I went to see Fly Boys last night. It was a good movie as far as the action and all went, but the train that one of the guys gets on when he's leaving his small mid western US community is the same train he gets off of in France... Also, the tri-wing planes that the Germans were supposedly using didn't come out until late in 1917, not 1916... I wish Hollywood would get their **** together!.
Tracklayer
I will spot your points, and yeah, should have checked alittle farther on their facts. But considering that everyone who worked on the movie project was born WAY (most likely several generations) after the War, I am just glad to see a movie about it. If it has been a little Hollywooded....I suppose so be it. Its still a story that needs to be told the generations of our time.
Best Regards, Big John
Kiva Valley Railway- Freelanced road in central Arizona. Visit the link to see my MR forum thread on The Building of the Whitton Branch on the Kiva Valley Railway
I hate when movies do that
its like oh well looks good its a wrap
just looks so dumb
K
Budliner wrote: I hate when movies do that its like oh well looks good its a wrap just looks so dumb K
Come on Budliner. Let's hook up and go to Hollywood and show them how to make movies!...
but the train that one of the guys gets on when he's leaving his small mid western US community is the same train he gets off of in France...
It must been one hell of a tunnel. All the German RED tri-planes ruin the movie for me.
Might be a good idea to go to IMDB.com and post the errors under trivia and goofs.
the goat
Many times folks go to the movies to escape reality. As stated above, it is just a Hollywood movie, not a documentary. I will occasionaly catch myself "nit picking" movies, and quickly remind myself that it is just a Hollywood feature and nothing more. They produce what sells, not reality.
cspmo wrote: but the train that one of the guys gets on when he's leaving his small mid western US community is the same train he gets off of in France... It must been one hell of a tunnel. All the German RED tri-planes ruin the movie for me.
I still laugh when ever I watch "Rambo" shoot up the place with a M60 with a short ammo belt that last forever..Or how one man can kill off lots of bad guys while he's getting shot at by the same guys..
C'mon now guys a movie is suppose to be fantasy entertainment.
Even the great award winning "Titanic" movie had several oops if one knows anything about RMSTitanic.
Larry
Conductor.
Summerset Ry.
"Stay Alert, Don't get hurt Safety First!"
dave9999 wrote:I was watching "That 70's Show" the other day and noticed that when Red Forman opened hisbeer, the pop top was one of those that stays attached to the can.... they didn't start using thoseuntil the early 90's.
Mid-1980s, actually. The old pull tops were all long gone by 1990.
My problem with Hollywood is that in most cases, the producers/directors KNOW that what they're doing is inaccurate. They might not know exactly what's right, but they know that what they're doing is not it. And guess what? They don't care. In most cases (like Flyboys, but I haven't yet seen it), the director will spew off something like, "I know it's not right, but it looks better on film my way."
And so what? Most paintings aren't historically accurate either. Neither are most art photographts, which are composed in such a way to provide the viewer with only the impression that the photographer really wants (you think the scenery that Ansel Adams shot in was really that picturesque?).
Actually, I'll tell you why "so what". The problem is that the vast bulk of the American public is stupid. They have neither the means, intelligence, or inclination to care about "trivial" things like history (or science, literature, art, or any other "unimportant" subject). Make a movie of Superbowl XXIII, and they'll howl if you get it wrong, but have Napoleon say "Dude!" or use a M-60A3 in place of a Tiger I, and no one will give a rat's butt. Most of the general public takes what Hollywood feeds them as gospel truth. Show a secret plot by the Illuminati to kill Kennedy (pick one), or show ALL the Germans flying red triplanes, and they'll think that what they're seeing IS a documentary, and store away those small inaccuracies away as "truth". Eventually, they've got so many "truths" rattling away in their brains that they end up with a completely screwed up sense of the past. And it's that WRONG interpretation of the past that gets us into trouble at the polls.
Will Hollywood change? No, not really. They've been screwing up history since movies were invented. They got things wrong in Casablanca, for pete's sake, and that was a CONTEMPORARY movie. Will the public get any smarter? No; we just have to keep hammering away at them with reality and hope that some of it gets through to a handful of people (which is usually unlikely). To think that it's these people who run America...
(Moron people with a screwed up sense of history isn't new. In 1982 or 1983, when I was starting out in American Civil War reenacting, I heard this great conversation between a father and son, as they were walking towards the Confederate displays: "Daddy, daddy, look! It's the Dukes of Hazzard flag!!!" "That's right son; let's see if Boss Hogg is here." Sigh...)
Ray Breyer
Modeling the NKP's Peoria Division, circa 1943
Sorry guys, but I can't deal with movies that aren't right... The only time I can kick back and relax with a movie is when I know ahead of time that it's total fiction. This particular movie burned me because I'm not only a model railroader but also a World War One fighter plane buff!... I'm really looking forward to the German version of the Red Baron. I've read some good reviews about it. I don't care how boring a movie is as long as is historically correct.
Tracklayer wrote: Sorry guys, but I can't deal with movies that aren't right... The only time I can kick back and relax with a movie is when I know ahead of time that it's total fiction. This particular movie burned me because I'm not only a model railroader but also a World War One fighter plane buff!... I'm really looking forward to the German version of the Red Baron. I've read some good reviews about it. I don't care how boring a movie is as long as is historically correct. Tracklayer
I understand what you are saying. I have known folks in the past that have complained about certain things not being realistic in movies such as The Matrix.
To me what's aggravating about such obvious mistakes is I've read that many of the movie maker go to very extreme measures to have some of the details "just right" at any cost. These are often things that most people wouldn't even notice. But major gaffes like the train thing are ignored.
A while ago I watched a Stephen King video "The Silver Bullet", which was supposed to have been set in the 1950's or so. Again a train mistake - they showed a modern container train passing by with a FRED on the rear! Way out of time on this one. BTW the movie wasn't very good either, a surprise as I usually like King's movies. I think this one went direct to video because I hadn't heard of it before. I wonder why?
Bob Boudreau
CANADA
Visit my model railroad photography website: http://sites.google.com/site/railphotog/
csmith9474 wrote: Tracklayer wrote: Sorry guys, but I can't deal with movies that aren't right... The only time I can kick back and relax with a movie is when I know ahead of time that it's total fiction. This particular movie burned me because I'm not only a model railroader but also a World War One fighter plane buff!... I'm really looking forward to the German version of the Red Baron. I've read some good reviews about it. I don't care how boring a movie is as long as is historically correct. Tracklayer I understand what you are saying. I have known folks in the past that have complained about certain things not being realistic in movies such as The Matrix.
Wait a minute now!. What is it that could not be possible in The Matrix ?... (ha ha). Cool movie!.
Reality check time:
1. Hollywood doesn't spend any money on research. They may even cut script items that would assure accuracy if using them would involve delay or cash expenditure. The excuse - "Who's going to notice, anyway?"
2. When they need a train scene, they send a script girl down to the morgue to get some clips, then choose the one with the best dramatic effect. That's why you'll see European steam in a documentary about American railroad history or a NYC Hudson pulling into Pittsburgh.
3. By far and away, the vast majority of the mundanes are so caught up in the story line (or their dreams about the actors) that they wouldn't notice if the WWI hero had arrived in France aboard the Shinkansen. Or climbed into the cockpit of a Mustang to give battle to the Hun. Only folks with a proper historo-geographic-technical background find it impossible to maintain the necessary suspension of disbelief.
Now you know why I haven't gone to the movies in years.
Chuck
Contrary to what some folks may think, directors doing a project such as Fly Boys do strive for historical accuracy...to a point. The historical research has to stop at a place where the attention to detail becomes overwhelming. And since it's not a documentary, somewhere along the way, historical accuracy may be compromised due to other areas with a higher budget priority. This is a business structured to make a profit...not a School Board production for a classroom broadcast.
Yeh, everyone wants accuracy. George Cosmatos who directed Tombstone (the one with Kurt Russell & Sam Elliott) hired several noted Tombstone-specific historians to ensure accuracy. But guess what....even they slipped up on a few things.
History is nothing more than someone's interpretation of past events. Even eyewitnesses viewing the same thing can come up with totally different stories as evidenced by numerous versions of the events of the Tombstone shootout between the Earps & Clantons. It happens today in courtrooms all over America, too.
Even the History Channel has a disclaimer relative to the accuracy of it's content....and they're supposed to be the Numero Uno guys in the field.
As an actor in various disciplines, I can assure you no director wants blatant historical errors. That's why you'll see, as the credits roll down the screen...something like Joe Blough-Technical Advisor. He's hired to provide a professional element for a particular purpose. If the "expert" makes a mistake, who has the knowledge to challenge him??? No one knows everything...including the experts.
Lastly, be thankful someone took the time to make Fly Boys. When's the last time we had the pleasure of a WWI flying flick and especially with such excellent graphics.
Perhaps if we allow ourselves to be more entertained by a movie, we'll be less inclined to be critical of it's shortcomings.
Have fun with your trains
I notice unrealistic train things in movies and TV shows, too, but I don't really mind, cause HEY! There's a train in there!
I like making short movies on my computer or with my Legos in my free time, and I had one where an Athearn DASH 9 and Bachmann 4-4-0 came running through a Lego cowboy scene with a spaceman. That pretty much tells you how much I care about realism in movies.
CARRfan wrote:For whatever reason, many people consider Citizen Kane the "greatest movie ever" (I do happen to like the movie myself).
I've never seen it, or even heard of it. Is it new?
I consider "Galaxy Quest" to be one of the greatest movies ever, even if there aren't any trains.
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It double posted. What in the world?