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Tuesday, April 6, 2010

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BOMBERS B-52 is a mildly diverting tribute to the title plane. The film has a good cast and beautiful widescreen cinematography, but is hampered by a meandering, fairly lame plot.

Karl Malden plays Chuck Brennan, a 20-year Air Force mechanic. He's had it in for Jim Herlihy (Efrem Zimbalist Jr.) since Korea, and when Jim becomes the new C.O. of Chuck's base, Chuck decides to retire for a more lucrative career in the private sector, despite his love for the military. Jim wants Chuck to remain in the Air Force to work on the base's new B-52 planes, but when Jim begins romancing Chuck's daughter Lois (Natalie Wood), Chuck is all the more determined to leave.

The plot bounces all over the place, depicting unconnected trivial incidents which don't really have any bearing on the story: See Chuck's car overheat. (Well, maybe that's to illustrate he's not making much money...) See Chuck go on vacation. (Of course, all we see, other than the car overheating, is a visit to a friend and a stop in a cafe.) Most inexplicably, see Chuck be a game show contestant. (?!) See Chuck give his daughter a yellow convertible. See daughter be a total ingrate! See Chuck arrest saboteurs on the base. And so it goes. Yawn...

The second half of the film isn't a great deal more exciting, but the storyline flows a little better as it depicts test flights of the B-52. Some of the aerial footage is quite interesting, especially the in-flight refueling of the B-52.

I love Karl Malden, but his Chuck is a bit of a one-note character -- a problem which plagues all the characters in the movie. It's easy to anticipate that Chuck's longtime antagonism toward Jim is based on a misunderstanding, which makes Chuck's tiresome antipathy toward the level-headed, charming Jim seem a bit pointless. Malden's Chuck spends most of the movie fuming, which gets old quickly.

Despite the film's poster art, the romance between Zimbalist and Wood is more talked about than actually seen; it's sweet but tepid. I couldn't help wondering if the filmmakers were a bit leery of showing then 18- or 19-year-old Natalie being romanced by a man who in real life was almost two decades her senior. Natalie doesn't do much more onscreen than pout that Daddy isn't "respected" because he's a lowly sergeant who doesn't make a lot of money.

Marsha Hunt plays the peacemaking, supportive wife and mother. I love Marsha Hunt and the movie is better any time she's on the screen, but in all honesty it's a nothing part, with her emotions written to run the gamut from A to B. Her overly placid character is there to reassure her husband and her daughter, but she doesn't get to do much reacting herself, even when her husband bails out of a plane and is missing.

One of the funniest moments comes in the climactic sequence when a search and rescue operation is underway. The voice heard over the intercom at headquarters is unmistakeably that of...James Garner! This film was released the same year he appeared in SAYONARA and began starring on MAVERICK. He also played a supporting role in Randolph Scott's SHOOT-OUT AT MEDICINE BEND that year.

The film has some attractive '50s set design. I loved the greens and reds in Malden and Hunt's little base home and the Fiestaware pitchers on view. The cookware with glass lids Hunt used made me think of this story I saw today on Guardian Service cookware; I wonder if that's what she was using?

Perhaps the most striking aspect of the film, living in the unsettling shadow of this week's news, is its clear statement of the United States policy of nuclear deterrence and the film's theme that the United States is a force for good in a scary world.

If you don't blink, you'll spot Juanita Moore (IMITATION OF LIFE) as a maid and Will Hutchins (SUGARFOOT) as a navigator. Don Kelly, Nelson Leigh, Ann Doran, and Russ Conway are also in the cast.

This film was directed by Gordon Douglas. The striking cinematography was by William H. Clothier. The movie runs 106 minutes.

BOMBERS B-52 is available in a beautiful DVD print as part of the Natalie Wood Collection. The only extras are the trailer and a cartoon.

Glenn Erickson reviewed the Natalie Wood DVD set at DVD Savant.

BOMBERS B-52 is worth seeing if you like the cast, appreciate nice widescreen photography, or have an interest in films depicting the Cold War era...just don't expect anything especially exciting.

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