The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming!
We must have boat. Even now may be too late. This is your island, I make your responsibility you help us get boat quickly, otherwise there is World War III, and everybody is blaming you!
Those of us who grew up during the Cold War and remember it as a time of very real suspicion and fear probably look fondly upon this lightweight but not unsophisticated farce. It’s message that “Russians are people, too” probably seems a little simplistic to those too young to remember the times in which it takes place, but in its day, the concept was sufficiently radical to make an impact in the box office. It was, perhaps unsurprisingly, one of the most popular American films behind the Iron Curtain.

The story is straightforward. A Russian submarine runs aground off Gloucester Island when the captain (Theodore Bikel) decides he wants to see America. He dispatches his second-in-command, Lt. Rozanov (Alan Arkin in a breakthrough role that earned him an Oscar for Best Actor) and several of his men to find a boat to tow the sub off the sandbar. Rozanov and his men succeed mostly in scaring the residents into believing that World War III has started. The only person who knows what really is going on is Walt Whittaker, a vacationing screenwriter (Carl Reiner in a role not unlike Alan Brady, his character from The Dick Van Dyke Show
The villagers are represented by their level-headed sheriff (Brian Keith), his panicky deputy (Jonathan Winters) and the island’s resident cold warrior (Paul Ford), who sees his chance to be the hero. The warmth and sincerity of the characters and the story more than wins you over and you don’t mind that the action never really rises above the level of gentle farce and the ending shamelessly tugs the heart strings.
Alan Arkin’s performance is a star-making turn and excercise in comic understatement. He portrays a man who outwardly projects calm but inside is near his boiling point for almost the entire film. It’s a tightrope that Arkin walks brilliantly.
Title: The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming!
Director: Norman Jewison
On Screen: Alan Arkin, Brian Keith, Carl Reiner, Eva Marie Saint, John Phillip Law, Jonathan Winters, Paul Ford, Theodore Bikel
Production/Distribution: The Mirisch Corporation, United Artists
Released: 1966
Running Time: Two hours, six minutes.
MPAA Rating: Not rated
Genres: Based on a Book, Comedy
Academy Awards: Best Actor.
Keywords: Cold War, New England, panic, Russia, Submarines
About the author:
Paul's grandfather used to work for your grandfather. Of course, the rates have gone up.

This is one of the best in it sort.
Regards
Adam
great movie! no one i know has seen this