Welcome to Rosie the Reviewer, a Dutch-Canadian female-led WW2 media podcast. A new episode airs every Friday!

Ep 96 – I Was Monty’s Double – M. E. Clifton James’ Role of A Lifetime

Subscribe:

Apple PodcastsCastBoxPocketCastsSpotifyRSSAmazon MusicYouTube

Support the podcast

Rosie the Reviewer is a passion project, built episode by episode. If you’d like to support what we do, you can help keep us on the air or pick up some Rosie merch. We’re working on more ways for you to get involved in the future.

Description

In this episode of Rosie the Reviewer, we discuss I Was Monty’s Double (1958), a British WWII film based on M.E. Clifton James’ memoir. The film tells the almost unbelievable story of an actor recruited to impersonate Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery in the lead-up to D-Day, as part of a wider Allied deception effort. Clifton James plays himself, and Monty. How any of this was true, we don’t know, because it really is stranger than fiction.

I Was Monty's Double clip

Historical context for I Was Monty's Double

Operation Copperhead, Operation Bodyguard and Allied Deception

The real operation behind I Was Monty’s Double was known as Operation Copperhead, part of the much larger deception strategy Operation Bodyguard. In the months before D-Day, the Allies worked to convince the Germans that the invasion of Western Europe might take place anywhere except Normandy. False radio traffic, fake units, planted rumours, and carefully staged movements were all used to muddy the picture.

Copperhead focused on one specific idea: if German intelligence believed Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery was active in North Africa, they might assume that a major Allied landing was planned for southern France or the Balkans rather than northern France. M. E. Clifton James, who bore a strong physical resemblance to Montgomery, was selected to play the role publicly, making carefully controlled appearances designed to be observed and reported by Axis agents.

Alongside Copperhead, Bodyguard included phantom armies such as the fictitious First U.S. Army Group, inflatable tanks and aircraft, and double agents feeding false information to Berlin. While historians still debate the impact of individual elements, the overall effect was clear: German forces were slow to redeploy after the Normandy landings, buying the Allies crucial time.

Dudley Clarke

The operation was devised by Brigadier Dudley Clarke, one of the central architects of Allied deception during the war. Clarke had already built an extensive reputation in the Middle East for creating fictional units, false command structures, and misleading troop movements. His understanding of psychology, theatre, and misdirection shaped Copperhead’s emphasis on performance as much as intelligence.

Other episodes mentioned

Ep 91 – Ice Cold in Alex – Desert Survival, Camaraderie, and an Ice‑Cold Beer

In this episode of Rosie the Reviewer, we discuss Ice Cold in Alex (1958), directed by J. Lee Thompson and based on the 1957 novel by Christopher Landon. Set during the North African campaign of World War II, the film follows a British officer, his NCO, two nurses, and a mysterious South African hitchhiker as they attempt to reach Alexandria in a battered ambulance.

It’s a tense adventure film, with the desert as the main antagonist and an ambulance that feels like a character rather than a vehicle. And of course, the film has a famous promise: an ice‑cold beer waiting at the end of the road.

Listen now »

Book Rec by Sam

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

More episodes

Ep 99 – Nr 24 – Gunnar Sønsteby, the Most Decorated Saboteur in Norway

Netflix’s Nr. 24 (2024) follows Gunnar Sønsteby, Norway’s most decorated citizen and one of the most effective resistance operatives in occupied Europe.

Tense from beginning to end, the film uses a sparse, near-ticking score and a documentary-style framing device to press a harder question: was it worth it? An elderly Sønsteby lectures students who have never known occupation, and what he chooses not to say is sometimes as revealing as what he does.

How do resistance stories shape national memory? And who gets left out of the telling?

Go to episode »

Ep 86 – Bruce McKenna on The Pacific, Band of Brothers, and the stories he’d like to tell.

In this episode of Rosie the Reviewer, we welcome an extraordinary guest: Bruce McKenna, co-executive producer, creator, and principal writer of The Pacific, and writer of the Bastogne episode of Band of Brothers. We talk about the moral stakes of war, what made it into the episodes and what didn’t, and why everything is about narrative and theme.

We explore Bruce’s creative process and the kind of stories he likes to tell. This one may change how you look at WWII media.

Go to episode »

Support the podcast

Rosie the Reviewer is a passion project, built episode by episode. If you’d like to support what we do, you can help keep us on the air or pick up some Rosie merch. We’re working on more ways for you to get involved in the future.