This blog is a random collection of information, partly in support of my quotations web site. Other topics include wine, military news, economics, history, libertarianism, and other random things which happen to strike my fancy. Backup site is at http://quotulatiousness.blogspot.com/ (if there are no posts showing, hit the backup blog for explanation). Comments have been turned off, as the spam was getting too much to handle. Comments can be emailed to me for posting.

September 20, 2006

Historical ignorance

This is the write-up for a new film opening this weekend:

Flyboys (PG-13); Wide release
In 1914, The Great War — WWI — began in Europe. By 1917, the Allied powers of France, England, Italy and others were on the ropes against the German juggernaut. Some altruistic young Americans disagreed with the war. They volunteered to fight alongside their counterparts in France; some in the infantry, some in the Ambulance Corps. A handful of others had a different idea: they decided to learn how to fly. The first of them — a squadron of only 38 — became known as the Lafayette Escadrille. This is their story. Forced to abandon his family's ranch, Blaine Rawlings finds his future in a newsreel chronicling the adventures of young aviators in France. At a small train station in rural Nebraska, William Jensen promises to make his family proud. In New York, spoiled Briggs Lowry embarks on a trans-Atlantic passage. Meanwhile, in France, black expatriate boxer, Eugene Skinner, vows to repay his debt to his adopted racially tolerant country. Together, these American boys arrive at an aerodrome in France, eager to learn how to fly. What they didn't realize was that they were about to embark on a great, romantic adventure, becoming the world's first combat pilots.

If the war's been going on since 1914, and it's "now" 1917, you'd think someone, somewhere on one side or the other might have had a notion or two about air combat, wouldn't you?

Posted by Nicholas at September 20, 2006 08:57 AM
Comments
Before you get too upset about this, you might note that some of the founding members of the LE were flyers before the war ever started, and some of them had been flying for France since 1914 or later. So (at least partially) some of them actually were the world's first combat aviators, and considering the limited number of combat pilots at the time, anyone flying during the War should probably be considered a pioneer in the field. Posted by: cirby at September 20, 2006 11:11 AM
I know little about the Lafayette Escadrille, and I was surprised to find that the part in the movie involving a black fighter pilot is based on a real person. I'd blithely assumed that this had been added to appeal to modern sensibilities. Posted by: Nicholas at September 20, 2006 11:19 AM
But have you watched the previews closely? Everyone sees the part where the zepplin is blowing up, but did you see the man running for his life along the top of it? I can only assume that he's an "altruistic young American" about to save the bloody day. Yeah. This is gonna be an awsome movie... Posted by: Liam at September 21, 2006 04:34 PM


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