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The Blue Angels review

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The Blue Angels Review: Portraits of Courage Under the Big Blue Sky

Hardship Above and Below: When Privilege Remains Privately Preserved Despite Progress Promised

Arash Nahandian by Arash Nahandian
1 year ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 6 mins read
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Paul Crowder takes viewers inside the elite US Navy flight demonstration squadron known as the Blue Angels in his invigorating documentary, The Blue Angels. Witnessing a year in the life of this renowned group, we experience their stringent training regime, high-flying performances, and the camaraderie binding them. Crowder splendidly captures the pulse-pounding aerial maneuvers while also giving us a glimpse into the personalities and dedication of those who push limits in the sky.

From intense selection processes to nationwide air shows, we follow the 2022 team throughout their season. In tight formation flights reaching 400 miles per hour, only inches apart, risky yet rigorous maneuvers are executed with breathtaking precision. Extensive pre-season practice pays off during thrilling displays. Behind the scenes, focus propels each pilot as renewed commitment drives them.

Not neglecting the human side, Crowder highlights some members. As flight leader, Brian Kesselring leads with passion and pride in his efforts. We also meet the first female inductee, Amanda Lee, as part of a history-making move. While portraits remain somewhat surface-level, faces and families give personalities to these professional performers. The risks inherently faced in their vocation also become palpable, from centrifuge tests to the memorial honoring those lost during the program’s ascent.

Over the film’s run time, The Blue Angels soars by sharing its namesakes’ awe-inspiring abilities and diligence in achieving them. Crowder’s documentary does justice to its subject by thrilling and informing viewers of America’s celebrated ambassadors to naval aviation. The sky-borne spectacles alone make this a film for anyone with an appreciation of such aerial art.

Soaring Sequences on Screen

Paul Crowder’s documentary transports audiences straight into the cockpit through its jaw-dropping aerial shots. Using IMAX technology to full effect, the hair-raising flight sequences offer a spectacle unlike any other. Though the film provides fascinating behind-the-scenes insight, it’s the dynamic dogfights that truly shine.

Sequences unfold with you right in the pilot’s seat. Through their eyes, complex maneuvers become instantly graspable. Formation flights see six jets twist and turn in seamless synchronicity, somehow squeezing together with minuscule gaps between wings. Yet these tight-knit dances require precision far beyond what words can convey. Only through Crowder’s cinematography can one fathom coordinating at such velocities and proximities.

Particularly impressive is the coveted Delta Formation. Where other routines risk collision, this signature move sees six aircraft merge within inches of each other. It staggers to witness their neck-straining closeness at high speeds. Yet the pilots manage flawlessly through drills like these. Their devotion to excellence comes through with each technical trick executed with exacting precision.

Of course, the true star remains the F/A-18 Hornet itself. Crowder films with intimacy, surrounding the audience with the roar of engines. Through maneuvers both intricate and explosive, the sheer performance of the planes takes center stage. IMAX displays their dexterity to a mesmerizing effect; each barrel roll, loop, and high-altitude stunt feels right there alongside the pilots.

For those accustomed only to distant air displays, Crowder’s cinema vérité puts spectators in the thick of the action. The arresting flight sequences serve as a visceral reminder of the pilots’ daring feats. Through their lens, we’re given front-row seats to the passion and skill driving the Blue Angels. For an hour and a half, the documentary soars by bringing audiences startlingly close to the thrills of a real demonstration.

Excellence Through Every Turn

The Blue Angels provide a glimpse beyond just the aerial acrobatics. Paul Crowder’s documentary grants unmatched access to these pilots’ rigorous training regime and the teamwork fundamental to each jaw-dropping maneuver. Across months of preparation, the selected six develop split-second coordination through continual practice, review, and refinement.

The Blue Angels Review

Selection alone is no small feat, with the Navy’s top combat aviators vying every two years for these coveted positions. Candidates face intensive physical evaluations and classroom sessions examining even minute details. At a base in California, centrifuges thrust recruits’ endurance to the limits in simulations of the forces exerted during loops and dives. A steely resolve and constitution are required merely to avoid unconsciousness under such duress, let alone perfect dizzying maneuvers.

Once installed, the routine is far from glamorous, as routines are broken down and rebuilt. Meeting reviews dissect each flight with an exacting eye, and pilots identify the slightest drift from tight formations. Yet this diligence delivers unparalleled results, representing the very pinnacle of aeronautical artistry. Through eight months on the road, the troupe shares their talents at airshows nationwide, alongside outreach enriching communities.

Crowder pulls back the curtain further still, introducing support staff instrumental to the demonstration’s success. From engineers to medics, diverse roles mesh into a well-oiled machine. We also gain insight into those who shaped this prestigious organization over generations.

A sombre tribute honors comrades who ultimately sacrificed everything in the line of prowess and service, leaving a legacy that will inspire for years to come. The documentary soars by celebrating excellence through perseverance, team spirit, and respect for those who cleared the way.

Daring Demonstration Drivers

Crowder pulls back the curtain on several stars in this high-flying show. As Flight Leader, Brian Kesselring heads training—a natural-born leader despite downplaying his talents. His devotion to precision shines in squadron reviews, dissecting each maneuver. Off-duty family scenes reveal the sacrifices of constant travel, though always with duty in focus.

The Blue Angels Review

New recruit Amanda Lee also commands attention as the troupe’s pioneering woman. Her skills are beyond question and are welcomed by teammates who celebrate merit alone. Yet little insight is granted into the hurdles surely faced on this trailblazing path.

Others lending years of experience include wingmen Christopher and Frank, holding wings steady through storied turns. However, personally, these proven performers remain somewhat enigmatic figures. Supporting roles go unsung too, from engineers keeping birds airborne to medical masters prepping bodies for g-force endurance.

While welcoming access to esteemed aviators, humbler human stories fall short of the great heights reached. Crowder could perhaps have probed minds and motivations deeper to counterbalance riveting aerials. As it stands, surface impressions offer mild entertainment yet lack dimension to linger with.

Ultimately, zipping cameras fail to loosen lips as the most daring demonstrations occur not in the sky but in quiet moments. These modern knights may have shared fears, failures, and personal fuel behind fame’s fairfront. One leaves wanting a richer reward for such tightrope walks of bravery witnessed.

Daring Flyers Take Flight

Crowder captures the flying scenes superbly. You feel right there in the cockpit as choreographed chaos unfolds overhead. Through GoPro helmets and sky-high panoramas, the excitement translates. This technical triumph makes for riveting viewing—their true showcase.

The Blue Angels Review

Yet beneath their wings, men remain somewhat anonymous. We glimpse lives reduced to soundbites. Love for families feels formulaic where a richer reality likely exists. Context is also lacking around barriers broken by one inducted. More could have investigated the challenges undoubtedly faced by pioneers of change.

As a documentary, a close examination of personal challenges and societal hurdles escapes its reach. As a promotion, unfiltered portrayals suffice. But audiences wish to understand what propels these souls and what structures sustain resistance to diversity. There remains an imbalance here between art and publicity.

With access granted, a starker self-reflective lens could have proven thought-provoking. By diving deeper into drives and hardships largely untouched, the film would better serve its subjects. Their dedication deserves depiction with care, candor, and critique, absent here. In fairness, Crowder traded depth for a silver-screen showcase of his stars. Yet their stories stir interest in more probing profiles to come.

Dazzling Flyboys Take to the Sky

To summarize, Crowder captures flight magic like few others. The Blue Angels allow entry into their elite world yet hold something deeper in reserve. As promotion, it excels; as documentary, opportunities remain.

The Blue Angels Review

Their skills are beyond breathtaking. Through pulse-pounding aerials, flying’s holy grail seems attainable. Yet lives outside aircraft feel barely skimmed. Are challenges faced due to gender downplayed? Do the personal costs of perfection go unsaid?

Still, as an aeronautical appetizer, this delivery satisfies. Non-aviation crowds gain perspective on skills requiring the utmost talent and discipline. For fanatics, another fix awaits. Rare outside access provides a thrill that lingers.

Overall, a cinematic peek is rewarding for admiring man and machine meeting at nature’s edge. One finishes envisioning what drives souls to pit fallible forms against the sky and gravity. Their dances defy beauty, hard won through struggles glimpsed yet remaining largely unknown. This film nourishes fascination with tales still left untold beneath the sunshine where heroes truly earn their wings.

The Review

The Blue Angels

8 Score

"The Blue Angels" dazzles most in showcasing its pilots' aviation artistry. While personal stories could have a deeper dimension, awe-inspiring aerials lift this tribute above routine promotions. Recommended foremost for aviation aficionados seeking an extra dose of aerobic adrenaline.

PROS

  • Stunning aerial cinematography that is viscerally thrilling
  • Gives insight into the rigorous training process of the Blue Angels.
  • Educational about the history and purpose of the program
  • Inspiring portraits of the talented pilots

CONS

  • Lacks depth in exploring the personal lives and challenges of the pilots.
  • It could have analyzed the barriers faced by the first female pilot more critically.
  • Overly promotional at times without sufficient critical analysis

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Bobby Speed BaldockBrian AllendorferBryon BeckDocumentaryFeaturedLance BensonPaul CrowderRalph BertelleThe Blue Angels (2024)
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