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Stereotypes and missed opportunities

Red Tails is a film that has been George Lucas’s passion project for the past two decades. The problem with passion projects is that they can be hard to finance. The other issue inherent with making a passion project like Red Tails is that it stars an all African-American cast, and studio executives don’t believe that a film with minorities as the main characters can appeal to an international audience.

Red Tails is the story of the Tuskegee Airmen who had to fight segregation in World War II because society did not want to accept them as true fighter pilots. The fighter pilots that are essential to the story of Red Tails are Marty “Easy” Julian and Joe “Lightning” Little. Joe and Julian are best friends and the film is, in essence, the story of their group’s determination to become accepted. Red Tails is a fine example of what it means to have an ensemble cast. No one actor plays a lead role in Red Tails. Each actor turns in a unique performance that adds to the story, rather than having any standout leads. Cuba Gooding Jr, Terance Howard, Bryan Cranston, Ne-Yo, and Tristian Wilds all have important roles in the film.

My problem with Red Tails, however, is with the personalities of the characters. All of them are stereotypes that we’ve seen in other military movies. Some of the archetypes include: the pilot with drinking problem, the pilot who’s viewed as “the kid,” and the impulsive pilot who constantly puts himself in danger. Because the characters are so one-dimensional, it’s almost impossible to find someone to root for. I wanted to care about these characters and their struggles, but the childish dialogue and their actions made them seem not only immature, but also unintelligent. I love stories about overcoming obstacles and challenging perceptions on race, but the experiences depicted in this film only focus on the anger and disappointment the pilots felt because they were not given actual missions. While I can see the undertone of the Tuskegee airmen not being respected by the air force, I would have liked to have seen that group of men struggle in more diverse ways.

Another problem with Red Tails is its setting. The majority of the film takes place in Italy in 1948. There’s not much room to tell a story about oppression in Italy, which looks exactly like any tourist would expect. The environments are picturesque and the local people are friendly. The only opposition Joe and Julian face — other than the Germans — are the white fighter pilots who don’t respect them.

The film feels unfocused at times because it’s trying to emotionally invest the audience, but the situations these pilots are placed in — while extremely difficult and unrewarding — give us no reason to root for the characters. An example where characters actually emotionally connect with an audience can be found in last year’s The Help, when Aibileen Clark lectures Hilly Holbrook towards the end of the film because Hilly is a horrible parent. Red Tails makes no real attempt to deeply connect with the audience. Instead, Lucas and his director Anthony Hemmingway paint Red Tails as a by-the-numbers period piece. Any depth about the actual achievements of the Tuskegee Airmen will only be found just before the end credits, and that’s of very little use to those who viewed the film.

Red Tails attempts to fly high, but crashes after takeoff due to poor character development and no focus on how the airmen conquered the oppression they faced, beyond the dogfights they survived during the war.

Two Stars.

 

Red Tails can currently be seen at Savoy 16 and Carmike Cinema’s The Beverly.


3 comments

username

C-U Later

#1

What a joke. This is a terrible review. Of course it has stereotypical war characters. That’s what the movie is. What’s not stereotypical is the all African American cast. And a great one at that. I don’t think the movie portrayed the pilots as unintelligent at all. In fact the tuskeegee airmen were all college graduates and I felt like their intelligence was thoroughly portrayed. Your missing the bigger picture here. The main idea is that this movie had to fight to become what it is : An epic tale of African American pilots. It’s a feel good movie not a thriller political drama. I’m surprised they let you review movies at all.

username

Lia

#2

What type of war movie is a “feel good” movie.

Look out Hitla, here we come!!!!

That doesn’t make them seem as educated men like the Tuskeegee were.

Take that Mista Hitla…

It was garbage and a the Boondocks creator wrote the script. Have
you ever heard Uncle Ruckus speak on that cartoon?

It was a terrible movie but liberals wont criticize it because they think it makes them look racist.

username

C-U later

#3

There are plenty of war movies that do not show one second of fighting or death or blood. There are many feel good war movies. This movie is meant to be inspirational and uplifting. I don’t watch the boondocks because that show is degrading and racist. I didn’t feel like any of the dialogue in RedTails portrayed the tuskeegee airmen as ignorant. Did you ever take into consideration the way people used to talk in that era? Especially from southern states in America? Maybe you could elaborate on why you think the movie is so terrible? I’d be more than happy to engage in a debate with you. But unfortunately you have not given any facts for your opinion.

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