As America’s involvement in World War II deepened, military
leaders became more desperate to find an edge and finish the fight. As such, the
Air Force turned to a group of black pilots known as the Tuskegee Airmen.
Having been previously shunned and denied the right to fight for their
countries, these pilots, under the command of Colonel AJ Bullard (Terrence
Howard), had been pushed to the limit and trained harder than virtually any
group in the military. Finally given an opportunity to serve, the Tuskegee
Airmen were thrown into the midst of the fray and given the most dangerous
missions the war had to offer through which they were able to not only make a
name for themselves in the sky but also to demonstrate the ignorance behind the
discrimination they faced on the ground.
Most people these days know a thing or two about the
Tuskegee Airmen. They are some of the bravest men this country has ever known
and their legacy is one that will live on long after they themselves have gone
on. They deserve much better than Red
Tails.
There are only two positive things I can say about this
movie:
1.) The dogfights are, at times, quite stunning. The
vast, VAST, majority of the movie’s $58 million budget was clearly spent on special
effects and while these shots don’t exactly operate with much realism, they are
visually compelling.
2.) Red Tails tries
hard. It is, if nothing else, an honest effort to honor the pilots and
illustrate just what they went through. This is most readily evident in the
earnestness of the narrative and the performance of Howard and a couple of
others in the cast.
The problem is that everything else that does not involve
this film’s special effects or its laborious effort is an absolute bloody disaster.
Even for a George Lucas production, the dialogue is particularly atrocious in
both actual terminology and general approach. It is perhaps the thickest, most
heavy-handed script I could possibly imagine. Red Tails desperately wants you to know that these men faced a
tremendous amount of racism and boy, does this movie lay it on thick when it
wants to get a point across. Virtually every line spoken by a non-Airman is
stripped down to its most basic level with no allowance for exposition or a differentiation
in tone. Even the German pilot who vexes the Red Tails for a time speaks
entirely in mono-syllabic, monotone terms, including such gems as “Those pilots
are African.” In all honesty the worst dialogue from the Star Wars prequels is better than what Red Tails has to offer, a shocking statement that I never thought I’d
never get to make.
Just like the script, the characters at work within Red Tails are overly earnest and paper
thin. Nate Parker is decent in his role as the squadron’s leader but no favors
are thrown his way by the rough plot points he has to work with. Most of the
other actors, however, measure up to the level of the narrative and at times it
was all I could do not to turn the TV off. I can’t really blame David Oyelowo,
Gerald McRaney, Cuba Gooding Jr. and the rest for the various lackluster turns
the actors provide as any movie that can make Bryan Cranston look bad probably
wasn’t going to work even with Oscar-caliber performances. But at the same
time, these portrayals are often cringe-inducing and they certainly do nothing
to pull this movie up from the muck it seems all too content to slide around
in. It really is a shame because, again, these soldiers deserve to be
memorialized on film in ways that Red
Tails can’t possibly hope to attain. In truth it really doesn’t get just a
whole lot worse than this.
It's sad to me that such a great story would suffer such terrible treatment.
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