Our
roller coaster ride continues as we get another episode with no action. This
trend is getting concerning. Did I wait years for this? Episode 6 covers three
threads. One is our sad sack navigator Crosby who is off to Oxford for some
lectures. A second is Rosenthal’s crew (the only surviving bomber from the
Bremen mission) on R&R at a mansion that is the equivalent of a cruise
ship. And finally, we follow Bucky as the evades capture in Germany.
“Masters of the Air” is being
compared to “Band of Brothers” and “The Pacific”, and both those other series
had episodes that developed characters instead of sating the male audiences’
desire for more combat. But both of those other series had a core of characters
that were appealing and stuck around through the series (mostly). And the
action was consistent in both of those. “The
Pacific” had two non-combat episodes (3&10) and BoB (1, 9, & 10). So
far, MOTA has already had two (4&6) and they are both poor, unlike the noncombat
episodes in the other two series.
I have not checked on accuracy of the
series yet because I do not want to know what happens, but based on this
episode I have to assume the stories of Crosby, Rosenthal, and Evans are true. Because if they are not, then the screenwriter
(John Orloff) has some explaining to do. Crosby is sent to the conference
because he needs time away because of the death of one of his friends. This is
a guy who has a desk job, and he needs time away? Is the series seriously arguing
that a guy flying a desk needs help more than the guys flying bombers? But
wait, I must be wrong because Rosenthal’s crew is given a break, too. After
THREE missions. Instead of concentrating on one of the B-17s from the original group
(there are three left), the series decides to focus on a new crew. As far as
the Bucky scenes, we get the obligatory scene where he has to see the damage
American bombs do to civilians. Remember, he was the guy who argued it’s
justified because its war. He and some other American flyers are assaulted by
German civilians in a brutal scene. I personally felt sympathy for the Germans
and definitely would have done what they did. It is a bit ironic that this happens
to Americans, instead of to Brits. At least we were trying to avoid collateral
damage, unlike the RAF. Bucky turns out to be an incredibly lucky guy as he
ends up alive and in a Stalag. Guess who is already there. Let me put it this way, female viewers must
really love the end of episode 6.
I gave the series a pass after the
bad episode 4. It was back on track with episode 5, but this episode is putrid.
The two R&R threads are terrible and that is not just because there are no
combat scenes. Crosby’s roommate is a British female. However, we know nothing
is going to happen because Crosby is not the type to cheat on his wife, so what
is the point? I would guess the purpose
for this pairing is to get female viewers. Rosenthal has the obligatory talk with the psychologist
where he claims he doesn’t need a break. But then the episode proves him right.
He shows no PTSD, nor do any of his crew. So, what is the point? While the 100th
is flying missions off screen, these guys are taking an unearned break! As far as Bucky, he escapes capture twice and
certain death twice. His thread gets the obligatory train carrying Jews. Holocaust reference – check.
MOTA has one of the best opening
credits that I have ever seen and much of the clips are events that have not
cropped up yet. This leads me to believe the series still has a lot of good
scenes coming up, but it’s getting late in the series. There are only three episodes
left. We still have not seen the Red Tails. And I assume the resistance thread
will be revisited. There was nothing in this episode. Instead, we spent most of the episode
watching uninteresting characters resting.
GRADE
= F