The Aerodrome
The Aerodrome
| 13 December 1983 (USA)
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In the future England is ruled by a fascist government, and one day the leaders begin the construction of a heavily guarded, mysterious airport. BBC adaptation of Rex Warner's 1941 novel of the same name. A stereotypical village in a somewhat alternative England is taken over wholesale by 'The Air Force.' Living in the village is young Roy, who has just learned he is not who he thought he was. Attempting to forge a new sense of identity, he joins the dashing Air Force, seduced by its dynamism and direct and brutal ways.

Reviews
Micransix

Crappy film

WillSushyMedia

This movie was so-so. It had it's moments, but wasn't the greatest.

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Invaderbank

The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.

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Philippa

All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.

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Charlot47

Very well written and shot film with first-class acting, excellent music and apt dialogue. All round far better in quality than most Hollywood dross.Captures much of the spirit of the complex 1941 book by Rex Warner, which under the surface of a melodramatic and somewhat surreal story addressed a number of philosophical issues. In particular, it contrasted the hate-filled logic of fascist tyranny that was then triumphing all over Europe with the muddled imperfect affectionate life of rural England.The two worlds are typified by the village and the neighbouring aerodrome. In the village people are free, make their mistakes and believe in, even if they by no means always obey, traditional Christian values. On the air base, religion is abolished and harsh man-made rules are enforced by rigid discipline. Roy, a naïve 21 year old from the village, joins the air force and rises rapidly. He quickly learns to suppress the feelings that he grew up with and to regard the villagers as benighted, while women are just prey. But as he sees more of the ruthless and dangerous behaviour by the air force, its moral corruption and its cruelty, his conscience awakens. In the end he returns to his widowed mother in the village and marries the barmaid he always fancied.The book was vague about the exact years when it was set, though it was clearly not during the Second World War, and the brutal air force it describes was certainly not the Royal Air Force that was then defending Britain heroically. The deliberate haziness over time is kept by the film, which uses aircraft and equipment from several different decades, but is more explicit over the Nazi-like nature of the air force by clothing the officers in uniforms reminiscent of the SS.Recommended as a story, even though deliberately far-fetched, as a satisfying viewing experience and above all as another reminder about the life-denying emptiness of totalitarianism. It is always better to stay at home and marry the barmaid than to join the Nazis.

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