The Wild Blue Yonder (1951) Poster

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5/10
A decent film but the sloppy use of stock footage was a major annoyance.
planktonrules19 February 2018
This film from Republic Pictures is a tribute to the B-29, the long range bomber that helped win the war in the Pacific. In many ways, I enjoyed it...and in others, I certainly didn't. It's a shame, as it really could have been a dandy picture.

The story is a semi-fictional account of the introduction of the bomber in the Pacific theater during WWII. It mostly follows the crew of one particular B-29 through the course of 1943 to the end of the war. I appreciate the film and its attempt to honor men who truly sacrificed so much. In particular, there is a scene involving Sgt. Erwin that is amazing and moving...mostly because it's a true case of heroism. Much of the film, unfortunately, is also made up using too much stock footage--footage that often didn't integrate well into the movie. The worst case was where P-51 Mustang fighter planes became P-39 Airocobras....planes that really did NOT look alike and even non-airplane buffs will notice. In addition, the studio head's girlfriend, Very Ralston, was unfortunately used in the film and as usual, her acting was amateurish and her Czech accent inexplicable.

For a much better film about the bomber, try 1952's "Above and Beyond" with Robert Taylor.

By the way, in this copy of "The Wild Blue Yonder" on YouTube, someone was having fun with the film and inserted a very, very brief clip of a 727 airliner (it first flew in 1963)! It obviously could not have been in the film originally, since it came out in 1951!
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2/10
Searching for a story. Still waiting.
mark.waltz18 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
The good news here is that this Vera Ralston movie doesn't focus on her. The bad news is that it's barely a film, basically plotless and just a series of events of what may or may not have happened in the last years of the war that led to the nuclear bombing. It's a bunch of action sequences tied together with a common bunch of familiar film actors (Wendell Corey, Forrest Tucker, Walter Brennan, William Ching) and nothing to keep it attached. Ralston is there as an Air Force nurse (along with veteran character actress Ruth Donnelly, completely wasted!) to provide a slight romantic story that simply just does not need to be there.

Ralston and Donnelly are important basically for one key scene where their hospital is attacked from the air and Ralston disobeys orders to get to the patients. Its sloppy writing and messy editing is what keeps this as disastrous as the actual bombings, featuring unnecessary humor that really just drags this down even further. Stock footage turns this into an attempted semi-documentary with absolutely no point that this ends up being as big of a bomb as the nuclear explosion thrust into the end. This really has no point in having even been made, and at nearly 80 minutes ends up being a complete waste of time.
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10/10
The Wild Blue Yonder 1951
stackja24 May 2024
Warning: Spoilers
The Wild Blue Yonder 1951 is one of my favourite movies. I do not understand other negative reviews shown here. Republic Pictures worked to a small budget yet managed to produce good quality motion pictures for over twenty years. The Wild Blue Yonder released in 1951 was a dramatized story of the World War Two bomber, the B-29, that the Boeing Company designed. The B-29 bombing aircraft was capable of reaching Imperial Japan from available airbases first in Nationalist China and later in the Pacific Mariana Islands, while carrying 20,000 pounds of bomb payload, B-29s were used in a strategic bombing effort against Imperial Japan beginning in June 1944. The cast represent a cross section of the then US Army Air Corp men and officers. Only two actual men are portrayed, Curtis LeMay and Henry Erwin, called Irwin in the motion picture. I accept the limitations that the budget imposed. But the story held my attention for the entire motion picture. The heroism featured, showed what was required to win a war, not of the United States of America's choosing, but needed to defeat Imperial Japan. Lives were changed and lives lost. Several of the men featured paid the ultimate price.
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