Hell's Angels

November. 15,1930      NR
Rating:
7.3
Trailer Synopsis Cast

When World War I breaks out, brothers Roy and Monte Rutledge, each attending Oxford university, enlist with the Royal Flying Corps.

Ben Lyon as  Monte Rutledge
James Hall as  Roy Rutledge
Jean Harlow as  Helen
John Darrow as  Karl Armstedt
Lucien Prival as  Baron Von Kranz
Frank Clarke as  Lt. von Bruen
Douglas Gilmore as  Capt. Redfield
Jane Winton as  Baroness Von Kranz
Evelyn Hall as  Lady Randolph
William B. Davidson as  Staff Major

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Reviews

Karry
1930/11/15

Best movie of this year hands down!

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TinsHeadline
1930/11/16

Touches You

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PodBill
1930/11/17

Just what I expected

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Comwayon
1930/11/18

A Disappointing Continuation

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DeborahPainter855
1930/11/19

I'm glad that my fondness for Jean Harlow led me to see this amazing film. So many scenes haunt me from this film, especially the pilots, the night before a crucial bombing run, talking about the futility of worrying about whether or not they were going to die... they probably were... and the man who was accused of being "yellow" because he dared question why they were Over There to begin with .... the Germans taking orders from their commanding officer in the zeppelin (I won't tell you what they are so as not to place spoilers in my review). The plane crashes in the hillsides were real planes and they were really crashing. The score was great as well. One of the great war epics.

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Tad Pole
1930/11/20

. . . who proves to be a Brit! The power of life to imitate art cannot be overestimated, and Howard Hughes was a master of insinuating his morbid fantasies into the fabric of civilization forevermore. He famously designed the cantilevered brassiere for one of his movies, which persisted to Madonna and beyond. Here, in the oddly-titled HELL'S ANGELS, the Allied anti-heroes use suicide as a military tactic more than once. Not to be outdone, dozens of Germans march out the bomb bay of their dirigible without parachutes, viewing themselves as expendable ballast. Even fratricide is not off limits to the main character, and if Howard could have worked a little incest into the plot I'm sure he would have. Hughes lured three stunt pilots to their deaths in "real life" during the making of this flick. It got to the point where Howard had to put his mouth where his money was, and fly his death crates himself for the stunts toward the end of the shoot. As a death-obsessed crazy living a charmed life, he survived to film this movie not once, but twice, making it the most expensive flick until GONE WITH THE WIND came out. Adjusted for ego and inflation, it tops HEAVEN'S GATE and ISHTAR put together as a monument to the wrong-headed promulgation of dangerous ideas which obviously inspired PEARL HARBOR. Too bad we do not know what variation of "Rosebud" Hughes was muttering as he passed away in his museum of his own carefully bottled and preserved urine.

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calvinnme
1930/11/21

In 1927, Howard Hughes began production on a epic featuring the pilots of World War I that would be heavy on aeronautical thrills much in the same vein as "Wings". However, Hughes just could not stop tinkering with his pet project, eventually running the production cost up to four million dollars. This movie is a good example of not being able to tell where Hughes' OCD ends and his desire for perfection begins. However, it all paid off in the end, although it took years. Eventually the film did make eight million dollars, making it one of the top money-making films of the 1930's.There are two major flying sequences in the movie, part of which were actually filmed by Hughes since he couldn't get a professional cameraman to take the kind of chances involved. 1927's "Wings" had some great aerial combat, and had actually won a special Academy Award for engineering, but this film really outstrips it in daring and realism. For example, there are thirty or forty biplanes spinning around one another in one breathtaking combat sequence. Hughes pulled these scenes off largely by employing actual veteran flyers and ex-doughboys eager to show off their skill on camera in return for the big bucks Hughes was offering. However, after three of them died in the extreme sequences, the rest refused to fly for the final scene, saying that they were sure to crash. Hughes decided to fly the scene himself, getting the needed shot. However, just as the pilots had predicted, he also crashed the plane, although he escaped with relatively minor injuries. The main dirigible model was built on a vast scale, and when it explodes (in partial color) the effect is impressive. For the final aerial scene, Hughes used an authentic rebuilt German Gotha biplane bomber.Politically, this film has quite a bit of anti-German sensationalism. For example, the German dirigible commander decides to lighten his ship by ordering his own crew to jump to their deaths. In this film, although there is one "good" German - Roy and Monte's Oxford pal Karl - the women are all faithless. There are no adoring mothers or girlfriends waiting for our airmen to return home in this movie. This is especially true of Jean Harlow's character, Helen. She toys with Roy's heart while every man in uniform becomes her target of opportunity. Helen's outfits are all very revealing and definitely pre-code. There is also plenty of rough language between the pilots, especially when they are aloft. Although this is probably quite realistic in terms of what went on, this also could only happen in the pre-code era. Hughes knew the so-called "code" had no teeth in the era in which this film was made, although his stunts caused him real trouble in his later films.It's hard to tell from the film if Hughes had any real hard and fast feelings about World War I or war in general, or if it was just him inserting the right sense of showmanship at appropriate places to stir up the audience. For example, in one scene a man demonstrating in the street preaches that it is folly to fight a war that is really about capitalism being impeded by the petty inter-fighting of the various European powers, and is beaten by the crowd as a result. But strangely enough, when that line of reasoning is later adopted by the "bad" brother Monte, although much less eloquently, he is deemed a coward. Monte tries to redeem himself by volunteering for a dangerous aerial mission, but even then he has to be dragged to execute the assignment by his brother. When both brothers are captured and Monte wants to tell everything about the pending British attack to his German captors in order to save himself, brother Roy comes up with a clever but unpleasant solution.This is really great entertainment if you are at all interested in either film or aviation history.

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Tim Kidner
1930/11/22

Certainly one of the most expensive - and only three years after the inception of 'Talkies', this audacious epic still features some of the most dramatic aerial dog-fight footage ever made, the like of which will never be made ever again.I came to be interested in it as it takes a whole chunk of Marty Scorsese's modern study on Howard Hughes, in his film 'The Aviator'. Leonardo DeCaprio portrays the ambitious Hughes there, the Howard Hughes who only went on to direct Hells Angels after sacking three others, just because they couldn't translate his ideas onto celluloid.As expenses spiralled higher than the actual WWI biplanes, Hughes had amassed the largest private fighter plane force in the World, larger than most countries had. Seventy pilots were employed - and three died during the shoot, with Hughes piloting himself on a stunt that everybody else had refused to perform - he crashed, breaking many bones. A ratio of almost 250 to one feet of film shot, to that used and in The Aviator, we learnt that the whole production was grounded for weeks, costing a fortune, as the Californian skies remained too blue - and cloudless. Hughes claimed that without a background to offset the planes, they looked unreal, as if against a modern CGI green background, but without anything added. This also made them look as if they were static, shot from the side on.In actuality, most of the dialogue and story had been shot as a Silent in 1928, but as it all took so long, Sound came in and so was then out- of-date. Only someone so brilliantly reckless would re-shoot the it, though those looking close report some scenes can be seen to have been dubbed over.So, how does it rate as a film? Yes, it's dated, obviously, with many of the male leads looking rather absurd but the sex-siren of the day, Jean Harlow is superbly spirited and sultry - I was surprised how steamy some scenes in late-night French cafes got - this was before the days of heavy censorship, so real, heavy kissing is very evident. There's a comical - and very un-PC (these days) mockery of the Germans; the Zeppelin (all in a lovely tinted dark blue) wafts over London - their target, Trafalgar Square. After many calculations, their ordnance lands in (presumably) the Thames. "Mission accomplished, target destroyed" they report back...etc etc. Do NOT buy this film for any historical fact, but relish in the sheer (if slightly odd) entertainment values...That that Zeppelin is flown into on purpose by a gallant British pilot in an effort to bring it down is shown in all its glory - one of the dazzling highlights - the whole Zeppelin structure hypnotically scrunching up into a ball of bright orange, with that lovely blue tint - almost alone worth buying the film for.Yes, it takes an hour and a half to get to the finale dog-fights and these are both exciting but also graphic; no angle or violence spared, again quite shocking for such an old movie. These scenes are truly awe inspiring and even classic WWII movies such as The Battle Of Britain had only a few planes, not dozens and all the shots here are from other planes flying alongside - no back projection here!Yes, it is a Museum piece now but a truly magnificent one and one that should be seen to respect the vision and technical accomplishment, which in its day, I would dare to say was the 'Titanic' of the time. Try it....

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