DINKY-DOO M'HEARTIES ❤️ ❤️ ENJOY EVERY SECOND OF THIS OUTSTANDING MOVIE
@guycastonguay9633Ай бұрын
BORING NO ACTION TO SPEAK OF!
@jjock323910 күн бұрын
I went through pilot training in the RCAF in 1965, just as they had retired the Harvard, and introduced the Tutor. This movie reminded me a bit of our training. We were the second course on the Tutor, and they ran an experiment with us, where 1/2 the course started on the Chipmonk (15 hours max to solo), and the other half, had our first flight on the jet. Good memories, an incredible comradery developed within the course.. I am still in regular contact with my old coursemates.
@ScottieMcClue10 күн бұрын
Fabulous - Thank You
@michaelbritton977820 күн бұрын
Just love these typically British airforce film’s. Absolutely wonderful.
@robinblankenship11711 күн бұрын
Ray Milland...👍 I don't know the others but enjoyed the film greatly.
@ScottieMcClue11 күн бұрын
Thank You 😊 🙏
@martinlagrange882116 күн бұрын
Historical note - Warwick pictures was the early venture in England of Albert R. 'Cubby' Broccoli, and the foundation stone for his lasting contribution to cinema which was to come... The excellent Sir Bernard Lee began to have association with the production at about this time.
@stevehuggett2098Ай бұрын
In my youth we looked skyward to the new jets flying in the skies; the De Haviland Vampire, with its distinctive whistle, and the Hawker Hunter, with its trademark 'thrum', a bellicose engine roar. No more were we so excited to see those yeoman prop jobs which had saved us (back then), so recently. A dwindling sight, the Spitfires, Hurricanes, Lancasters, Lincolns, Sunderlands, and Mosquitoes. The New Centurions were craft like the Gloster Javelin, and the Gloster Meteor, the Vampire, the Hunter, and most astoundingly and impressive of all, in 1960, the English Electric Lightning, whose engines could be FELT in ones chest and lungs it seemed. 74 Squadron, "the Flying Tigers' were the first to go operational. Who could then guess that, a scant few years later, I would be at the controls of its later mark, the BAC F6 Lighting, with 11 Sqdn. "Ociores acrioresque aquilis". Time, just like those aircraft, flies,.......but oh how much faster, and blindly. I understood that one day I might be old, but had no idea it would happen so bloody fast !
@ScottieMcClueАй бұрын
@@stevehuggett2098 Thank you 😊 🙏
@rogerhowell6269Ай бұрын
Good Flic, thought the Hawker Hunter one of the best Fighter and FGA ever made FOR ITS TIME, great lines. 👍😎
@adamlee3772Ай бұрын
Never seen this film before. Thank you for sharing it. 😊
@ScottieMcClueАй бұрын
A Pleasure
@johnstevens6971Ай бұрын
I watched this film when I was about twelve years old, it thrilled me then and the flying sequences still do, great film.
@michaelbailey2476Ай бұрын
Joining the RAF was a wonderful experience. It really felt like joining a family and the blue uniform of the discip sgt although military in feel just wasnt too intimidating. Almost comforting and let you know you were doing the right thing.
@ScottieMcClueАй бұрын
Should they have pandered to Winchester?
@certuvАй бұрын
Very enjoyable, thank you for posting
@ScottieMcClueАй бұрын
A Pleasure 🙏 ☺️
@tangerinedream7211Ай бұрын
And it wouldn't be long until English Electric Lightnings, TSR 2 got cancelled for F111s and Phantoms and Dunsfold was developing the P1127 which became the Harrier, time flies by in Aviation circles.
@ryokolynn6948Ай бұрын
I like this movies because i love Hawker Hunter aircraft
@skyedog24Ай бұрын
@@ryokolynn6948 yep I have a hawker Hunter on my channel in fact.
@minhthunguyendang9900Ай бұрын
The most elegant airplane in history. But most unwelcome to the Red Wolves terrorists in the Crater.
@skyedog24Ай бұрын
@@minhthunguyendang9900 I don't know very much about them I just know that a man that I built cabinets for back in the early eighties when I was a cabinet builder the CEO of Micron , Air Force pilot. Whose life was tragically taken at boi airport probably about 10 years ago now he was in an experimental aircraft and pulled up over the runway when the engine quit stalled RIP. He was a great aviator anda good man. He owned a highly modified Hunter hawker that he flew at air shows and dazzled the crowds with the performance of the Hunter -Hawker
@ryokolynn6948Ай бұрын
@@skyedog24In my schooling days, my school was build on the landing path of a nearby airfield...everything during breaktime/lunch break, i will venture to the top floor of a 4-level school building, viewing the Hawker Hunter making the last quarter curve approaching for a landing....due to the very low approach, i could see the under belly clearly, types of stuffs it carry, plane's numbers under the wing.
@BillyBoy1235Ай бұрын
@@minhthunguyendang9900 Ah do I detect an Aden veteran.?
@ryokolynn6948Ай бұрын
In my schooling days, my school was build on the landing path of a nearby airfield...everything during breaktime/lunch break, i will venture to the top floor of a 4-level school building, viewing the Hawker Hunter making the last quarter curve approaching for a landing....due to the very low approach, i could see the under belly clearly, types of stuffs it carry, plane's numbers under the wing.
@melvyncox3361Ай бұрын
Good film.Reminds me of my RAF days.Ahh, memories........👍
@ScottieMcClueАй бұрын
Thank You 😊 🙏
@stevehuggett2098Ай бұрын
I think I'd have been less magnanimous than Wingco Rudge; in fact, I know I would ! I'd have 'binned' Winchester when he took off without clearance, and contrary to a clear, and well reasoned, order. I'd have Courts Martialled him, and ensured he served no longer than had already been suffered. Either you have discipline, or you haven't, the Military isn't a popularity contest, it's teamwork, and bloody hard work at that ! I survived it, and my men knew I had their backs, and their wellbeing front and centre. Oh the stories I could tell....
@ScottieMcClueАй бұрын
A loose cannon ?
@yves-reneguilland9708Ай бұрын
a very nice film for pleasure . . . Bravo! the music is very beautiful and super well played = magnificent . . . Ah the English = the unique charm . . . CH-French .
@peterthomerson3607Ай бұрын
I liked this mooooveeeee ❤
@rodgoth3249Ай бұрын
not a hunter, that has a single tail, they were built just down the road from me, at squires gate. saw them regularly, hunters at the end, brilliant
@ScottieMcClueАй бұрын
I know Squire's Gate well
@clarefreeman3909Ай бұрын
Thanks fo another great movie
@ScottieMcClueАй бұрын
A Pleasure 🙏 ☺️
@figaro501Ай бұрын
Since when did Hunters make that weird howling noise? Woooh!, Woooh! Loved the film though. An uncle trained there in WW2.
@usernamesreprise4068Ай бұрын
I've seen this film a few times now but never realised that Bishop was THE Ian Fleming (author of James Bond 007)
@dave472829 күн бұрын
Different Ian Fleming. Actor Ian Fleming born Australia 1888 died London 1969.
@kcphillips1000Ай бұрын
You could always tell when there was a Hunter about by that distinctive howling .There seemed to be dozens of them flying about when I was a youngster. The Hunter was and still is a beautifully designed aircraft .
@kodebruijn475319 күн бұрын
if it British, I'll give it a try. Blamey, if it is from Scottie, its good! But it was way too long.
@ScottieMcClue19 күн бұрын
Dinky-Doo
@dast540Ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing it! I always enjoy watching Great Movies though. 👍👌👏 And of course, I'm a subscriber! Thanks Again Though.
@ScottieMcClueАй бұрын
Thank You 😊 🙏
@andrewmallard2301Ай бұрын
Not exactly the best film, but anything about RAF pilot training and flying, has my vote :)
@ScottieMcClueАй бұрын
What's the best would you say ?
@alan4ytАй бұрын
Don't know about hunter look like DH110 vampire to me.
@BillyBoy1235Ай бұрын
Thats what I thought
@ednammansfield8553Ай бұрын
The initial flying training was on the Provost followed by the DH Vampire. They went operational on the Hunter.