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	<title>Military items &#124; Military vehicles &#124; Military trucks &#124; Military Badge Collection &#187; Aviation</title>
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		<title>Films &#8211; Aviation</title>
		<link>http://miliblog.co.uk/?p=3720</link>
		<comments>http://miliblog.co.uk/?p=3720#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Mar 2012 20:21:29 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Aviation]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Dam Busters, The &#8211; Special Edition *Digitally Remastered* [DVD] [1945] Something of a cult item among British war movies (and brilliantly spoofed a few years back by a lager ad), The Dam Busters turns a minor World War II incident into a saga of heroic stiff-upper-lippery in the classic British style. A bombing raid is [...]]]></description>
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<strong>Dam Busters, The &#8211; Special Edition *Digitally Remastered* [DVD] [1945]</strong><br />
Something of a cult item among British war movies (and brilliantly spoofed a few years back by a lager ad), The Dam Busters turns a minor World War II incident into a saga of heroic stiff-upper-lippery in the classic British style. A bombing raid is proposed on a strategically vital Ruhr dam, but its position is inaccessible. Enter eccentric inventor Dr Barnes Wallis (Michael Redgrave in best daffy professor mode) who comes up with a genius idea&#8211;a bomb that will bounce on water like a skimmed pebble. Naturally the top brass pooh-pooh it, but gallant Wing Commander Guy Gibson (Richard Todd) is persuaded, and between them flyer and boffin forge ahead. The touches of carefully understated emotion now verge on self-parody, but it&#8217;s hard not to get caught up in the narrative sweep, especially when the bombers take off on their mission and Eric Coates&#8217; stirring march hits the soundtrack.<br />
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<strong>Reach for the Sky [DVD] [1956]</strong><br />
Reach for the Sky was a box-office hit in 1956 and rightly remains a fondly regarded classic of British cinema. Kenneth More is ideally cast as Douglas Bader, the gifted pilot who loses both legs in a pre-war air crash, only to play a major role in the Battle of Britain, rise to the rank of Group Captain and become a war hero. Based on Paul Brickhill&#8217;s biography, this is an &#8220;official&#8221; history maybe, but Lewis Gilbert&#8217;s screenplay and direction are historically accurate and informed by that very British humour, of which More was a natural. The film is graced by a decent supporting cast and a typically &#8220;widescreen&#8221; score from John Addison. </p>
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