Air Force with John Ridgely: DVD Cover
  • Cover Image

Air Force Director: Howard Hawks Cast: John Ridgely, Gig Young, Arthur Kennedy, Harry Carey

DVD - Black & White Learn more

BUY THIS ITEM

  • $19.99 Online price
    $17.99 Member price
  • skip to cart
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=012569599826&productCode=DV&maxCount=100&threshold=3

GET FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OF $25 OR MORE

DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:

Usually ships within 24 hours

Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

Enter a zip code

  • DVD Release Date: 06/05/2007
  • Original Release: 1943
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 9,404

Customers who bought this also bought

 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Cast & Crew
  • Full Product Details

Features

Oscar-Nominated Technicolor Drama Short at War; Classic Cartoons The Fifth-Column Mouse and Scrap Happy Daffy; Audio-Only Bonus: Radio Adaptation With George Raft and Harry Carey; Theatrical Trailer; Subtitles: English, Français & Protuguês (Feature Film Only).

Full Product Details

Editorial Reviews

The 1943 Howard Hawks-directed Air Force comes at the attack on Pearl Harbor from a side angle, opening with a squadron of nine B-17 bombers takes off for Hickam Field, Hawaii, on December 6, 1941. The crew of the Mary Ann, including two new men, assistant radio man Private Chester (Ray Montgomery) and gunner Sergeant Joe Winocki (John Garfield), assembles for the flight, and in the first 20 minutes, the movie reveals certain things about the crew: the shadowy past of one, the mother of another, and the wife of a third; two of them are good friends with the sister of McMartin (Arthur Kennedy), the bombardier, who lives in Honolulu; the son of the senior member of the crew, Sgt. White (Harry Carey Sr.), is a pilot stationed at Clark Field in the Philippines. Then more characters make entrances: the aircraft commander Quincannon (John Ridgely); Weinberg (George Tobias), a Jewish mechanic from New York; and a man from a farm in the upper Midwest -- they all represent a broad cross-section of America as it saw itself, and the "regular guys" in the Army Air Force as it existed in 1941. The flight proceeds without incident. Winocki, an embittered, washed-out flight school candidate who accidentally killed another pilot, is about to leave the service when the weather report from Hickam Field is interrupted, and the radio man begins picking up transmissions in Japanese. The Mary Ann and the rest of the squadron fly right into the middle of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor unarmed and out of gas, and nearly crack up landing on an emergency field; no sooner do they make repairs than the crew comes under attack, and the plane takes off and makes for Hickam Field, which they find a flaming shambles. They fly on to the Philippines, stopping at Wake Island just long enough to meet a few members of the doomed Marine garrison, taking their company mascot, a dog, with them. At Clark Field, the Mary Ann and her crew finally go into action against the enemy, flying in alone against a Japanese invasion force; Quincannon is mortally wounded in the brief action, which leaves the plane damaged seemingly beyond repair. The remaining crew won't give up the plane, however, even when ordered to abandon and destroy her; they get the bomber off just ahead of the advancing Japanese, and survive to help bring retribution to the invading fleet and the Japanese empire. Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Viewer Rating:
Write a Review