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| Movie Review |
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Flyboys
- In theaters September 22nd 2006
- Rated PG-13 for war action violence and some
sexual content
- RunTime: 139 min
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Website
- Matt's rating - 4 out of 5
- Cindy's rating - 4 out of 5
Matt's Review
“War. What is it good for? Absolutely nothing, Huh,
say it again.” There are many on each side of that
song lyric that would argue passionately about the
need or futility of war. Hollywood would more than
likely answer that phrase with something like, “Well,
it makes for darn good movies!” To which we all
would reply, “Sometimes”.
Flyboys is a truly decent film. I never know what to
expect from a 2 hour epic about war. I figure it will
be loud with lots of shouting and cursing. Anything
past that is in the hands of the writers. You can’t
assume a film it will be great just because it is based
on true events. (Please see Pearl Harbor for
reference, wait, no, on second thought don’t see it.)
But this feature had a unique and well told story that
made for a first-rate look at man rather than the war
machine. It is the story of the legendary Lafayette
Escadrille. The ordinary, young, American men who,
in 1916, volunteered for the 1st World War as fighter
pilots alongside the French.
If war is good for anything it could be in how it takes
young men from varying backgrounds who probably
would never cross paths in any other situation and
forces them to not only get along but bond as
brothers in a way that no other event can. Flyboys
displays that perfectly. Blaine Rawlings (James
Franco) has lost home and family, Briggs Lowry (Tyler
Labine) joined only to try and please his disciplinarian
father, while an African-American boxer Eugene
Skinner (Abdul Salis) is fighting for a country that
didn’t discriminate against his color. They are being
instructed by French Captain Thenault (Jean Reno)
and the leadership of an American Ace, veteran Reed
Cassidy (Martin Henderson). You watch these guys
grow and mature and evolve into something more
than just a military unit. Race, culture, status, all
falls away in the light of unity.
Flyboys is filled with aerial action and amazingly
realistic dogfights. It not only displays the almost
suicidal missions of these young men, but also the
skill and talent they created in what was a fairly new
invention. I was worried the scenes would be choppy
and hard to follow but they are shot perfectly and
must be seen on the big screen. Staying true to the
story you never know who will make it back alive
from each battle. This tension pulls you through the
movie with a rush. You find yourself liking these
young men and wanting them to succeed.
There has not been a WWI aviation movie in 40
years. Flyboys does justice to a rare genre. I liked
this film for many reasons. Its history, humanity, and
humbleness. It doesn’t try to pull one over on us with
over the top acting and events. It simply tells a
great story and looks good doing it. That is a pretty
decent formula for a movie like this.
Flyboys is rated PG-13 for war action violence and
some sexual content. This is a movie to see with the
family and can spark lots of dialogue about history
and war itself. I give it 4 out of 5 wings. With a look
at Flyboys, I’m Matt Mungle.
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Mungleshow Productions
Matt Mungle
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