"Dad's Army" When You've Got to Go (TV Episode 1975) Poster

(TV Series)

(1975)

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8/10
Warm-Hearted Episode that Pays Tribute to the Value of Community
l_rawjalaurence5 September 2016
While watching this episode of the well-loved comedy, concentrating on Private Pike's (Ian Lavender's) decision to join the Air Force, we might be prompted to wonder just what it is that makes the series so endearingly watchable, over forty years after its first broadcast.

There are the obvious answers: the strength of the script, characterization, and performances. But there might be some subliminal answers that tell us a lot about how we view the past through the prism of the present. Although Mainwaring (Arthur Lowe) considers Pike a perpetually "stupid boy," it's clear that he harbors an underlying affection for the youth, one of life's misfits cossetted by his mother. Otherwise why would he always ask Pike about his welfare? The rest of the platoon also love the unfortunate boy, even the perpetually gauche Corporal Jones (Clive Dunn), who shares his experiences of going in service for the first time, even though they are invariably unpleasant.

This episode has a certain degree of uncertainty about it, as it seems that Chief Warden Hodges (Bill Pertwee) and his ARP Wardens are going to win a competition to give the most pints of blood to a national campaign, but Mainwaring's platoon are rescued by Jones's last- minute intervention. Although this makes everyone happy, we realize that no real conflict has ensued: both the ARP Wardens and the Home Guard have made a genuine contribution to the war effort, even though they like to pretend that they are deadly rivals. In fact both were an integral part of the Civil Defence Force that kept British morale high at that time.

The episode ends, appropriately enough, with a celebration for Pike at the local fish-and-chip shop. We discover the truth about his decision to join up, but as we do so we understand just how much the supper ritual means to the entire platoon - not just Pike himself, but to everyone, Mainwaring, Wilson and all the others combined. It is celebrations like that these that keep people together and focused on the task in hand whatever happens. This episode is a tribute to British stoicism in the face of adversity both in the past and the present.
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8/10
Farewell Pike.
Sleepin_Dragon4 January 2021
There is definitely a greater focus on Pike, his character had become a lot more involved, and he's starting to become central to events.

Of course it's sitcom land, and not real, but one question has always remained, why has Like never had his call up papers? This episode gives you that very story, it's funny, it's heart warming, and it's revealing, we learn exactly why Pike is the way he is, his domineering mother.

The blood donor side story was a nice touch, and had some amusing parts.

8/10.
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7/10
Ian Lavender continues to impress
phantom_tollbooth28 July 2023
From being largely a background character in the very early series, Pike has gradually come into his own across the years. With the death of James Beck leaving a noticeable hole in the ensemble, Ian Lavender stepped up impressively to fill the void and writers Croft and Perry seem to have recognised this as by this stage Pike had become one of the most prominent sources of laughs. Having stolen the opening episode of series 8, Ring Dem Bells, with his Nazi officer impersonation, Pike is once again the focus here as he receives his call up papers and develops a nervous facial tic as a result. This gives Lavender the opportunity to play broad physical comedy with a more emotional layer underneath. A separate plot about a blood drive dovetails nicely with the main plot towards the end, culminating in a sweet final scene with a celebratory fish and chip meal. If When You've Got to Go still isn't quite at the level of the show's heyday, it easily maintains an uptick in quality that followed the lacklustre ending of series 6 and first half of series 7. It's good to see the material improving and the ensemble back on form. If it's clear that Dad's Army is nearing the end of its natural lifespan, it's rocky transition into old age is blossoming into a graceful dotage.
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