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Von Richthofen and Brown (1970)

Von Richthofen and Brown (1970)
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This film of the wartime exploits of Baron Von Richthoven, who was also known as the "Red Baron," was a relatively lavish Corman-brothers production, and is directed by Roger Corman. The film's airborne dogfight sequences are among its most notable features. Vintage World War I airplanes were used, and accidents during filming resulted in one death and several injuries. The evolution of airborne warfare from being a sporting game between gentlemen to its use as an instrument of total war is integral to the story. Von Richthoven (John Phillip Law), who becomes an air ace and an important German hero, was an early aeronautical rival of Hermann Goering (Barry Primus). So important was he to German morale that he was asked to retire from fighting, so that he could assume a position in the post-war German government. He refused, and was killed by a young Canadian (Don Stroud) in an airborne battle. Spookily enough, even though he died in the air, his plane is reputed to have landed intact. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Director(s):
Roger Corman
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Von Richthofen and Brown

This film of the wartime exploits of Baron Von Richthoven, who was also known as the "Red Baron," was a relatively lavish Corman-brothers production, and is directed by Roger Corman. The film's airborne dogfight sequences are among its most notable features. Vintage World War I airplanes were used, and accidents during filming resulted in one death and several injuries. The evolution of airborne warfare from being a sporting game between gentlemen to its use as an instrument of total war is integral to the story. Von Richthoven (John Phillip Law), who becomes an air ace and an important German hero, was an early aeronautical rival of Hermann Goering (Barry Primus). So important was he to German morale that he was asked to retire from fighting, so that he could assume a position in the post-war German government. He refused, and was killed by a young Canadian (Don Stroud) in an airborne battle. Spookily enough, even though he died in the air, his plane is reputed to have landed intact. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
96 mins

Complete Cast of Von Richthofen and Brown


Director(s):
Roger Corman
Writer(s):
Joyce Hooper CorringtonJohn William Corrington
Producer(s):
Gene Corman
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG(Questionable for Children, Violence, Adult Situations)
Categories:
Action / AdventureWar
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Robert D.

One of the finest WW1 air films ever made! The aerial photography was masterful and the overall quality of the the production was first class. The acting leads were genuine and true to life without any "comic strip" embellishment. The dog fights were so real one would think one was watching a newsreel of the time. The only film that comes anywhere close is the Blue Max insofar as the dogfights but the hollywood casting in some cases was overdone. 41/2 stars.

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William H.

Over all the movie was well done, with great combat scenes. The acting was a little stilted. Unless that's how people behaved those days. I liked the widescreen presentation.

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William P.

Since most historians believe Manfred Richthoven was actually shot down by anti-aircraft fire from an Austrailian battery, while evading Brown, this otherwise good film is flawed.

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