Jonathan L. Scott
Gary Cooper
Jonathan L. Scott

“Nothing ever like it ! Nothing you ever liked more !”
After learning the finer points of carrier aviation in the 1920s, career officer Jonathan Scott and his pals spend the next two decades promoting the superiority of naval air power. But military and political "red tape" continually frustrate their efforts, prompting Scott to even consider leaving the Navy for a more lucrative civilian job. Then the world enters a second World War and Scott finally gets the opportunity to prove to Washington the valuable role aircraft carriers could play in winning the conflict. But what will it cost him and his comrades personally?
Jonathan L. Scott
Gary Cooper
Jonathan L. Scott
Mary Morgan
Jane Wyatt
Mary Morgan
McKinney
Wayne Morris
McKinney
Pete Richard
Walter Brennan
Pete Richard
Barbara McKinney
Julie London
Barbara McKinney
Captain Reeves
Jack Holt
Captain Reeves
Sen. Bentley
Stanley Ridges
Sen. Bentley
Dixie Rankin
John Ridgely
Dixie Rankin
Lt. Jack Southern
Richard Rober
Lt. Jack Southern
Sen. Vincent
Art Baker
Sen. Vincent
Adm. Ames
Moroni Olsen
Adm. Ames
Pilot
Ray Montgomery
Pilot
Told by way of a retrospective on the career of "Adm. Scott" (Gary Cooper) this is quite an interesting story of the evolution of the aircraft carrier and the training and development of naval piloting skills dating back to the 1920s - when the ships looked little more stable than upturned irons, and a fair degree of the pilots were injured or worse as they tried to land amidst a pitching sea with crosswinds galore. The aerial photography is superb, giving us quite an insight into the perils of trying to land a flimsily built aircraft on a 65 foot long object, in the middle of the sea. That's the interesting bit. The acting is really neither here nor there. Cooper has a glint in his eye at the start but becomes way too earnest as he rises through the ranks and has to strive to establish his vision of carrier-based naval air squadrons. He has a few helpers en route - an oddly wooden Walter Brennan in a much straighter role that we are used to seeing him in, and to be honest - he isn't a natural. Wayne Morris and Jane Wyatt make up the numbers but this film is really about the history of maritime aviation. The drama is very much secondary and aside from the last fifteen minutes, it might as well be a (good) documentary with some familiar faces presenting it
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