Features:
 - Color
 - Closed-captioned
 - Widescreen
 
  
 Description:
  The Blue Max is highly unusual among Hollywood films, not just  for being a large-scale drama set during the generally overlooked World War I,  but in concentrating on air combat as seen entirely from the German point of  view. The story focuses on a lower-class officer, Bruno Stachel (George  Peppard), and his obsessive quest to win a Blue Max, a medal awarded for  shooting down 20 enemy aircraft. Around this are subplots concerning a  propaganda campaign by James Mason's pragmatic general, rivalry with a fellow  officer (Jeremy Kemp), and a love affair with a decadent countess (Ursula  Andress).  As directed by John Guillermin (who later made The Battle of Britain in  1969), the film's main assets are epic production values, great flying scenes,  and stunning dogfights. The weak point is the sometimes ponderous character  drama, not helped by Peppard, who is too lightweight an actor to convince as the  driven antihero. Clearly influenced by Kubrick's Paths of Glory (1958),  The Blue Max is a cold, cynical drama offering a visually breathtaking  portrait of a stultified society tearing itself apart during the final months of  the Great War. --Gary S. Dalkin
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