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| DVD - Special Edition / Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $19.99 |
| DVD | $14.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $19.99 |
Audio commentary by director Tony Bill and producer Dean Devlin
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Flyboys
1. Main Titles/Off to War [6:21]
2. Orientation [1:43]
3. For Killers Only [5:46]
4. Training [2:21]
5. Out of Gas [3:35]
6. Personal Insignia [4:20]
7. Briefing [4:48]
8. Dogfight [3:30]
9. Pilot Down [3:44]
10. Drink Up [5:52]
11. Lucienne [2:20]
12. Honor in the Skies [2:40]
13. Officially Killers [4:10]
14. A Future in Flying [2:25]
15. Having Fun [6:22]
16. Are You a Spy? [3:06]
17. Aerial Combat [3:32]
18. Desperate Measures [3:43]
19. Lowry's Cognac [4:58]
20. Finding Meaning [4:49]
21. Mercy Mission [3:11]
22. Pre-Dawn Rescue [4:05]
23. Formal Charges [6:46]
24. Zeppelin Attack [3:30]
25. Cassidy's Heroism [2:54]
26. Memorial Service [5:31]
27. See You in Paris [3:46]
28. The Jitters [6:01]
29. Bombing Raid [2:36]
30. The Falcon and the Eagle [2:44]
31. Flyboys [2:41]
32. End Titles [4:13]
An old-fashioned adventure yarn set during World War I, Flyboys calls to mind such large-scale aviation epics of Hollywood’s Golden Age as Wings, Hell’s Angels, and The Dawn Patrol. It’s a story about the Lafayette Escadrille, a daring bunch of young Americans who flew for the French air corps before the United States entered the conflict in 1917. Among these proto-Top Guns are Blaine Rawlings (James Franco), a tight-lipped Texan whose family has just lost its ranch; William Jensen (Philip Winchester), the scion of a military family; Briggs Lowry (Tyler Labine), a spoiled, upper-class punk looking for thrills; Eugene Skinner (Abdul Salis), an expatriate black boxer who’s been treated better in France than in America; and Eddie Beagle (David Ellison), an odd, enigmatic youth with a peculiar past. Lovingly made by director Tony Bill (himself a longtime pilot with an affection for that era in aviation), Flyboys teems with elaborately staged and photographed dogfights. By accident or design, the formulaic script actually enhances the film’s kinship with earlier classic aviation movies. Plot or character development, though, remain secondary concerns: The film is friendliest when it's in the skies. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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