Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines was created on 1965-06-03.
The duration of Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines is 2.3 hours.
I think it has 12
Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines or How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 hours 11 minutes - 1965 is rated/received certificates of: Argentina:Atp Australia:G Finland:S Iceland:L Norway:7 Portugal:M/6 Spain:T Sweden:Btl UK:U USA:G
It took some time and repeated close listening. Some of the words were a little difficult to understand because the vocalists are obviously British. That's noticable when the words "enchant" and "chances" are sung. But you wanted them, here they are: Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines. They Go Up, Tiddly, Up, Up. They Go Down, Tiddly, Down, Down. They Enchant All The Ladies And Steal All The Scenes With their Up, Tiddly, Up, Up And They're Down, Tiddly, Down, Down. Up! Down! Flying Around. Looping The Loop And Defying The Ground. They're All, Frightfully Keen Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines. They Can Fly Upside Down With Their Feet In The Air. They Don't Think Of Danger. They Really Don't Care. Newton Would Think He Had Made A Mistake. To See Those Young Men And The Chances They Take. Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines. They Go Up, Tiddly, Up, Up. They Go Down, Tiddly, Down, Down. They Enchant All The Ladies And Steal All The Scenes With their Up, Tiddly, Up, Up And Their Down, Tiddly, Down, Down. Up! Down! Flying Around. Looping The Loop And Defying The Ground. They're All, Frightfully Keen Those Magnificent Men, Those magnificent men, Those magnificent men and their fly--ing ma--chines!
The first beat boxing was probably in 1965 in "Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines." It was approximately 1980 when this fad into common popular culture in the United States.
Steptoe and Son - 1962 Those Magnificent Men and Their Heating Machines 4-3 is rated/received certificates of: UK:PG (video rating) (1994)
It was a specially constructed replica of the old Brooklands racetrack built on the far side of Wycombe Air Park airfield where a lot of the flying sequences were filmed. Even the sewage works where one aircraft crashes was a "set".
Just watched the movie once again not half an hour ago. The dog looked to me like a Pyrenean Mountain Dog, known as a Great Pyrenese in the US. A breeder site that I found through Google seems to confirm that.
He was in lots of movies. Some of these include "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang", "The Italian Job" and "Those Magnificent Men In Their Flying Machines", amongst others. He was in many TV shows apart from his own too.
Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines or How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 hours 11 minutes - 1965 was released on: UK: 3 June 1965 (London) (premiere) USA: 16 June 1965 Sweden: 26 August 1965 Brazil: 10 September 1965 West Germany: 14 September 1965 Denmark: 17 September 1965 Finland: 24 September 1965 Australia: 14 October 1965 (Sydney) Mexico: 16 February 1967 East Germany: 28 April 1967 (70mm version) East Germany: 4 August 1967 (35mm version) East Germany: 2 July 1976 (re-release) Finland: 23 May 1980 (re-release)
Airplanes found them and sunk them. Aircraft were launched from escort carriers. Destroyers and Destroyer Escorts sometimes get the glory for it, but seldom could anything (in WWII) escape from those flying machines!
Max Howard has: Played Billy in "Sergeant Cork" in 1963. Played Boy in Stately Home in "The Yellow Rolls-Royce" in 1964. Played Boy in crowd in "Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines or How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 hours 11 minutes" in 1965. Played Child on Ferry in "The Heroes of Telemark" in 1965. Played Child in street in "Poor Cow" in 1967.