­nly Warfare” finds room for just about everyone in the ensemble to have a showcase moment. One highlight is when Marjorie slips into a femme fatale dress and sings a sultry version of “Mack the Knife” in both English and German to keep the Nazis occupied while her colleagues are running all over the harbor and executing their ridiculous­ly complicate­d plan.

Of course, complicati­ons ensue, and there’s a call to abort the mission, but these wisecracki­ng rogues aren’t about to start taking orders, right? They’re having too much fun blowing things up and dispatchin­g Nazis in creatively gruesome fashion. It’s ungentlema­nly, but also quite heroic, and devilishly good fun.

 ?? LIONSGATE ?? Henry Cavill plays a British officer who assembles an off-the-books naval attack squad in “The Ministry of Ungentlema­nly Warfare.”
LIONSGATE Henry Cavill plays a British officer who assembles an off-the-books naval attack squad in “The Ministry of Ungentlema­nly Warfare.”

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