The Daring Young Men In Their Flying
Machines-Cary Grant’s Only Angels Have
Wings
DVD Review
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Only Angels Have Wings, starring Cary
Grant, Jean Arthur, Rita Hayworth, directed by Howard Hawks
Kids from the generation of ’68, my
generation that came of age in the 1960s, were animated the exploits of guys
who explored the outer reaches of space, the astronauts (and in the beginning
it was only guys under something like the same principal as in track where
women were thought to be organically incapable of running more than about one
hundred yards and were protected against any longer distances by stern old men.
Didn’t those old gophers get a surprise when the women could outrun them.) Every kid, every guy kid measured himself
against those daredevils, dreamed dreams if only for a moment of taking that
big lift-off into the unknown to see if they had the “right stuff.” That same
premise applies to the subject of the film under review, legendary director
Howard Hawk’s Only Angels Have Angels, for an earlier generation who dreamed of
flying airplanes. Of fulfilling the old ancient Icarus dream of flying to the
heavens. Most of us were not around to witness the feat when Charles Lindberg
crossed the Atlantic solo from New York to Paris and survived he was thereafter
treated as a hero (whatever his later isolationist politics).
Of course nowadays with computers
practically running the modern jet (it is estimated that the pilot only
“controls” the plane for something like three minute of the flight) there is
little swashbuckling thrill to the profession (and overall that is to the good
for nervous passengers) but back in the 1930s in the outback with vintage
airplanes held together by wire and guts that was a different story. And that
is where our story gets some traction. See Geoff (Cary Grant) and Dutchy are
running a small airmail run business down in some unnamed “banana republic”
(literally- the opening scenes show a dockside unloading of mucho bananas,
okay). Except they are in trouble since that wire and guts only takes you so
far when you are losing pilots and mail to the horrible weather conditions and
whatever else Mother Nature can throw at you.
But Geoff is a hard guy, a guy who
has been around and has taken a few hard knocks in his life and he will not let
the operation go under without a fight. And in the end it does not go under
thanks to the Kid (a fellow pilot) and Bart who had left the Kid’s brother high
and dry one time but who in the end whether to satisfy his wife Judith (played
by fetching Rita Hayworth, fetching at that time, later in Gilda she would be, ah, let’s leave it at alluring) proved he too
had the right stuff. Nice story for
swell guys who had guts and glory written all over them.
Wait a minute, wait a minute that is
just the cover story, the story for kids who want to dream about flying in
tough spots. Here is the real story, what the hell this one had handsome Cary
Grant in it so it could not only be about “hail fellows, well met.” Yes, there
is a dame involved. Two actually since the aforementioned Judith left Geoff
high and dry when he refused to ground himself so she would not worry at night
whether he was coming back. Judith took Bart on the rebound and Geoff was
soured on women for good. Well, not quite for good because Bonnie (played by
Jean Arthur) a gal down on her uppers finds herself coming off the boat in that
unnamed banana republic and as one thing leads to another she falls, falls hard
for hard guy Geoff. What is a woman to do in such a situation? Well use her
pluck, her charms and her pouts to lure the hard guy in. And guess what
(remember this is 1930s black and white film Hollywood) it turned out that
Geoff was kind of stuck on her despite his better judgment. (I still think when
Rita showed up with old Bart I would have taken another at her but that is just
my druthers). This is not the best of Cary Grant or Jean Arthur but the film proved
to be a lot more interesting than I expected so worth a watch.
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