Sometimes you wonder why certain movies get
transferred to DVD, especially projects broadcast on British TV that never ran
on television here, featuring actors you've never heard of. It's not that First
Light (2010) is a terrible film; it's just that it's innocuous. And
considering the story it’s telling, it shouldn't be.
Geoffrey Wellum |
The one other thing they do get right is
the ribald language. As Wellum approaches the enemy for the first time, he
exclaims, “oh my fucking god!” We then get a reverse shot of what he is seeing:
hundreds and hundreds of German airplanes. This is practically the first flyboy
film I've ever seen that allowed the characters to actually swear like, well,
pilots. Of course they cursed up a storm, whether in shock or in anger as they
tried to shoot the shit out of another plane that just wouldn’t go down. It
gives the film a bit of authenticity that is missing from the rest of the
project. Oh yeah, the flying sequences are pretty good, too, and if they are
CGI, quite realistic. It's just a pity they didn't spend more time on the story
and less on the battle scenes. If they had they may have been on to something.
Colin and Ewan McGregor |
Battle of Britain is actually the other-side-of-the-coin film to First Light.
Where First Light is mostly a dramatic film intercut with brief
present-day documentary footage of WWII pilot, Geoffrey Wellum, Battle of
Britain is mostly a current-era documentary featuring short archival
footage from WWII that was probably staged for the propaganda cameras at the
time. Of the two, Battle of Britain is the better film because it
manages to tell its story in toto, where First Light tells only half a
story (the Siege of Malta material would have been far more interesting).
Battle of Britain isn't a very deep doc though and it covers ground we've all seen
before, but the footage of Colin McGregor learning to fly the Spitfire is
actually very entertaining. It also contains a few surprising moments around
the memorial for WWII RAF pilots. Shaped like a gigantic propeller and located
on the southern coast, it's not a memorial at all, since all the names of all
the men who flew during WWII, whether they survived or not, is included. It's a
lovely tribute to everyone who risked their necks in those crazy-fast (for the
time) airplanes.
One of those crazy-brave people was
Geoffrey Wellum. It's unfortunate that the film that is about him is slight and
unmemorable. He deserves a much fuller tribute.
– David
Churchill is a critic and author of the novel The Empire of Death. You can read an excerpt here. Or go to http://www.wordplaysalon.com for more
information.
No comments:
Post a Comment