mustangdriver wrote:
I know I always take heat for this, BUT the Pearl harbor movie did some good. I had alot of non-aviation friends come up to me after seeing the film and ask things like, "Did a few P-40's really get in the air that day", or "That Doolittle Raid at the end, was that real?" I had one buddies wife come up to me after watching and as we talked about the real events, she almost got chocked up, and said, "Those Doolittle guys...they were told that it was basically a one way mission, and they went anyway". So yes while you and I can sit here and make fun of stuff that they got wrong, it still did some good by spoon feeding some history. There were also alot of good facts in it. Like using coke bottles to hold blood, and using lipstick to mark the patients. So the Zero is the wrong color. That wasn't the point of the movie. I guess I am one of the few that see that it did have some value. Anything that calls attention to the real veterans is a great thing. The movie had screenings with free admission to veterans. They had a special screening in Pittsburgh for WWII vets. The one thing that one I remember one of them saying was that some of the sounds were really taking him back. The sound of the shells as they were running seemed to dust some memories off for him. Funny how something can do that. Now I have to go. A real classic movie is on I can't miss. "Thunder Over Reno"

The farcical air situations aside, the things which annoyed me most about PH were the scenes of the attack itself... Spruance-class destroyers erupting in flame, nary a battleship to be seen, and those scenes which DID feature battlewagons had them arranged haphazardly, not even close to reflecting the situation on 7 December. And as any halfway decent historian will tell you, the arrangements of the ships played a critical part in the events of that morning. So, GRRRR to that.
On the plus side, however, we have Kate Beckinsale, whom I'd happily pay 7.50 to watch her read the phone book for two hours. So, we'll call it a draw.
Lynn