It's Show Time
Aero-Views by Kevin R.C. "Hognose" O'Brien
OK... because I am on this side of the computer
screen and you are on that side, I get to pontificate on
my opinion. BUT -- you are going to have a chance to email us and
tell us your opinions afterward. We like to keep things
positive here at Aero-News, so this isn't the "Ten Stinkingest
Flying Movies," but we'll consider your nominations for that,
too.
1. Dark Blue
World -- OK, it's largely in Czech. I understand
Czech; for the rest of you, there are subtitles. It's worth the
subtitles to appreciate this story of a young pilot and his mentor
and the largely unappreciated contribution of the captive nations
of Europe to the war effort, specifically in the RAF, and the poor
outcome for such nations that just exchanged one captor for another
at war's end. These guys are not lucky in love either. In a
remarkably strange but effective concept, the Czechs are played by
Czechs, the Britons by Britons, and the Germans by, guess who.
Method acting? The principal protagonist's dog is played by... the
actor's dog, who always travels with him. The acting is good, the
flying is better (at $10,000 per flying hour per Spitfire, it had
better be) and the director explains the CGI magic on a featurette
on the DVD. How cool is that?
2. The Great
Waldo Pepper -- IMHO, three films "made" the
reputation that Robert Redford is still dining out on, (3 days of
the Condor, Butch and Sundance, and this). This is the best of
them. Redford plays a Peter Pan airman who wants to just barnstorm
the world, and who doesn't want to change. But the world is going
to change, with or without him. Aviation is going to grow up. Lots
of artful flying, lots of excitement. The scene where Axel calls
Waldo on Waldo's war story is incredibly powerful. The ending is a
bit hokey. For better dogfights, scroll down. Special bonus: Susan
Sarandon, young and pretty (it's an ollllld film).
3. Spirit of
St. Louis -- when this film came out in 1957,
starring Jimmy Stewart in a mostly accurate portrayal of the great
pioneer's flight, the New York Times's reviewer wrote, "It runs for two
hours and eighteen minutes, which is about how long it will take to
fly to Paris some day." Who knew then that the Times would be doing
its best to help torpedo SST travel in barely more than ten years?
But the film is excellent. It doesn't say much about the enigma
that is Lindbergh, one of the greatest and most puzzling of
aviators (and a brilliant writer, as well; and a medical researcher
of some note). Jimmy Stewart as the Lone Eagle was a brilliant
casting decision on many levels.
4. The Blue
Max -- OK, I'll grant that Ursula Andress in a 60s
hairdo was a bit out of place, and to some degree the director made
a botch of an even better book. And the aircraft are not always
correct (YOU try to get the right planes for a particular period of
a long-over war together... I'll even let you pick the war. Good
luck!) This has the best dogfight scenes to date... the editing
continuity makes sense and the maneuvers are what planes really can
do. As is the case with many of these films, the book was better
(and there is a sequel, The Blood Order, too). George Peppard got a
commercial pilot license before the film and did a little of his
own flying; the FAA still shows Peppard in the database, but notes
he has no medical. (I can explain why to the FAA: the actor died in
1994 at the age of 65 after a long battle with cancer). Stunt pilot
Derek Piggott flew the under-the-bridge scene -- with both planes,
some twenty takes.
5. Piece of
Cake (miniseries) -- This may be the best portrayal of
a combat unit in extended combat in all cinema. Seriously. It also
has some beautiful flying (look for the tip vortices when they
"attack" the train) and some existential questions get answered
(can a Spitfire fly through that bridge?) Some people have been
down on it because it portrays the Few "warts and all," and legends
aren't supposed to have warts. Technical accuracy hounds grind
their teeth to see Spitfires in the Battle of France (there were
none). The problem is, you see, where do you get enough Hurricanes
to do this accurately? Another problem is the limits that a TV
budget put on effects. As is the case with many of these films, the
book (Hornet Squadron, by Derek Robinson) is better. He also wrote
a similarly great First War story, Goshawk Squadron.
Read Part Two!