Friday, 31 May 2024

Punjabis Painted (almost) and an Italian miscellany

I have, at last (almost) completed painting my Indian battaltion for the 'D-Day Dodgers' Italian Campaign 1943-45 project.  So here, on parade for the camera on what looks suspiciously like a stopover in rural England before deployment, are the gallant men of the entirely imaginary  11/8th Punjab battalion:

 

They comprise (from the front )  the HQ company with Battalion commander, PIAT team, 2-inch mortar team and truck;  three  rifle companies each of 8 figures with a truck;  a fourth company with 8 figures and 2 Bren carriers;  and the Support Company with 6-pounder A/T gun,  3-inch mortar, Lloyd carrier and Bren carrier. 

Keen readers may remember that I was unsure how to recruit the fourth company, having limited numbers of figures with Punjabi Muslim style turbans or British steel helmets - I am grateful to Neil from the excellent aufklarungsabteilung blog who suggested that I could consider a Sikh company in a Punjabi battalion.  I had enough Sikh-turbaned figures to do that, and it seemed a nice idea, giving a bit more interesting variation in the battalion. So we now have 'A', 'B' and 'C' Companies of Punjabis, and 'D' Company of Sikhs. I'm quite pleased with them

 As I said, they are 'almost' complete - if you look very closely at the back, you'll see that the 6-pounder crew are in need of a change of uniform colour and skin tone. So indeed not quite finished yet, but almost! Also the transport is 'from the pool' so to speak (specifically the vehicles bought recently from the collection of the late Eric Knowles),  hence their carrier crews also look distinctly White British. So the next step is to provide some more appropriate crewmen - which should be simple enough. 

If you'll excuse my 'impressionistic' painting style (as ever, button-counters should look away now), I'll risk a close-up :


 hmmm... those HQ company bases may need a little work. You may notice that the only White British figure is the  battalion commander - as far as I know, this is pretty much true to reality (note that this is a battalion for Rapid Fire Reloaded, in which one figure represents about 15 men). Anyway I am quite pleased with them overall, and hope they acquit themselves well when they finally get to the gaming table! 

When  painting them, I decided to be a little more adventurous than a very simple 'block-painting' style, and found  some useful tips in Andy Singleton's book Painting Wargaming Figures: WW2 in the Desert

 

I liked this book, as it starts from the very basics and really assumes no prior knowledge of various painting techniques, hence great for beginners.  He also has step-by-step instructions (with plenty of good photos)  for painting figures at each of three levels of skill, which he calls 'Conscript' ( block colours and a little dry-brushing )  'Regular' ( some dry-brush highlights, and shading to finish ) and 'Elite' ( using layering and spot-highlights ).  My chaps are somewhere between Conscript and Regular, I think, and that will do nicely for me. We'll have to see what level they fight at..

This week has coincidentally provided some more Italian-related interest and events, as follows: 

(1) a trip to the BFI ( National Film Theatre, as was ) in London for a showing of  Roberto Rossellini's  Rome, Open City , which I had shamefully never seen before (and I call myself a film fan?). Absolutely  relevant to the 'D-Day Dodgers'  period, this neo-realist classic depicts life in Rome under the Nazi occupation of 1943-1944, and the hazards of involvement in the political/violent resistance movements. It's famous for being filmed very close to the time it depicts, and as the program notes say it was 'made on the streets of the war-ravaged capital with stolen electricity and scraps of 35mm stock supposedly sourced on the black market'.  It was first shown in September 1945,  less than a year after the Allies liberated Rome, and only months after the German forces in Italy had surrendered. It struck me that the people of the areas where filming took place (and the allied troops in Rome) may have been pretty shocked if chancing across the filming, as tenement blocks were surrounded and 'residents'; rounded up by parties of SS troops in full uniform, distinctive helmets and fully armed! There must have been some delicate negotiations between the film-makers and the authorities, and the locals. It's a great film, well worth catching. 


 


 

(2) Picked up at a neighbourhood 'give a book, take a book' box,  A Walk In the Sun  by Harry Brown, a slim novel recounting the experiences of a fictional US Army platoon landing on an un-named  beachhead in Italy in 1943 or 1944,  Harry Brown was a US Soldier, but not on the front-line - he was a writer for Yank magazine ('the army weekly')  from 1942. He went on to be a film screenwriter, with Sands of Iwo Jima among his credits.   I was pretty suprised to learn that this novel was published as early as 1944, as it is not in the least 'gung-ho' and does not paint a romantic picture of war, quite the opposite indeed. The platoon finds their commanding officer incapacitated before even reaching the beach, and then try to follow what little they know of their orders, given  no  contact with their parent unit. The writer  must surely have interviewed real-front-line troops, and the story 'rings true' in its depiction of ordinary men in the  extraordinary situations of war.  I haven't finished it yet, so no plot spoilers, please!  


 

 (3) Last but not least,  a different period but also Italy-based, I was lucky to take part in another of Jon Freitag's remote games, this time recreating  the battle of Bassignana, 1745.   

I'll give nothing away except Jon's picture of the initial deployments, trusting him to provide his usual excellent report of what was one of his usual excellent games, which came to quite a dramatic last-gasp  conclusion!


 I was privileged to play the 'Gallispans' C-in-C Mallebois, with a small brigade command too, while Chris 'Nundanket' and Dave 'St Cyr' took the Spanish and French wings, against Piedmontese and Austrians led by Mark 'Jolly Broom Man' and Tony 'MS Foy'.  Many thanks to Jon and all concerned, as usual, for a great game! 

Next, it must surely be time to actually try a game of Rapid Fire Reloaded : and next weekend there is the 'Broadside' show at Gillingham which I hope to attend. Plenty of material for future blogging, then. Until then, keep well, everyone.

21 comments:

  1. Excellent looking muster David. Looking forward to seeing you at Broadside.

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    1. Thanks Richard, and apologies, this comment somehow got put in 'Spam' and I missed it until 2 months later! I think we did meet and chat a bit at Broadside, at least..

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  2. David,
    Thank you for the plug for the blog.
    Nice to see you are making progress on the Italian front project.
    All I'd say is you may want to consider doing some work to the bases; it's an odd thing about wargames figures that what people notice are bases, flags, shields and faces. This can lift an otherwise basic paint job. It's all seen from two feet anyway!
    Can I suggest the following company; they make a very nice Mediterranean basing mix:

    https://geekgamingscenics.com/

    I'm sure "A walk in the sun" is a movie - yes from 1945, same as your intriguing Italian film. One to watch out for?
    Neil

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    1. Thanks Neil, your suggestion about the Sikhs was really useful!
      With those bases, I made a hesitant attempt to vary them from my usual old school plain green, given the more 'Mediterranean' uniform colours, but my drybrushing attempts were not right. I may go back to plain green, or make them much more 'sandy' coloured. I confess I have a bit of an irrational allergy to texture, flock etc!
      Yes 'A Walk In The Sun' was filmed, it seems, and I will see if I can find it on-line or on DVD, perhaps. It seems the novel was quite a hit at the time, but has since been rather forgotten.

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  3. Lots of interesting stuff in the one post David. The 11/8th Punjabis are looking battle ready.
    The Rossellini film looks intriguing. Must have been some quite raw emotions around at the time of filming.
    And last night’s game was another cracker! A very close run thing.
    Chris/Nundanket

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    1. Thanks Chris, yes that film was good, worth seeing. There is a bit of a 'neo-realist' season at the BFI at the moment, and a new Italian film drawing on that period ('There's Still Tomorrow') is on release.
      That was indeed a great game, and your contribution was crucial - without giving any spoliers away!

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  4. I like seeing an impressionistic style of figure painting. You continue making good progress on this project. It was great having you back at the table in Thursday game. The game and camaraderie were terrific and the fight a tough one for all. I enjoyed it!

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    1. Thanks Jon, I have rationalised it that on WW2 figures you don't want every button shiny and every piece of webbing and equipment picked out and visible, anyone who did that would get sniped in the first 5 minutes! So my guys are in the spirit of good camouflage..
      Yes a great game on Thursday and a real nail-biter, thanks so much for hosting us!

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  5. These are looking really good!

    My father landed in Sicily in '43 and worked his way up the boot then over to Holland. He was a linesman in the RCCS (Signal Corps). He rarely told stories about the war, but a few amusing ones might slip out when watching Combat! on tv or similar, like the story about what he said was when he almost got killed. They were behind the lines so without helmets and one guy went up a pole to fix a broken line but forgot to tie his tools on. The huge heavy wrench he dropped missed dad's head by inches!

    He never mentioned having a commendation signed by Montgomery and wouldn't talk about. It was only a year or two ago that I put some anecdotes, and an account of a late war battle in Holland including the unit he was attached to. But I'm wandering.

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    1. Thanks Ross, I am quite pleased with them.
      Interesting to hear about your father, have you been able to obtain his service records? They might show which unit(s) he was attached to, from which you might follow unit War Diaries to figure out where he would have been.
      A commendation from Monty sounds impressive and worth checking out..

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  6. No I haven't done the work but once I encountered this video of the Battle of Otterloo in Apr '45, by a Dutch historian, in the right place with the right unit and crossed it with a of couple incidents in Holland that he once related to me in his later years, it all came together. He and a private were responsible for keeping the telephone lines working despite frequent cuts. Eventually they ended up pinned in a basement when the Germans over ran the town to be driven out the next day by next morning's Cdn counter attack. It included Wasps, and the smell and horror they left stayed with him . I have no doubt that this was the incident.

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    1. That's most interesting, and maybe understandable that he didn't want to re-live the experience by talking about it later. But it always seems a shame not to have been able to learn what our late family members went through until it's too late.

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  7. the Battle of Otterlo, 16-17 April 1945 https://youtu.be/4CgT9jFg7io

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  8. Excellent work there and they should look rather good when on the table and in action:). I've read the book and also watched the film, both of which are really good. It certainly shows that war is not at all glamourous nor that exciting, bar the 1% of terror when in action.

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    1. Thanks Steve, and apologies also, your comment somehow ended up in 'spam' - not intentionally, of course! I thought both book and film excellent.

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  9. Your Indian battalion is coming along very nicely. Do you have much more to do before using it in a game?

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    1. Thank you Peter, yes it's high time they saw some use on the table! I think I have enough now to try a game..

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  10. These figures have turned out really well. I look forward to seeing them in action…
    Alan Tradgardland

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    1. Thanks Alan, yes indeed a game really should be the next thing!

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  11. I like the idea of the Punjabi battalion. Makes a change from the usual British/Commonwealth units

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    1. Thanks Khusru, glad you like them. I was interested in the wide variety of troops in Italy, especially on the allied side, and I read a bit about the Indian forces there. Also I worked quite a bit with Indian colleagues, so it's a little nod to them!

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