Flight

The Younger Generation (see August 8) was Capra's (and Columbia's) first attempt at a talkie, and his cinematic confidence stops dead when the dialogue starts up. However, with Flight, released later in 1929, the advances are huge. The dialogue still sounds somehow both stiff and improvisational, but the camera has been freed, and the aerial photography here is stunning. It's a late entry in the post-Lindbergh aviation cycle, with a romantic triangle stolen from Wings (two flyboys/one nurse). Overall, Flight looks less a typical Capra than something from Howard Hawks or John Ford, with all its male roughhousing and Right Stuff. Indeed, its Air Force jingoism has made it irresistible for revival this year. After an opening modeled on the infamous wrong-way run in the 1929 Rose Bowl, Capra's free-and-easy docudrama turns to Central America. His characters fly off to Nicaragua to confront guerrilla hordes under "the bandit Lobo" (read "Sandino") and avenge mutilated U.S. Marines. Our misbegotten, wrong-way running hero is lost, reported last seen-believe it or not-"chasing some gooks." In the history of U.S. relations with Nicaragua, Flight is a little-known piece of propagandist escapism, crafted with Capra's own touch. Scott Simmon (Library of Congress Film Preservation, PFA 9/86)

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