Red Tails is caught in a fatal tug-of-war between two
narrative approaches. On one side, we have serious drama; the film is an
historical account of the Tuskegee Airmen, the first ever group of African
American fighter pilots to serve the United States military during World War II.
On the other side, we have a stylistic homage; it’s a generic war movie rife
with threadbare clichés, some lightweight, some melodramatic, all of it dated
and hopelessly predictable. Perhaps if someone had come to a decision as to
which film they wanted to make, there might have been something to get out of
it. Had I been executive producer George Lucas, who invested an estimated $100
million of his own money into its budget and promotion, I would have opted for a
more serious approach.
That’s because the real life story of the Airmen is far more compelling than
the filmmakers give it credit for. During World War II, many African Americans
were still subject to degrading Jim Crow laws, and the U.S. military was
racially segregated. It took just over twenty years of civil rights advocacy for
Congress to pass a law amending the rules that prevented funding for the
training of black military pilots. That was in 1939, two years before the
formation of the Tuskegee program and five years before the all-black 332nd
Fighter Group would be sent overseas to join the 99th Squadron in escorting the
Fifteenth Air Force’s bombing raids across Europe. Even then, the War Department
stipulated that blacks be put into separate military units and that they be
staffed by white officers, who usually prevented them from advancing.

Not much of this background information is explored in Red Tails. It takes
place in 1944, after the program had been established. This provides precious
little context for audiences unfamiliar with the history of the Airmen. What the
filmmakers do explore has been filtered through a highly conventional lens, many
scenes looking, sounding, and advancing as if they had been lifted straight from
a 1950s war movie. At that time, Hollywood would freely indulge in contrivances
and stereotypical characters, including the unyielding superior officers, the
hotshot young privates, and the poor sons of bitches that would die after
revealing their plans to return home to their women. This movie provides us with
variations of all of the above. The dialogue, especially during the early combat
scenes, was written in the cornball style of a Saturday matinee serial – a
mixture of obvious puns, harmless goading, and preachy sermons.
When the issue of racism finally does work its way into the plot, it will
immediately be obvious how much it has been simplified and sanitized. Bryan
Cranston, for example, plays Col. William Mortamus, an inflexible white bigot
who, naturally, speaks in a Southern drawl. He will on a few occasions butt
heads with A.J. Bullard (Terrence Howard), a black colonel who correctly points
out that his men deserve better than rusty hand-me-down planes. He delivers
every line as if giving a child an ultimatum. And then there are the scenes with
the Airmen stationed in Italy. The white pilots refuse to give them the time of
day until the Airmen do their stuff during the bombing raids; at that point, the
white men make the most miraculous and sudden of turnarounds, going so far as to
salute the Airmen in broad daylight, inviting them for a round of drinks at the
local bar (which they had previously been denied access to), and even shake
their hands. If problems were this easy to solve, the world would indeed be a
much better place.
Several characters are given their own dramatic situations. There’s friction
between best friends Martin “Easy” Julian (Nate Parker) and Joe “Lightning”
Little (David Oyelowo). The former likes to do everything according to protocol
and masks his resentment of his unseen but nonetheless demanding father with
alcohol. The latter is an ace pilot who takes foolish risks, on land and in the
air. There’s the kid everyone calls Junior, although he would much prefer the
nickname Ray Gun (Tristan Wilds); a bit inexperienced, he will eventually find
himself in a POW camp and participating in a great escape with the white
inmates. There’s Major Emanuel Stance (Cuba Gooding, Jr.), always with a pipe in
his mouth, always having an occasion to deliver a firm but inspirational speech.
The filmmakers even find time for a soppy romance between Lightning and an
Italian woman named Sofia (Daniela Ruah), the circumstances of which would be
phony even within the pages of a dime store romance novel. Never mind the fact
that they can express their love without knowing the languages they each speak.

For George Lucas, Red Tails was an odyssey, originally
conceived of in 1988 but repeatedly postponed due to multiple script rewrites,
many attached directors, and its rejection by every major studio because of it’s
all-black cast, which they claimed would have made it impossible to market
oversees. It’s a project he obviously cared about from the start. And yet ...
this is the best he could give us? I can give him credit for his trademark
display of special effects; the aerial dogfight sequences, some edited in the
style of a Star Wars space battle, are nothing short of spectacular. But all the
digital wizardry in the world can’t compensate for a screenplay that relies on
an inferior plot and one-dimensional characters. How tragic that a very real and
very interesting chapter in American history has been marginalized by bad
filmmaking.
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