L.A. Weekly by Scott Foundas
A highly enjoyable programmer about those brave young men and their rickety flying machines.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Tony Bill
Cast
James Franco,
David Ellison,
Jean Reno,
Philip Winchester,
Todd Boyce,
Mac McDonald
Genre
Action,
Adventure,
Drama,
History,
Romance,
War
The adventures of the Lafayette Escadrille, young Americans who volunteered for the French military before the U.S. entered World War I, and became the country's first fighter pilots.
L.A. Weekly by Scott Foundas
A highly enjoyable programmer about those brave young men and their rickety flying machines.
Seattle Post-Intelligencer by William Arnold
As imaginatively as some of them are staged, the action scenes are never authentically gripping. This seems to be the hidden handicap of our new digital filmmaking era in which all big action sequences are generated in the computer and look vaguely like cartoons.
Variety by Todd McCarthy
Lovingly and knowledgeably made by director Tony Bill, who got his pilot's license as a teenager, pic nonetheless has a lightweight, airbrushed feel; despite the brutal dogfights and inevitable deaths, there's little gravity or resonance.
The Hollywood Reporter by Sheri Linden
A decidedly old-fashioned war film that reaches for epic sweep but is often bogged down in cliched drama and two-dimensional characters.
Village Voice
Here is the War to End All Wars seen from on high--as it was way back when, in "Wings" or the Howard Hughes "Hell's Angels"--a world apart from the grim, futile slaughterhouses of Verdun and the Marne. Among these combatants, you won't find much "All Quiet on the Western Front"–style despair, and the paths of glory are unsullied by doubt or disillusionment.
The New York Times by Nathan Lee
Despite its empty head and arduous length, Flyboys is ever so nice, in the manner of a Norman Rockwell illustration. The director, Tony Bill, may not be a philosopher but he is a gentleman, moving things along with a tidy, well-mannered hand. In another context, such politesse might feel tonic. Given the state of things, it’s nearly toxic.
Washington Post by Stephen Hunter
While the music slops and churns and the ground-level bathos rises, the aerial stuff is occasionally stirring.
Chicago Tribune by Michael Phillips
Just about everything in the video-gamey World War I picture Flyboys rings false, although the planes certainly are terrific.
Entertainment Weekly
This is a lost opportunity on an epic scale. The actors are so styled and the dogfights so drippy with CG that, as a period piece, the movie almost looks like it's set in the future.
USA Today by Claudia Puig
Flyboys doesn't succeed as a wartime adventure story or as a period romance. Even the special effects, set in a historical context, are too ho-hum to save this over-long and tedious film.
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