Thursday, April 7, 2011

The P-51 in Movies

You are treading on thin ice when you state that something is "the best". With that in mind, any reasonably informed person would have to acknowledge that the P-51 Mustang was, at the very least, one of the best fighters of WWII. No less an "authority" than Hermann Goring, the infamous head of the Luftwaffe, said he realized the war was lost when he saw P-51s over Berlin. In The Military Channel's series of "10 Best," the episode on fighter aircraft ranked the P-51 # 1, not just of WWII, but of all time.

P-51B CV-Q 44-15717 (368FS) in flight with a flight of four. Photo courtesy of Elsie Palicka, wife of Ed Palicka, 370th Fighter Squadron Photographer: Archived by Char Baldridge, Historian, 359th Fighter Group Association.

Given its illustrious history and reputation, you would think the P-51 might have been featured in multiple mainstream films. Nope. To the best of our knowledge there is a grand total of one film that is centered around the P-51, and it takes place not in WWII but Korea. The 1957 release of Battle Hymn (widescreen, color) used Air National Guard Mustangs with the American southwest substituting for Korea. There isn't any actual combat footage but the staged attack and flying sequences give the viewer a glorious look at the P-51.

A 1996 HBO movie, The Tuskegee Airmen, tells the story of the famous black aviators that flew out of North Africa and Italy in the 332nd Fighter Group. A few civilian P-51s were rounded up and repainted, and the movie has some decent flying sequences.

That's it. There are P-51 "sightings" in a few movies such as Empire Of The Sun, Saving Private Ryan, Memphis Belle, and, if memory serves, the 1968 film Dark Of The Sun, set in the Congo.

Ironically, the plane the Mustang was most often called upon to escort - the B-17, has had it's fair share of exposure. The 1943 film Air Force, set in the Pacific, revolves around the B-17 "Mary Ann", and the 1990 release of Memphis Belle follows the story (Hollywoodized) of the real "Memphis Belle". Another 1943 release, Bombardier, centers on bombardier training in B-17s. It was filmed, in part, at Kirtland Army Air Field in New Mexico, where real training was taking place. 1962's The War Lover stars Steve McQueen in the title role as a B-17 pilot. In 1948 Command Decision concentrated on the thought process behind the strategy of daylight bombing and target selection. Based on the play of the same name, there are a few B-17 scenes in the movie. The following year the Academy Award winning Twelve O'clock High emphasized the toll the decision making took on those in command, but it also utilized Allied and German combat footage of B-17s in action. Both Command Decision and Twelve O'clock High were set in 1943, before the deployment of the Mustang, and focused on the terrible losses the bombers incurred without long range fighter escort.

George Lucas is co-producing a movie titled Red Tails, about the Tuskegee airmen. Due for release in 2011, it stars Cuba Gooding, Jr, who also starred in HBO's Tuskegee Airmen. Since it will, presumably, be set in Italy, it means there still is not a single movie featuring P-51s flying out of England. Who knows, maybe Fogg In the Cockpit...

We'd love to hear from you about any other P-51 sightings in film or TV.

3 comments:

  1. How could you possibly forget "Fighter Squadron", produced in 1948? It featured a squadron that flew the P-47 Thunderbolt. The "enemy" planes were P-51D Mustangs painted to look like Me-109's. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fighter_Squadron

    The P-51 was featured in two episodes of 12 o'clock High, a TV program in the mid 1960's.

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  2. You're forgetting a short scene in Hart's War, when a Tuskegee P-51 chases a German fighter across the POW camp... and Terence Howard's character tells the white Americans that was his black squadron, the Red Tail Angels, that the white Americans were cheering on. Funny reactions.

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  3. Spielberg's "Empire of the Sun" is a virtual love letter to the Mustang.

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