“Flying
Tigers” was John Wayne’s first war film.
As is well known, Wayne did not serve in the military in WWII. This movie is part of the argument that he
better served his country by making “flagwaving” films like this one. Since it is unlikely that the uniformed Wayne
would have killed as many Japanese in reality as compared to the celluloid
hero, let’s concede the argument. The
fact that the movie was made in 1943 means that there were technical
constraints on the effects and which impacted a script with the requisite
propaganda themes. The movie is meant to
be a tribute to the American Volunteer Group (popularly known as the “Flying
Tigers”) and leads off with a testimonial by Chiang Kai-shek. The plot is basically the story of the leader
of the unit (Wayne as Jim Gordon) and a hot shot jerk named Woody (John
Carroll). Gordon is the empathetic head
pilot who takes in black sheep pilots to shoot down Japanese planes for the
saintly (but hickish) Chinese people.
Woody is a wolf who makes no secret that he is in it just for the bounty
money given for each kill. He says “get
out your checkbook, General” when he shoots down a Zero. There is a love triangle involving a nurse
named Brook (Anna Lee). Woody wears out
his charming roguishness when he contributes to the downing and subsequent
strafing while parachuting death of the beloved exec “Hap” (Phil Kelly). He does get a chance to redeem himself at the
end and the love triangle conundrum is solved via subtraction.
“Flying
Tigers” was a big hit in a country that was craving Japanese ass-kicking. People had heard of the famous unit already,
but if they were hoping for a history lesson they were disappointed. None of the characters were based on real
people. The only thing the movie gets
right is the fact that the pilots were paid a bounty for each kill. The biggest boner is having the unit earning
those bounties before Pearl Harbor. In
reality, the AVG did not go into action until after Pearl Harbor. The other departure from reality is in the
air combat depicted in the movie. That
can partly be blamed on the available technology. The effects make heavy use of models (P-40
Warhawks) and footage (including Japanese newsreels to show the effects of
bombings). Although the movie was
nominated for an Academy Award for Best Effects, it looks decidedly
quaint. There are three ways to go in
dogfight movies: the use of models, the
use of actual planes to reenact, and the use of CGI. The use of models can be pulled off if you
are making “Star Wars”, but in this case it just looks like models. Plus models pre-Star Wars often defy the
realities of physics and look foolish doing so.
“Flying Tigers” also falls into the Old School of showing dogfights via
cockpit shots and machine guns blazing.
Any plane shot at goes down and usually with the bullet ridden body of
the pilot on board (unless you want to reenact the dastardly strafing of an
American pilot early in the war).
“Flying
Tigers” is patriotic bull shit, but it is not painful to watch. The acting is good. Wayne is Wayne, as usual. Carroll gets the meaty role and digs his
teeth into it. The character is not
two-dimensional and although quite a cad, he has some redeeming qualities. Anna Lee is lovely and can actually act a bit
(usually not a requirement in movies like this). The plot is very predictable, but what do you
expect from a 1943 movie? I could say
the same for the dogfighting scenes, but they were done much better by movies
pre-1940s.
GRADE
= C
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