- At the dawn of supersonic flight in the 1950s, a group of Edwards Air Force Base experimental aircraft test pilots push themselves to the limit.
- USAF Major Lincoln Bond is captured, tortured and released from a POW camp in Korea. After the war he returns to the US where he is re-assigned as a test pilot at the Flight Test Center at Edwards Air Force Base. The Air Force is testing the new experimental aircraft Gilbert XF-120 fighter. The acceptance of the new aircraft by the Air Force is dependent on successful tests designed to prove the aircraft's reliability and safety. However, when Major Bond flies the prototype he encounters a problem that points out a dangerous structural flaw. This could threaten the aircraft's acceptance by the Air Force and derail the whole project. Major Bond's commanding officer and some of his colleagues start to suspect that Major Bond is imagining things because of his mental condition dating back to his imprisonment and torture in the Korean POW camp.—nufs68
- USAF Major Lincoln Bond (William Holden) was captured during the Korean War and subjected to torture, finally cracking after 14 months and signing a confession used for propaganda. Upon his release, he took a year to recover from the ordeal before showing up at the Flight Test Center at Edwards Air Force Base, hoping to return to work as a test pilot. On his arrival a plane crash lands nearby on the dry lake bed; he races to offer assistance, braving flames and explosion to attempt to pry the canopy free and save the pilot. His old buddy, Colonel McKee (Charles McGraw), tries his best for him, but in spite of recognizing him as the stranger who attempted to save his life notoriously strong-willed base commander Brigadier General Banner (Lloyd Nolan) turns him down because he does not trust him to be stable. A complication is that the general's secretary and love interest, Connie Mitchell (Virginia Leith), is an old flame of Bond's with strongly conflicted feelings toward him. Bond presses for any job and accepts the general's offer of routine flying in support. Banner is a hands-on leader, taking the most dangerous assignments himself. When Bond flies the new Gilbert XF-120 fighter he finds dangerous structural problems that threaten its imminent acceptance by the Air Force. He claims he did not press the aircraft beyond its design specifications, but no one believes him, especially H. G. Gilbert (Ralph Moody), the head of the company that built the fighter. When the general tries to duplicate Bond's maneuvers, nothing untoward happens. Afterward, Bond sees Banner nearly collapse in the locker room, but Banner tries to deflect the incident. When Banner is endangered in a test flight Bond calmly and expertly comes to the rescue, helping to build a bond of trust between the pair. Bond's rehabilitation is endangered when a drunk Major "Bromo" Lee (Murray Hamilton), Banner's top test pilot, tries to pick a fight with him at the officers club. Bond reacts badly to being held by a bystander, invoking memories of his Korean War imprisonment, and punches Bromo twice. Then Major Joe Craven (James Garner), another close friend of Bond's, is killed when a wing of his XF-120 tears away, confirming Bond's warning. With an appreciation that both pilot were to blame for the altercation, Banner eschews punishment and instead gives Bond the assignment he craves: the rocket-powered X-2, which is designed to fly to the edge of outer space. The general insists, however, on piloting the first full power test himself, despite strong pressure from his superior, Lieutenant General Bryan Shelby (Paul Fix), McKee, and Bond --- who calls him on his locker room collapse to no avail --- to let a younger man take on the dangerous job. When Bond is assigned to fly the last half-power test before the main flight, he goes to full power without authorization and barely survives a high-altitude bailout when the aircraft goes out of control. The base flight surgeon tells Banner that only a young, fit person could have survived, leading the general to accept a promotion and transfer, and cover Bond's trail by claiming he had given him verbal authorization to go to full power if he saw fit, sparing Bond censure in return for saving his life. He recommends Colonel McKee as his successor. Although Banner offers to take Connie with him to his new assignment, she decides to stay with Bond.
- Maj. Lincoln Bond (William Holden), an ace pilot who was captured and tortured during the Korean War, returns to the Flight Test Center at Edwards Air Force Base, hoping to be rehired as a test flier. Col. R. H. "Mickey" McKee (Charles McGraw), Lincoln's close friend who is second in command there, is willing to hire him, but needs permission from his superior, Brig. Gen. Bill Banner (Lloyd Nolan). Bill is sympathetic, but rejects Lincoln's request, believing that his breakdown under torture, during which he signed a paper admitting to germ warfare, suggests he is too unstable to resume flying. Lincoln is also disappointed that his girl friend, Bill's secretary Connie Mitchell (Virginia Leith), is romantically involved with Bill, having given up on Lincoln when he refused to communicate with her during his recovery. A few days later, Lincoln asks Bill to reconsider and, when refused, asks for any job on the base, explaining that he needs to be near the air field. Bill, who understands Lincoln's devotion to flying, hires him to assist with testing on a strictly limited basis. On another day, Bill gives Lt. Gen. Bryan Shelby (Paul Fix) and Senator Black (Bartlett Robinson) a tour of the base, and shows them the latest development in aircraft, the X-2. Possessing two rocket-powered engines, the plane is expected to fly faster than the speed of sound. Shelby tries to convince Bill to accept a promotion to the Air Force's research and development department in Washington, but Bill refuses the office job. Vigorous despite his advancing age, Bill still flies the most dangerous test flights. His attitude concerns Shelby, Mickey and the other pilots, who presume that a pilot will need split-second reflexes to survive flying faster than anyone has ever flown. Lincoln, while flying a test plane, experiences problems and expertly lands under dangerous conditions, where, on the ground, the airmen discover that the plane's wings have wrinkled. Although Lincoln believes that there is a structural problem, the engineers and another test pilot think that Lincoln tried to exceed the limits of the plane's design. News of the problem reaches H. G. Gilbert (Ralph Moody), the owner of the company that built the plane and he, too, insists that the plane has no structural problems. Despite the protests of most of his team, Bill orders another test flight before committing the plane to mass production. Flying together in separate planes, Lincoln and Bill try to recreate the problem conditions, but both planes operate smoothly. After the flight, Bill nearly passes out in the locker room, but claims that he only tripped. Over time, Lincoln gains Bill's respect and is trusted with difficult test flights. On another flight, Lincoln and Bill are again flying in separate planes when Bill's drag chute breaks loose. To prevent the chute from opening, which will cause Bill's plane to spin, Lincoln flies his plane at close range directly behind Bill, so that the chute drapes on the nose of Lincoln's plane. In this dangerously close formation, the two planes land and afterward, Bill acknowledges that Lincoln saved his life. Candidly, Bill admits that he cannot understand the discrepancy between Lincoln's calmness under stress and the story of him breaking under torture. Knowing that he cannot explain the experience of psychological torture to someone who has not lived it, Lincoln says that solitary confinement is harder than physical torture. At a party celebrating the promotion of Lincoln's friend, Maj. Joe Craven (James Garner), recovering alcoholic Maj. Bromo Lee (Murray Hamilton), who is considered the best pilot on base, gets drunk and picks a fight with Lincoln. Although he tries to ignore Bromo's insults, Lincoln loses control when Bromo's drunken buddy pins him down while Bromo hits him. Lincoln fights back hard, knocking Bromo unconscious. Then, depressed that he has proven himself to be unstable, Lincoln retreats to the hangar where the X-2 is parked. There he encounters Hank, the X-2's engineer, who talks about the aircraft's role in future space travel and how he, like most pilots, covets the opportunity to be the first to fly it at full speed. The next day, Bill reprimands Bromo for his drinking lapse and, when Lincoln offers to resign, attributes his behavior to self-defense. When Mickey reports that Joe is experiencing wing problems mid-flight on the X-2, Bill radios Joe to bail out. However, Joe delays until after the wings fracture and, once he finally ejects, his parachute opens too late to save him. Lincoln is sent to give the bad news to Joe's widow Polly and is later promoted to Joe's position as head of the X-2 project. Later, despite revisions and setbacks, the team is almost ready to test the X-2 with full rocket power, but no one knows how a man will withstand flying faster than the speed of sound. Ordered by Shelby to take the promotion, Bill delays accepting the post until he personally performs the final test. Although Bill feels responsible for making the dangerous flight, his colleagues believe he is wrongfully risking his life. Connie, who is sorting out her feelings for both men, is also worried and expresses her concern to Lincoln. When Lincoln reminds Bill of the time he nearly passed out in the locker room and suggests that he is jeopardizing the project with "blind egotism and stubborn pride," Bill, admitting that he must soon relinquish control, stands firm about flying the final test. On the day of the flight, Hank asks to redo a previous test before proceeding with the use of both rockets, so Bill assigns Lincoln to the penultimate test flight. The mother plane, a B-50, takes off, and from inside, the X-2 is "dropped" or shot out. Lincoln, who is piloting the X-2, decides to disobey orders and engages both engines, risking his life in place of Bill's. Soon, the plane spins and its controls fail to respond. The experimental face-plate serving as Lincoln's mask also malfunctions. After Lincoln ejects, without benefit of a mask, his chute opens in time. Mickey later reports to Bill that Lincoln was unconscious for some of the ordeal, and that he suffers from a concussion, an injured hip, and a severe case of the bends. The doctor concludes that Lincoln survived because of his excellent physical condition and warns that Bill, at his age, would have perished. Concerned about discipline, Shelby notes that Lincoln violated written orders, but Bill saves Lincoln from a reprimand by saying that he had verbally ordered him to make the final test. When Bill later boards a plane for Washington, leaving Mickey as his replacement, both Mickey and Lincoln, who has sneaked out of the hospital, see him off. Connie decides to stay with Lincoln, and although disappointed, Bill says that Lincoln deserves her.
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