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Wings
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Directed by William Wellman.
Wings, the first feature film to win an Academy Award, tends to disappoint a little when seen today. Too much time is afforded the wheezy old plotline about two World War I aviators (Buddy Rogers, Richard Arlen) in love with the same Red Cross nurse (Clara Bow), while the comedy relief of El Brendel is decidedly not to everyone's taste. But during the aerial "dogfight" sequences, the film is something else again: a grand-scale spectacular, the likes of which has never been duplicated, not even by more expensive efforts like Hell's Angels (1930) and The Blue Max (1965). Twenty-eight-year-old director William Wellman, himself a wartime aviator, was fortunate enough to have the full cooperation of the US War department at his disposal (even though his legendary temper nearly lost him that cooperation on more than one occasion!) Brilliantly handled though the aerial scenes may be, they are matched by the Earthbound combat sequences, including the now-famous shot of a long trench caving in on hundreds of unfortunate doughboys. Oh, we forgot about the storyline. Well, here goes: Rogers and Arlen hate each other during basic training, grow to like each other, fall out again over Clara Bow's affections, Bow sacrifices her own nursing career to save a drunken Rogers from disgrace, Rogers goes on a rampage when he believes his pal Arlen has been killed, inadvertently shoots down Arlen while decimating the German air corps, is reunited with Bow, The End. Wrapped up in nurse's garb throughout most of the film, the ebullient Clara Bow is permitted a sequence in which, disguised as a Parisian floozie while trying to rescue a revelling Rogers, she displays a great deal of epidermis. One of the film's chief claims to fame is its "introduction" of Gary Cooper (who'd actually been in films since the early 1920s), in a brief but crucial role as veteran flyer with a cheerily fatalistic attitude. When originally released, Wings included a sequence lensed in the wide-screen "Magnascope" process; even when seen "flat", however, the film contains some of the best flying sequences ever captured on celluloid. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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stanjan1stanjan1 Wings
by stanjan1 in stanjan1 Blog
liked it.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful. [What do you think?]
"The All Movie Guide review must not be about the same version of Wings that I seen. Roders and Arlen are in love with the same woman but not Mary played by Clara Bow but rather Sylvia who is played by Jobyna Ralston and her role is very small comared to that of Clara Bow. The movie has it's slow moments and the drinking scenes in Paris are somewhat boring and unbelievable. Overall the movie is very good. The war scenes are the best feature of the movie. " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Wings is the 1927 equivalent of Top Gun, with marvelous air combat scenes and just enough plot to keep the film moving at other times. While the film stands out primarily because of its production values, there's still room for strong performances by Buddy Rogers and Clara Bow and a small but important appearance by Gary Cooper. On the downside, there's the not-so-comic relief of El Brendel, whose contributions occupy far too much of the film's 139 minutes. When it came time for the first Oscars to be awarded, the committee selecting the winners struggled with whether to honor a film for production values or for artistic merit. They did both, giving a Best Production Oscar to Wings and a Best Artistic Quality Oscar to Sunrise. ~ Richard Gilliam, All Movie Guide
 



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