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Amelia
Just saw the film Amelia. Hilary Swank played a convincing role of this American hero and I learned much about her life as an aviator and person I did not know before. The film was a little slow and flat but is worth catching. The cinematography was very well done but a little more detail and facts in the script would have helped give it a little more life. Always a treat to see a Lockheed Electra.
Last edited by bushwhacker; 10-23-2009 at 06:48 PM. |
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#2
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Amelia
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Switches |
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#3
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I had heard some of the same comments, but if the press makes you out a great pilot, then you certainly must be. Of course, until reality reaches up and bites you in the butt and you find yourself in deep ka ka...
Remember the old saw...Aviation in itself is not inherently dangerous, but to a even greater extent than the sea it is intolerant of any carelessness, incapacity, or neglect.... |
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#4
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Hindsight is 20/20, of course, but it has always seemed to me that to take a life-or-death chance on finding that tiny speck of land that is Howland Island with the primitive navigation techniques of the day and a very marginal fuel supply was pretty foolhardy.
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#5
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I will second your comments. Years ago when I was going through my Private ground school, it was taught by a proud member of the 99s etc....she knew a lot about female pilots and was very proud of women fliers. One day we talked about Amelia, and she said she was a horrible pilot, couldn't land worth a darn etc..... Our instructor was disappointed that many of the "better" female pilots have been forgotten in history.... Like you, I am not trying to "slam" her, just passing along what I was told... FWIW, here is a link to a documentary which gives a little more info on other female aviators. I have no affiliation with it, just think it sounds interesting. http://www.ragwingderby.com/noframes...=homepage.html Aseweepay Last edited by aseweepay; 10-24-2009 at 12:59 PM. |
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#6
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I had heard of some of the things you mentioned. Wow, they showed in the film the absence of Morris Code not being used but didn't go into detail that she and her navigator refused to learn it.....pretty foolish in a day when modern day navigation was in it's infancy. In one of the scenes they showed Amelia dumping everything from the Electra including the life raft to lighten it up. Well, being a mediocre pilot and the bad choices she made or not, I admire her passion, guts and commitment. It looks as if her husband was a master of promotion but the choices were Amelia's. Hopefully, one of these days we will know the real truth behind her disappearance. RIP Amelia. |
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#7
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Mantz
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We had to service and maintain the TBF and Widgeon that they were using in the movie that they were shooting at the airport and at nearby Anna Maria Key. The movie, " On An Island With You" was one that you never heard of , I'll bet. Esther Williams and Peter Lawford were in it along with a lot of fake palm trees. Switches |
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#8
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One good reconstruction of Amelia's last hours suggests that poor navigation - essentially the lack of a purposeful error in her navigation - put Earhart and Noonan on a N/S line that was roughly that of Howland Island, but they could not determine whether they were North or South of the Island.
That, combined with the difficulties of early radio navigation aids and possibly Earhart's questionable radio nav skills led to their demise. |
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#9
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They SHOULD make a movie about Jackie Cochran, but no one would believe it was a true story.
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Cochran
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#11
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How much of what they used in the movie was based on facts known though?
And while I don't want you to spoil the ending, but did they create their own theory, or a theory that exists today? |
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#12
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PBS Documentary
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#13
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What are the opinions on the TIGHAR theory that they ended up on Nikumaroro (then Gardner Island)? Given its distance from Howland (roughly 400 miles), this would predicate a pretty substantial navigational error. It seems that the main evidence to support this is a skeleton (allegedly matching Earhart's description) that was found there in 1940 and hasn't been seen since.
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#14
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Bob, could you tell us some more about Paul Mantz? Was it he or Frank Tallman (Tall-Mantz Aviation partner) who was killed in filming Flight of the Phoenix? Was there a contraversy about that (which I heard but don't want to mention unless somebody else has better information than I do)? |
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#15
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Mantz
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#16
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Female Aviators...
Speaking of female aviators, has anyone read, "West with the Night"? It was written by an African bush pilot named Beryl Markham. She seemed to be the genuine article, but at any rate she was a fabulous writer.
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#17
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Yep. That's well worth reading, and a window into a world that doesn't exist anymore.
__________________
"To desire the end is to desire the means to that end. If you are unwilling to embrace all actions required to achieve it, you never really wanted it at all." -- SM Stirling |
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#18
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Book
Agree ! I read it years ago and she remeinds me of St. Exupery.
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#19
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I have seen the FAA archived film of the Mantz crash. This was the mockup of the so-called single boom craft they made out of the cargo plane.
It had these fake skids on it and indeed they just touched the top of the dune and the thing immediately broke it's back - thus the front part tumbling the engine and the occupant end over end. I was told at the time that significant amount of alcohol was involved but didn't want to say without somebody else confirming. The film itself does not show the plane landing...just the survivors crawling into the little oasis on foot. |
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#20
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Something needs to be done!
I know its been brought up before, but I gotta put my vote in to somehow get Mr. Parks' fascinating aviation anecdotes and recollections documented and/or recorded. I have a feeling that the gems he shares with us on this forum are merely the tip of the iceberg. Any ideas?
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