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Aviation/aircraft-related movies
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<blockquote data-quote="LeafByNiggle" data-source="post: 76584141" data-attributes="member: 436315"><p>It is so old it is out of copyright so you can watch it for <a href="https://youtu.be/UVxyzpab3wE" target="_blank">free on YouTube</a>. I just watched it again before posting. One correction: Stewart plays a geeky scientist, not an engineer with zero social skills. Don't expect great special effects from a black-and-white 1951 film. There is a lot about aviation, but watch it for the story and interpersonal relationships which are complex and well-acted by the stewardess, the film star (played by Marlene Dietrich), Mr. Theodore Honey (played by Jimmy Stewart) and his daughter. I like that everything comes together in the last 90 seconds of the film when three things happen at once that all confirm Mr. Honey's theory of metal fatigue fracture. You will find yourself cheering.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LeafByNiggle, post: 76584141, member: 436315"] It is so old it is out of copyright so you can watch it for [URL='https://youtu.be/UVxyzpab3wE']free on YouTube[/URL]. I just watched it again before posting. One correction: Stewart plays a geeky scientist, not an engineer with zero social skills. Don't expect great special effects from a black-and-white 1951 film. There is a lot about aviation, but watch it for the story and interpersonal relationships which are complex and well-acted by the stewardess, the film star (played by Marlene Dietrich), Mr. Theodore Honey (played by Jimmy Stewart) and his daughter. I like that everything comes together in the last 90 seconds of the film when three things happen at once that all confirm Mr. Honey's theory of metal fatigue fracture. You will find yourself cheering. [/QUOTE]
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