<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<reviews itemIdentifier="MemphisBelle">
  <review>
    <reviewbody>This film gives the viewer a taste of what it was like to be an Air Force pilot during World War II and go on a bombing run. All the footage is real, shot during actual aerial combat. That and the second-person narration give the film an exciting you-are-there feeling. But there's grit as well as glamour in the job, and the film doesn't skirt that either. If Kill or Be Killed gives you a taste of what the infantry solider went through, this film does the same for the bomber crews of the Air Force. A very effective piece of propaganda, based on reality.
Ratings: Camp/Humor Value: P. Weirdness:  Historical Interest: Overall Rating: $$$$.</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>Bally Jerry Pranged His Kite Right in the Hows-Your-Father!</reviewtitle>
    <stars>4</stars>
    <reviewer>Christine Hennig</reviewer>
    <createdate>2006-02-09 14:24:25</createdate>
    <reviewdate>2006-02-09 14:24:25</reviewdate>
  </review>
  <review>
    <reviewbody>When watching this documentary, one gets a sense of what these airmen felt as they carried out their orders to protect the freedom of their homeland.</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>.</reviewtitle>
    <stars>5</stars>
    <reviewer>stilist</reviewer>
    <createdate>2006-04-15 16:55:12</createdate>
    <reviewdate>2006-04-15 16:55:12</reviewdate>
  </review>
  <review>
    <reviewbody>I was seven years old when the Memphis Belle made its last flight. I never saw the film. I didn't need to, I was busy conducting my own reconnaisance at the large aerodrome which dominated our village in the South of England. The film brought back to me the fascination of huge metal birds that flew, even though I was certain they would never get off the ground.
There was a film made later after the war with the same title (directed by Michael Caton Jones) but it did not hit me with the same impact as the original. I think its authenticity is, if you had ever been involved in a world war, awesome and at the same time frightening; you know it happened once and there's an uneasy feeling that the same can (in one form or another) happen again. I closed my eyes while watching for a moment and listened to the droning of the aircraft; and I was back there once more in the little village with the big aerodrome. This film is not an entertainment film, (although in a few places there is suspense enough) it is visual truth of a terrible time that should have taught us many things. Somehow, I don't think we got the complete message. Given the chance, man is only too eager to assert his dominance over others.</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>The Memphis Belle</reviewtitle>
    <stars>5</stars>
    <reviewer>victorgeorge</reviewer>
    <createdate>2006-05-26 21:08:34</createdate>
    <reviewdate>2006-05-27 04:00:05</reviewdate>
  </review>
  <review>
    <reviewbody>My father did this crazy business, i.e., flying over Germany in World War II as a gunner on a    B-17.  They bombed a whole bunch of stuff.  They got Sehweinfort.  They got Hamburg,  They got Wilhemshaven.  They even got Berlin.  My dad had no politics in those days; hell, he was only 19 years old (where were we when we were 19?).  

I rate this one a big fat 5 because of the truly frightening tale it tells about a war that was REAL, not the phony and contrived "conflicts" that America wastes its time and its youth on these days.  My dad's war was real.  Its issues were clear.  Memphis Belle is a universal story of that conflict that is timeless and yet still immediate.  It is a story of heroes who didn't want to be.  They just were.</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>When My Dad Was Young</reviewtitle>
    <stars>5</stars>
    <reviewer>Hamilcar21</reviewer>
    <createdate>2006-07-09 08:50:01</createdate>
    <reviewdate>2006-07-09 08:50:01</reviewdate>
  </review>
  <review>
    <reviewbody>and a fitting tribute to those brave men who went out on missions for eight to ten hours at a time, flying in unheated and un-pressurized aircraft, bouncing along over the continent of Europe at 10,000 feet, forty degrees below zero temperatures, breathing oxygen through a rubber apparatus in skies hostile with deadly anti-aircraft fire and enemy fighter aircraft shooting at them with machine-gun and 20-mm cannon fire. Many - too many - did not return.</reviewbody>
    <reviewtitle>A fine war report</reviewtitle>
    <reviewer>rbigelo</reviewer>
    <reviewdate>2007-09-30 04:13:06</reviewdate>
    <createdate>2007-09-30 04:13:06</createdate>
    <stars>5</stars>
  </review>
  <info>
    <num_reviews>5</num_reviews>
    <avg_rating>4.80</avg_rating>
  </info>
</reviews>
