List
The Tuskegee Airmen
General Details
Director:
Robert Markowitz
Writer:
Paris Qualles, Robert Williams, Ron Hutchinson, T.S. Cook, Trey Ellis
Producer:
Bill Carraro, Carol Bahoric
Theatrical:
1995
Rated:
PG-13
Studio:
HBO Studios
Genre:
Drama, History, War
Duration:
106
IMDb:
0114745
DVD Details
Languages:
English, French
Subtitles:
English, French, Spanish
Sound:
AC-3
Aspect Ratio:
1.77:1
Picture Format:
Widescreen
UPC:
0883929188154
Discs:
1
Region:
1
Release:
Jan 2012
Price:
$14.98
Credits
Hannibal Lee
Laurence Fishburne
Walter Peoples
Allen Payne
Leroy Cappy
Malcolm-Jamal Warner
Lt. Glenn (as Courtney Vance)
Courtney B. Vance
Benjamin O. Davis
Andre Braugher
Major Joy (as Chris McDonald)
Christopher McDonald
Col. Rogers
Daniel Hugh Kelly
Senator Conyers
John Lithgow
Billy Roberts
Cuba Gooding Jr.
Lewis Johns
Mekhi Phifer
Young Hannibal
Christopher Bevins
Tail Gunner
Eddie Braun
Left Waist Gunner
Max Daniels
Operations Officer
Jack Dwyer
Conductor
James Field
Charlene (as Vivica Fox)
Vivica A. Fox
Hannibal's Father
Bennet Guillory
White Pilot #1
David Harrod
Right Waist Gunner (as Brett Jones)
Brett A. Jones
White Pilot #2
Johnny Judkins
Lt. Wesley - B17
Tim Kelleher
Walter's Instructor
Doug Kruse
General Stevenson
Ed Lauter
German Prisoner
Barry Lehman
Hannibal's Mother
Janet MacLachlan
Lewis' Instructor
Allen McCormick
Black Prisoner
Willie Minor
Reggie Newton
Perry Moore
Eleanor Roosevelt
Rosemary Murphy
Col. Sirca
Marco Perella
Gang Boss
David Pickens
Tank
William Earl Ray
Chairman Cassidy
Rick Snyder
Drill Sergeant
Allen R. Stokes
Capt. Butler - B-17
Ned Vaughn
Summary
This true story of the black flyers who broke the color barrier in the U.S. Air Force during World War II is a well-intentioned film highlighted by an excellent cast. Proud, solemn, Iowa-born Laurence Fishburne and city-kid hipster Cuba Gooding Jr. are among the hopefuls who meet en route to Tuskegee Air Force Base, where they are among the recruits for an "experimental" program to "prove" the abilities of the black man in the U.S. armed services. Fighting prejudice from racist officers and government officials and held to a consistently higher level of performance than their white counterparts, these men prove themselves in training and in combat, many of them dying for their country in the process. Andre Braugher costars as a West Point graduate who takes charge of the unit in Africa and in Italy (where it's christened the 332nd). The film is rousing, if slow starting and episodic, but it's periodically grounded by a host of war movie clichés, notably the calculated demise of practically every trainee introduced in the opening scenes (ironic given the 332nd's real-life combat record--high casualties for the enemy, low casualties among themselves, and no losses among the bombers they escorted). Ultimately the Emmy-nominated performances by moral backbone Fishburne and the dedicated Braugher and the energy and cocky confidence of Gooding give their battles both on and off the battlefield the sweet taste of victory. "--Sean Axmaker"