I wasn’t prepared for Pressure. Walking into the World War II drama, which stars Andrew Scott and Brendan Fraser, I knew it was about the lead up to D-Day. As such, I braced myself for a serious, stiff-upper-lip drama about soldiers and the cruelty of war. And it’s not that Pressure isn’t about those things. Rather, adapted from David Haig’s 2014 stage play of the same name, Pressure comes from an unexpected angle in exploring war strategy.
Andrew Scott stars as Group Captain James Stagg, a Scottish meteorologist for the United Kingdom’s Royal Air Force, who was assigned to aid American ally General Dwight D. Eisenhower (Brendan Fraser) by figuring out the forecast for the beaches of Normandy for D-Day.
Now, you might be thinking that weather and war don’t sound like rich terrain for laughs. But Pressure‘s humor comes from the crackling cultural conflict between this no-nonsense Scot and the American general in desperate need of a sunny day.
Pressure is as much about social pressure as it is weather and war.
Brendan Fraser and Andrew Scott in “Pressure.”
Credit: Alex Bailey / Focus Features / STUDIOCANAL
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