14 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- Viewer likes Technicolor flying shots and delightful story line, 30 June 1999
Author:
anonymous from Riverside, California
A well done Technicolor story about flight training at Thunderbird Field,
Arizona in 1942 at the height of WWII. Great cast of supporting players,
with main stars Gene Tierney, Preston Foster, and John Sutton well suited
for their roles. Beautiful flying shots with the Arizona desert as
background. The dialogue in some spots is not too realistic in terms of
aviation, e.g. when Preston Foster, playing the role of a civilian flight
instructor at a military training school exclaims that a student's "motor
conked out" while viewing the incident from the ground with his former
sweetheart, Gene Tierney. Hilarious scene early in the movie where
civilians
are learning to be "civilian defense" first aid workers: Preston Foster,
leg
in cast, is loaded into an ambulance that then races away with the back
door
unlatched ejecting him out the back door and allowing him to fall attached
to a stretcher onto the street. Touching brave sentiments portrayed by
famed
English actress, Dame May Whitty, on the loss of her son in combat. Jack
Holt as the C.O. of the school, and Reginald Denny, as the British officer
in charge of English cadets, add greatly to the overall quality of the
picture, and Holt's facial expressions when he is dancing with Gene Tierney
are particularly funny in the dance scene late in the picture. Peter
Lawford
has an uncredited bit part as a cadet in the movie. Overall, a very
enjoyable movie if the viewer is interested in WWII aviation pictures,
especially for the color quality.
TRIVIA NOTE: Famed aviation ace Richard Bong is one of the pilots flying
the
formation of North American AT-6s ("Texans") in the movie (uncredited),
done
before he shipped out to the Pacific to become the "Ace of Aces" by
shooting
down 40 Japanese planes, more than any other US pilot in WWII. (He died
8/6/45 at Burbank, California while taking off in a P-80 "Shooting Star"
jet
which lost power on takeoff.)
GOOF: in the water tower scene early in movie, Preston Foster, in a trainer
from the base, buzzes water-bathing Gene Tierney and drops her his flight
suit from the plane to use for cover/clothing when she gets out of the
water
tower. Film editing mistake shows her catching the flight suit, but then a
shot of Foster's plane flying away shows the flight suit being thrown out
from the plane (after she already has it!).
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- The war needs more fliers., 6 April 2007
Author:
Michael O'Keefe from Muskogee OK
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
William Wellman directs this movie evocative of the early 1940's. In
Arizona desert land is the secluded Thunder Bird airbase. Young
Americans, British and Chinese are fliers in training. A veteran WWI
pilot, Steve Brit(Preston Foster)volunteers to train these young fliers
to take their part in WWII. Peter Stackhouse(John Sutton)is one of the
trainees that is full of determination, but has a problem with motion
sickness every time he goes up. Plus Stackhouse is competing for the
affections of a young woman(Gene Tierney)that is Brit's old flame. The
in-flight photography is probably before its time. Also in the cast:
Jack Holt, Dame May Witty, Reginald Denny, Ted North and Richard
Haydin.
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14 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-

Viewer likes Technicolor flying shots and delightful story line, 30 June 1999
Author: anonymous from Riverside, California
A well done Technicolor story about flight training at Thunderbird Field, Arizona in 1942 at the height of WWII. Great cast of supporting players, with main stars Gene Tierney, Preston Foster, and John Sutton well suited for their roles. Beautiful flying shots with the Arizona desert as background. The dialogue in some spots is not too realistic in terms of aviation, e.g. when Preston Foster, playing the role of a civilian flight instructor at a military training school exclaims that a student's "motor conked out" while viewing the incident from the ground with his former sweetheart, Gene Tierney. Hilarious scene early in the movie where civilians are learning to be "civilian defense" first aid workers: Preston Foster, leg in cast, is loaded into an ambulance that then races away with the back door unlatched ejecting him out the back door and allowing him to fall attached to a stretcher onto the street. Touching brave sentiments portrayed by famed English actress, Dame May Whitty, on the loss of her son in combat. Jack Holt as the C.O. of the school, and Reginald Denny, as the British officer in charge of English cadets, add greatly to the overall quality of the picture, and Holt's facial expressions when he is dancing with Gene Tierney are particularly funny in the dance scene late in the picture. Peter Lawford has an uncredited bit part as a cadet in the movie. Overall, a very enjoyable movie if the viewer is interested in WWII aviation pictures, especially for the color quality.
TRIVIA NOTE: Famed aviation ace Richard Bong is one of the pilots flying the formation of North American AT-6s ("Texans") in the movie (uncredited), done before he shipped out to the Pacific to become the "Ace of Aces" by shooting down 40 Japanese planes, more than any other US pilot in WWII. (He died 8/6/45 at Burbank, California while taking off in a P-80 "Shooting Star" jet which lost power on takeoff.)
GOOF: in the water tower scene early in movie, Preston Foster, in a trainer from the base, buzzes water-bathing Gene Tierney and drops her his flight suit from the plane to use for cover/clothing when she gets out of the water tower. Film editing mistake shows her catching the flight suit, but then a shot of Foster's plane flying away shows the flight suit being thrown out from the plane (after she already has it!).
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

The war needs more fliers., 6 April 2007
Author: Michael O'Keefe from Muskogee OK
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
William Wellman directs this movie evocative of the early 1940's. In Arizona desert land is the secluded Thunder Bird airbase. Young Americans, British and Chinese are fliers in training. A veteran WWI pilot, Steve Brit(Preston Foster)volunteers to train these young fliers to take their part in WWII. Peter Stackhouse(John Sutton)is one of the trainees that is full of determination, but has a problem with motion sickness every time he goes up. Plus Stackhouse is competing for the affections of a young woman(Gene Tierney)that is Brit's old flame. The in-flight photography is probably before its time. Also in the cast: Jack Holt, Dame May Witty, Reginald Denny, Ted North and Richard Haydin.
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