Lafayette Escadrille

Melisa 2022-01-06 08:02:09

Many people have recommended it before watching it. There was a tear in my eyes when I watched it, and it finally fell off at the end of the film.

In my opinion, the most moving part is not that Reed Cassidy smiled and died with the German airship; it was not that Lafayette risked the danger to save the four French villains; it was not that the heroes painted their own signs on the fuselage, nor were they the last two. Reluctant to say goodbye...but the narration at the end of the film tells everyone's future life: those who survived live an ordinary or extraordinary life. The last really old photo is even more awe-inspiring. It's all really happened!! The

war is really harmful. Thankfully, Director Bill’s original intention is very clear. If there is no sudden thought above and want to start a war, then everyone will live well, but there is no such thrilling story, and there is no dream of people in that era. It is impossible to achieve so many heroes.. The greatest enemy of mankind is not war, but irreversible things, such as time.

By the way, the shots of the aerial combat inside are really like those in Star Wars!

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Extended Reading

Flyboys quotes

  • Captain Thenault: Any questions?

    Eddie Beagle: [raises hand] Yes, sir. Will we be back by lunch.

    [boys snicker]

    Captain Thenault: I mean any intelligent questions.

    Eddie Beagle: Sorry. Just trying to loosen things up.

    Captain Thenault: Don't.

  • [first lines]

    Title Card: By the start of 1916, World War I had wreaked havoc across Europe. Over nine million people would eventually die.

    Title Card: Although the airplane had only recently been invented, it was quickly adapted into a war machine.

    Title Card: The young men who flew them became the first fighter pilots and a new kind of hero was born.