Memphis Belle (1990)

reviewed by
Mark R. Leeper


                                MEMPHIS BELLE
                       A film review by Mark R. Leeper
                        Copyright 1990 Mark R. Leeper

Capsule review: Disappointing and undoubtedly fictionalized account of the twenty-fifth mission of the first B-17 crew to reach that number and be sent home. Eight real B-17s were used and they deserve billing above the likes of Matthew Modine, Eric Stoltz, and John Lithgow. Rating: low +1 (-4 to +4).

Undeniably there is some truth to this story. The Memphis Belle really was the first B-17 Flying Fortress to complete twenty-five missions and hence win its flight crew an opportunity to go home and sit out the rest of the war in celebrity and with relatively cushy assignments. Hence there really was a twenty-fifth mission of the Memphis Belle. Whether the first twenty-four missions were as routine as suggested in the film and the twenty-fifth was as dangerous ... that I am somewhat skeptical about. I take most of the film with more than one grain of salt. The drama is pat; the characters are stereotypes. In fact, the script candidly tells you that the characters are going to be stereotypes. "There's always one guy who's very religious, always one guy from Cleveland," we are told in the first scene. So of course we have these cliched characters here. This is *not* TWELVE O'CLOCK HIGH and it is not one of the great adventure films about World War II. It is, however, a very nice film to look at. The music and the decoration have a nice feel of 1943, even if one can argue that the party is a bit lavish for a humble air base. But the real visual splendor is in seeing genuine B-17s taking off and flying together. I think most people get some sort of a charge out of seeing airplanes flying and there is a lot of flying in this film.

Basically Memphis Belle details for the viewer several of the more common hazards of bombing runs over Germany. You see air battles; you see near-misses, light collisions, and heavy collisions. You see flying through a shower of flak. You see people getting shot up and mid-air surgery. Mostly you see a lot of scenes you have seen in other films. Yet somehow the film falls short of actually generating real excitement or tension. We know the Belle is going to get back and the characters are not real enough and certainly not endearing enough for us really to worry about their individual safety. The film has a few too many contrived touches even to have a feel of authenticity. It has fliers mistaking tomato soup for blood. It has a dog who recognizes the sound of his master's plane engines. Touches like these get in the way of the audience taking the story very seriously.

This is a pretty film to watch but both too shallow in its drama and too unexceptional in its action really to engage an audience. I give it a low +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.

                                        Mark R. Leeper
                                        att!mtgzy!leeper
                                        leeper@mtgzy.att.com
.

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