Above is the Armstrong and Miller sketch in which they are rather genteel RAF pilots about to fight in 'D Day'.
Near the end of the scene the troop carrier lands on the beach. The commanding officer says 'Right! Company! Attention!' at which point the two men I presume to be Armstrong and Miller say:
'Why is he so strict, man?' to which his partner replies:
'I don't know man, he's like really uptight. Some people never relax on holiday, isn't it?'
The humor of the scene comes from a couple different techniques used here. One is the disconnect between the intense atmosphere caused by the dangerous situation at hand and the two RAF pilots who are not clued in to the gravity of the situation whatsoever, instead quipping at eachother and the commanding officer about the 'holiday' they are on.
Secondly is the fact that the two RAF men are seemingly emulating the lexis of modern youths, as evidenced by using fillers such as 'like' or referring to eachother as 'man'. What makes it comedic is that these two men seem to fulfill the extremely gentlemanly stereotype of early 20th century men, so for them to be using such modern colloquial words (or at least I think that's what they are doing, it could be some kind of other era-specific comedy) is wacky and absurd. It is also interesting that they utilize both frozen and colloquial register to create this effect.
There also is a visual gag in that every other man on deck is dressed for war with helmets, weaponry and other such utilities, while Armstong and Miller are wearing standard RAF uniforms, smoking from tobacco pipes and Miller is even wearing an inflatable rubber ring for what he assumes to be a frolic on the beaches of Normandy.
Alltogether the impression is created that these fellows are extremely out of their debt, with humor coming from the fact that they are completely oblivious to their folly and in fact quite discombobulated by the entire matter, being that they are completely out of their element.
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