The decision to drop the atom bomb, the secrecy surrounding the mission, and the men who flew it.The decision to drop the atom bomb, the secrecy surrounding the mission, and the men who flew it.The decision to drop the atom bomb, the secrecy surrounding the mission, and the men who flew it.
Photos
- General Groves
- (as Richard T. Herd)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaPaul Tibbets confessed that he had never any problems to sleep after dropping the bomb over Hiroshima. The Hiroshima bombardment killed less people than the raids over Tokyo pulled in 1945 and which caused the death of more than one hundred thousands of people.
- GoofsMajor Tom Ferebee has to unroll his autographed "Short Shot" money roll to help Colonel Paul Tibbets and himself remember the last name of Theodore "Dutch" van Kirk. In actuality the three men had flown over 40 combat missions together on the same crew in Europe, and it is highly improbable that either Tibbets or Ferebee, let alone both of them, would have forgotten van Kirk's name.
- Quotes
Colonel Paul Tibbets: Improperly commandeered an airplane...
Captain Bob Lewis: I was on official business.
Colonel Paul Tibbets: Lost in the middle of a snowstorm...
Captain Bob Lewis: Do you expect me to control the weather?
Colonel Paul Tibbets: Didn't occur to you to use instruments...
Captain Bob Lewis: My compass was out, SIR.
Colonel Paul Tibbets: Set down in the middle of a corn field...
Captain Bob Lewis: It was on the approach to the airport.
Colonel Paul Tibbets: So why didn't you use the airport?
Captain Bob Lewis: Because I was out of gas! It was one gorgeous piece of flying.
Colonel Paul Tibbets: People are going to say that I was lenient on you because of our friendship. Don't even start to believe it.
Captain Bob Lewis: Oh, c'mon, Paul...
Colonel Paul Tibbets: You're dismissed.
- ConnectionsEdited into Mission of the Shark: The Saga of the U.S.S. Indianapolis (1991)
I assumed that I'd seen an unrepresentative section so watched a repeat. In a knockabout comic scene in "the john" a security man disguised as a plumber has been caught by the aircrew listening in to their conversations. The scene exactly resembled that in those many many comic movies set the armed forces - from Operation Petticoat to Sargeant Bilko. How could such a huge, dramatic and sombre story receive such treatment? It was not simply incompetent but given the gravity of the subject matter, distasteful.
I contrasted it with the superb Emmy-awarded "Day One" with Brian Dennehy as General Groves, a military bulldozer whose responsibility it was to drive the immense project forward often in the face of the sophisticated scruples of the brilliant scientists he had no choice but to work with. Day One seemed to give absolute full and accurate measure to the characters and events - the first IMDb review on it is particularly worth reading. David Strathairn excellent as Oppenheimer. Even better was the 1980 mini series "Oppenheimer" with Sam Waterston in the title role.
Given these two superb renderings of the genuinely world shattering story I cannot imagine how "Enola Gay etc" came to be conceived let alone made. Rightly it received not a single award nomination.
- trimmerb1234
- Jan 31, 2008
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Enola Gay - Bomber des Todes
- Filming locations
- Acton, California, USA(Arizona scenes)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime2 hours 36 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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