Aces High (film)

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Aces High
Directed by Jack Gold
Produced by Benjamin Fisz
Jacques Roitfeld
Basil Keys
Written by Howard Barker
Starring Malcolm McDowell
Christopher Plummer
Simon Ward
Music by Richard Hartley
Carlo Rustichelli
Cinematography Gerry Fisher
Editing by Anne V. Coates
Distributed by Cinema Shares International Distribution
Release date(s) Germany:
30 September 1976
Finland:
19 November
United States:
December 1977
Running time 114 min.
Country UK
Language English

Aces High is a 1976 British war film directed by Jack Gold and starring Malcolm McDowell, Christopher Plummer and Simon Ward. The screenplay was written by Howard Barker. The film is based on the 1930s play Journey's End by R. C. Sherriff[citation needed] and the memoir Sagittarius Rising by Cecil Lewis[citation needed] of the Royal Flying Corps. It tells the story of an RFC squadron in the First World War and the high turnover of pilots and the strain on the survivors and includes aerial dogfight scenes impressive for the time it was filmed.

Contents

[edit] Plot

The film follows the plot of Journey's End quite closely,[original research?] albeit set in the RFC rather than in an infantry battalion.

The film opens with fighter ace Major Gresham (McDowell) speaking to a class of students at his former British public school. Back at his base, a batch of new recruits shows up and one of them, Lt. Croft (Firth), is the younger brother of his girlfriend. Already Gresham relies on alcohol to cope with combat stress and bring himself to continue flying. Now the strain of being responsible for his fiancée's brother further weighs on him. Croft has to learn how to survive not only in the air, but on the ground as well as he initially makes some minor mistakes in squadron etiquette. The film also follows Croft's rapid rite of passage from naive schoolboy to adult fighting soldier. We also see Croft's initial hero-worship of his commanding officer crumble as he learns the realities of combat, yet regains a new respect for Gresham and the stresses he has to cope with.

The film reaches its tragic conclusion when Croft finally scores his first air victory and seems to have made the leap in skills necessary to survive but is suddenly killed in a collision with a German aircraft.

[edit] Features

The squadron depicted is loosely based on No. 56 Squadron, one of the famous SE5 squadrons. The airfield facilities, barracks and motor transport are authentic looking World War I era equipments and the planes flown, although not real SE5's but converted Stampe SV.4s, are similar enough and the camouflage used authentic.

The film reused aerial sequences from The Blue Max and Von Richthofen and Brown.

There is a real Avro 504 used in the film, while the Nieuport 17 plane that 'Uncle' says is the one preferred by Gresham is nothing but another film SE5. A mistake the film makes is the presence of a two-seater reconnaissance aircraft within the same fighter unit; RFC squadrons by this time were usually organised for one aircraft type and operational purpose.

Some other parts in the film come from real stories of the RFC, like the pilot who prefers to jump from his burning plane rather than being slowly roasted in his cockpit (no parachutes were issued during the conflict to Allied aircrew). The fatalistic mess room songs and the often juvenile, 'public school' attitudes of the young pilots are considered authentic portrayals of the time.

The role played by Christopher Plummer (‘Uncle’) is characteristic of the Edwardian upper-class warrior stereotype, who tries to overcome the cruelty of the war with civility and a gentle manner.

[edit] Cast

Photo of an original movie poster

(Name in brackets gives the character's equivalent in Journey's End.)

[edit] External links

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