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・ The Dead Zone (novel)
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・ The Dead-Beat
・ The Dead-Tossed Waves
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・ The Deadliest Season
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・ The Deadly Affair
・ The Deadly Assassin
The Deadly Attachment
・ The Deadly Bees
・ The Deadly Breaking Sword
・ The Deadly Camp
・ The Deadly Companions
・ The Deadly Curse of Toco-rey
・ The Deadly Dinner Party
・ The Deadly Duo
・ The Deadly Game
・ The Deadly Hunter
・ The Deadly Isles
・ The Deadly Mantis
・ The Deadly Mantis (1978 film)
・ The Deadly Nightshade
・ The Deadly Reclaim


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The Deadly Attachment : ウィキペディア英語版
The Deadly Attachment

"The Deadly Attachment" is the first episode of the sixth series of the British television sitcom ''Dad's Army'' which was originally transmitted on Wednesday 31 October 1973. It has become one of the most famous episodes of the series due to the rare encounter between the platoon and the Germans and the much-remembered "Don't tell him, Pike!" exchange which has been placed in the top three greatest comedy moments of British television.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=BBC News - ENTERTAINMENT - Television's crowning moments )
In the episode, Mainwaring's men have been detailed to guard a captured German U-boat crew until a military escort arrives. When the escort is delayed, the platoon must house them in the church hall overnight. It turns out to be a trying time; the German U-Boat captain is a defiant leader who expects only the finest fish and chips and lets it be known that he is noting down enemy names for future reference.
The episode has also been adapted for radio and a recreation of this episode formed the fourth instalment of the 2007 ''Dad's Army'' Stage Show. In 1976, the episode script was selected as the basis of an unsuccessful pilot episode for an American Broadcasting Company adaptation called ''The Rear Guard''. The script also forms part of the combination of four shortened episodes published for amateur production.
==Plot==
Captain Mainwaring is giving a lecture on parachutists and the need to determine the respective identities of British and German parachutists. This eventually ends up becoming a discussion on the possibility of refugee nuns parachuting into Britain. Mainwaring's lecture is interrupted by a telephone call from GHQ; the survivors of a sunken German U-Boat have been picked up by a fishing boat and taken to Walmington-on-Sea. The Home Guard unit is to be responsible for providing security until the proper military escort can arrive. Mainwaring, excited at finally getting to grips with the enemy, sets off with most of the platoon to collect the prisoners, but not before ordering Sergeant Wilson and Private Pike to prime the platoon's allocation of hand grenades.
Pike is naturally excited at throwing around a lot of (unprimed) hand grenades and pretending to be a gangster; Wilson is a lot more cautious, and on discovering a collection of dummy detonators along with the real charges, opts to prime the grenades with dummies, reasoning that in the event of an invasion a switch could be made quickly, as allowing certain members of the platoon to be in charge of live grenades is very dangerous.
The prisoners, including their smug and surly captain, are held in the church hall until the escort arrives. However, the escort has been delayed, meaning the Home Guard will be responsible for the prisoners overnight, including the feeding of them. Corporal Jones' suggestion of cutting the prisoners' trouser buttons off is dismissed by the U-Boat Captain as being a violation of the Geneva Convention, thus earning Mainwaring's ire; and Mainwaring proceeds to refer to Adolf Hitler as a tinpot dictator resembling Charlie Chaplin, thus annoying the captain. Mainwaring's name gets put on the U-Boat Captain's ominous "List" - a collection of names of those who have upset him, who will be brought to account once the war ends, prompting a childish exchange of "Oh no, you're not!" "Oh yes we are!" between Mainwaring and the U-Boat Captain as to which side is actually going to ''win'' the war. Pike, who foolishly opts to sing a song in which Hitler is called a "twerp" at that very moment ("''Whistle while you work, Hitler is a twerp, he's half barmy, so's his army...''"), finds his name also put on the U-Boat Captain's List once Mainwaring inadvertently gives it to him (''"Don't tell him, Pike!"'').
After the prisoners receive a fish and chip supper ordered by Private Walker (including soggy chips, despite the U-Boat Captain's demands), the platoon settle down to guard the prisoners overnight. Matters are not helped by the Verger and Warden Hodges, entering the hall after a night on the drink to find the prisoners there waiting for them. Taking advantage of the distraction, the U-Boat Captain feigns illness ("''I reckon it must have been all those soggy chips you made him eat, Captain Mainwaring!''" quips Walker) and manages to steal Mainwaring's revolver, seizing Hodges as a hostage.
A tense stand-off between the Germans (housed in the Vicar's office with their hostage) and the British (in the main hall with superior firepower) sees the British try to recapture the situation. The Germans threaten to kill Hodges if Mainwaring does not release them, but Jones points out if the Germans escape, they will continue to sink British ships (Frazer does not help by pointing out that Mainwaring "never liked" Hodges, so he should have no qualms about letting him die.) A conversation about different films that ultimately goes nowhere, however, sees Mainwaring struck by inspiration; they will agree to the terms of the Germans, confident that someone in the town will see the Germans escape. Unfortunately, Mainwaring's plan is not as well thought out as the U-Boat Captain's, who has anticipated this - the platoon will be forced to march the prisoners through town to the harbour as to offset suspicion, and will then accompany the prisoners back to Germany in order to ensure that the Royal Navy do not intervene. And once they are back in Germany, the List will be closely examined. Cooperation will be further enforced by the presence of a grenade in Corporal Jones' waistband, which will have the safety pin pulled off by the U-Boat Captain at the slightest hint of trouble. Wilson gladly goes to get the grenade.
The march through town is a tense matter (for all except Wilson and Pike, who are the only ones aware that the grenade is a dud). The U-Boat captain's plan is inadvertently rumbled by Mainwaring's senior officer, the Colonel, who chances upon the marching platoon ''en route'' to meeting the escort and, seeing the string in Jones' waistband, immediately pulls it. The resulting chaos sees the Germans sprawled on the ground, Jones frantically screaming ''"Don't panic!"'' whilst dancing with a grenade in his trousers, and Wilson calmly asking the Colonel for a pistol. He promptly uses it to recapture the German Captain, forcing him and his men up against the wall. Once all has calmed down, and Mainwaring has realised that in disobeying his orders, Wilson has saved Jones' life, Jones requests if someone could ask Private Frazer to remove his hand from his trousers.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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