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IMDbPro

Thunderbolt

  • 1947
  • Approved
  • 44min
PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,6/10
784
TU PUNTUACIÓN
James Stewart in Thunderbolt (1947)
¿GuerraCortoDocumentalHistoria

En esta ocasión, tendremos oportunidad de ver a los P-47 realizando operaciones sobre Italia, un escenario, donde sin la presencia de estos aviones, los aliados hubieran encontrando dificult... Leer todoEn esta ocasión, tendremos oportunidad de ver a los P-47 realizando operaciones sobre Italia, un escenario, donde sin la presencia de estos aviones, los aliados hubieran encontrando dificultades prácticamente insalvables.En esta ocasión, tendremos oportunidad de ver a los P-47 realizando operaciones sobre Italia, un escenario, donde sin la presencia de estos aviones, los aliados hubieran encontrando dificultades prácticamente insalvables.

  • Dirección
    • William Wyler
    • John Sturges
  • Guión
    • Lester Koenig
  • Reparto principal
    • James Stewart
    • John K. Cannon
    • Ira C. Eaker
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
    6,6/10
    784
    TU PUNTUACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • William Wyler
      • John Sturges
    • Guión
      • Lester Koenig
    • Reparto principal
      • James Stewart
      • John K. Cannon
      • Ira C. Eaker
    • 14Reseñas de usuarios
    • 1Reseña de críticos
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de la producción en IMDbPro
  • Imágenes13

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    Reparto principal12

    Editar
    James Stewart
    James Stewart
    • James Stewart
    John K. Cannon
    • Self - Commander, 12th Air Force
    Ira C. Eaker
      Howard Hickok
      • Self - Flight Leader
      Richard O. Hunziger
      • Self - P-47 Pilot
      Archie J. Knight
      • Self - Group Commander
      Francis S. Manda
      • Self - Squadron Operations Officer
      Gordon P. Seville
      • Self - 12th Tactical Air Command
      Gilbert Wyman
      • Self - Commanding Officer
      Lloyd Bridges
      Lloyd Bridges
      • Pilot
      • (voz)
      • (sin acreditar)
      Eugene Kern
      • Narrator
      • (sin acreditar)
      Robert Lowery
      Robert Lowery
      • Narrator
      • (sin acreditar)
      • Dirección
        • William Wyler
        • John Sturges
      • Guión
        • Lester Koenig
      • Todo el reparto y equipo
      • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

      Reseñas de usuarios14

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      Reseñas destacadas

      8nickenchuggets

      Ancient history

      Thunderbolt is a film by William Wyler that suffered basically the same fate as the Frank Capra film "Here Is Germany", meaning that it was released at a time when everyone was eager to forget world war 2. Originally recorded in 1944 during the allied campaign in italy, Thunderbolt is a kind of documentary that follows the US 12th Air Force and the methods they use to destroy nazi supply routes responsible for enforcing the Gustav Line and the city of Anzio. The Gustav Line was a series of defensive structures and machine gun nests built across italy by the germans in order to prevent american forces from moving north. This made it very difficult for the US forces to do anything because the mountainous spine that runs through the italian peninsula made a perfect natural defensive barrier. The film goes over one of the most effective weapons the americans had during the campaign in italy, which was the Republic p-47 Thunderbolt. When it first flew, the p-47 was the largest and heaviest single engined plane in the world, and contains an insanely powerful pratt and whitney r-2800 engine. It may be large, but the plane was deceptively fast, and was superior to most german planes at high altitudes. It was also better in a dive because of its weight. With its eight .50 caliber browning m2 machine guns, it could rip its way through any plane it was likely to encounter. Lloyd Bridges narrates the film, which is essentially a bunch of clips edited together that detail how the p-47s flew mission after mission against the germans, and all of it is in technicolor. This is important because color footage of world war 2 aerial combat is not as common as you think. You can fully appreciate the paint schemes on the various planes as well. The film doesn't have much in the way of a storyline. It's the second world war and that's all you can really say. They do however go over how cameras were installed in many areas of the planes, such as in the cockpit, under the wings, and even the small recesses the wheels retract into upon takeoff. Before all this takes place, the program begins with an intro featuring James Stewart, who had to contextualize world war 2 for the audiences by calling it "ancient history." This film was released only 2 years later in 1947, but many people were (understandably) sick of the war by then and James had to take that into account. It's also interesting to note that he commanded planes during the war as a colonel and is the highest-ranking hollywood actor who was in the military. In addition to its portrayal of actual p-47 missions, Thunderbolt also shows how the pilots live at their base, located on the island of Corsica off the coast of italy. Even crashes are shown. The film ends with the allies liberating Rome two days before d-day on June 4, 1944. The war in italy comes to an end, and the surrender of Hitler's ally doesn't take him by surprise. For what it is, Thunderbolt is an interesting film simply because it is real and none of it is staged. Sadly, this was the film that marked the beginning of the end for Wyler's hearing, as it didn't return one day after he returned from filming footage for a plane mission. Before this film could be edited, the war was over and the public lost interest in films relating to it. Two years later, the film was finally released by a company called Monogram. If it was distributed earlier, it would have been much more successful. If only it were that easy.
      6greghm

      Excellent for aviation lovers and also realists

      As a private pilot, I really liked the aviation scene and the P47 is such an ugly impressive plane.

      Great scenes to see in colour.

      I am particularly shocked by the way the strafing was done. What's the point of shooting fields, cattle's or trains? There were probability civilians in it. Can't be Huns everywhere.
      9grantss

      Superb documentary

      A documentary series on the operations of the 57th Fighter Group in 1944. Stationed in Corsica, their missions largely consisted of low-level attacks on the Italian mainland, far behind the frontline. Their targets were German supplies and the infrastructure carrying it. This was part of Operation Strangle, the idea of which was to weaken the German front-line forces through depriving them of supplies, thus helping the Allied offensive through Italy. The 57th Fighter Group flew one of the greatest fighter-bombers of the war, the iconic Republic P-47 Thunderbolt.

      Superb documentary, directed by famed Hollywood director William Wyler (with John Sturges as co-director). Wyler's previous contribution to the Allied war effort was the equally-superb "The Memphis Belle: A Story of a Flying Fortress".

      Through clever placement of cameras on the Thunderbolts - behind the pilot looking forward, in the instrument panel looking at the pilot, in the wings, under the wings, in the undercarriage bay - we get a unique and illuminating perspective of the missions the 57th Fighter Group flew. Captures well the essence of their operations, and the dangers.

      The human side is well told - we see the pilots during their down time, learn something about them and understand how they lived and the rigours they went through.

      On that note, the movie is quite unique for a wartime documentary in that it shows the horrors of war. We see Allied casualties, including the charred remains of a P-47 pilot whose plane crashed.

      Wyler himself was one of those casualties, suffering total deafness due to filming much of the action from a noisy B-25 bomber.

      Unfortunately, WW2 ended before Wyler managed to have the movie released. It ended up only being released in 1947.
      8planktonrules

      You can tell this wasn't released during the war.

      This film is introduced by Jimmy Stewart and part of the narration is provided by Lloyd Bridges. It shows the duties of a fighter group-- P-47 pilots whose job it is to blow the crap out of railroads, roads and targets of opportunity in order to choke off supplies to German troops in Southern Italy.

      "Thunderbolt" was made in 1944 or 1945 (the film says 1944 and IMDb says '45) but it wasn't released until 1947. You can actually tell it wasn't released during the war because some aspects of this documentary probably wouldn't have done a lot to stir up the folks at home with patriotic zeal. This is because the documentary shows a few things that might have discouraged the audiences--such as one of the American planes crashing and killing the pilot. Also, there were quite a few VERY grisly corpses--things that I doubt that they would have wanted to show civilians. For the most part, films shown to the public were pretty sanitized...and this one wasn't. Now this is NOT a complaint- -in fact it makes this a much better and more realistic film. My only complaint about the film is the terrible quality of all the color footage. It's very degraded and muddy and could use conservation.
      8robertguttman

      Memorial to The Jug

      William Wyler began work on this film during 1944 as a counterpoint to his better-known film about the 8th Air Force, "Memphis Belle". While the latter concerned the strategic bombing campaign carried out by long-range, multi-engine bombers, the subject of "Thunderbolt" was tactical missions flown by single-engine, single-seat fighter-bombers. This was a very different war from that depicted in "Memphis Belle". For one thing, while strategic bomber crews could expect to be rotated home after completing 25 missions, the fighter-bomber pilots were flying literally hundreds of missions, frequently carrying out several during the course of a single day.

      The film chronicles a brief period with one of several fighter-bomber groups based on the island of Corsica, about 60 miles west of the Italian mainland. Incidentally, this was the same island where Joseph Heller was based, and which inspired him to write his famous novel, "Catch-22". The only difference is that "Thunderbolt" was not filmed with a Medium Bomber Group, such as Heller served in, but with a Fighter-Bomber Group.

      The fighter-bombers featured in the film are P-47s, to which the Army Air Force gave the emotive name of "Thunderbolt". However, to those who flew them, the P-47 was invariably known as "The Jug", partly due to it's rotund shape, but more especially as a contraction of the word "Juggernaut". For a Juggernaut was precisely what the P-47 was. The Jug was the largest single-seat fighter to serve during WW-II. It carried eight 12.7-mm machine guns along with a heavy load of bombs or rockets, and was capable of bringing it's pilot home after absorbing a considerable amount of battle damage. Unlike any other fighters of that time the Jug had an air-cooled engine, which meant that it's pilot did not have to worry about a liquid cooling system that was vulnerable to damage from enemy fire. Because of those characteristics the Jug came into it's own in the sort of low-level ground-attack missions shown in "Thunderbolt". In fact years later, when they began flying similar ground attack missions in Korea, a lot of veteran pilots regretted the fact that the Air Force had seen fit to scrap all of it's Jugs after WW-II ended.

      "Thunderbolt" does not glamorize the lives of these fighter-bomber personnel. The narration is as terse as the subject matter. It was a brutal war, and that brutality is not watered down. To the men of the Fighter-Bomber Group this was merely a day-to-day job, with the difference that the working men shown in the film did not always live to see the next day. However, the film does go out of it's way to explain exactly what it was that they were trying to accomplish, and why it mattered. It is interesting to reflect that The Big Picture was something many of the members of the Fighter-Bomber Group probably did not entirely understand at the time. In short, these aircraft were engaged in cutting Italian road and rail communications in order to prevent the movement of war material to the German Army, so that the Allied Armies could break the stalemate in the mountains of Southern Italy. The mere fact that the stalemate was broken is proof of how effective the air campaign shown in the film actually was.

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      Argumento

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      • Curiosidades
        Director William Wyler lost his hearing during production of this film when he flew in a noisy, unpressurized transport plane. He was subsequently medically discharged from the Army, but eventually got some hearing back in one ear. Hence, the delay in the release of this film.
      • Conexiones
        Edited into Federal Follies - Volume 5 (1987)

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      Detalles

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      • Fecha de lanzamiento
        • 26 de julio de 1947 (Estados Unidos)
      • País de origen
        • Estados Unidos
      • Idioma
        • Inglés
      • Títulos en diferentes países
        • 血戰長空
      • Localizaciones del rodaje
        • Corsica, Francia
      • Empresas productoras
        • Carl Krueger Productions
        • U.S. Army Air Corps
      • Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro

      Especificaciones técnicas

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      • Duración
        • 44min
      • Mezcla de sonido
        • Mono
      • Relación de aspecto
        • 1.37 : 1

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