The Great Waldo Pepper
Cast :Robert Redford
Director :George Roy Hill
Studio :Goodtimes Home Video
Format :Color, Closed-captioned
Released Date :January 01, 1975
DVD Released Date :August 20, 1998
Language :English (Dubbed), English (Original Language), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled)
Audience Rating :PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
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Customer Reviews
Rating
DateApril 24, 2005
SummaryWhere the Hell is the DVD?????
Content
Considering the original release was from Goodtimes, it's probably not a bad thing that this movie isn't available cause Goodtimes $#%^$!

Redford plays a former WWI flyer addicted to the skies and forced in to barnstorming after he comes home from the war, only to find that the gubment is now dictating who/when/where you go in your airplane via the newly formed CAB (now the FAA) whose local rep is a former pal/acquaintance of Waldo, who eventually grounds him after an accident, causing him to seek stealth employment on a movie set where he finds former combatant and German ace Ernst Kessler.

The aerial scenes are incredible, the best this side of the Blue Max. Terrific supporting cast that includes Bo Svenson, Susan Sarandon, and Geoffrey Lewis but this flick is all Redford. A hint of mystery overlaps the straight ahead action because we dont know a lot about Redford's character. That's OK, it all works. 5 Scarfs

Rating
DateDecember 26, 2004
SummaryThe film that anticipated Top Gun!
Content
After having triumphed with The Sting Georges Roy Hill repeated with the stellar and consecrated actor Robert Redford to the boy-men aerial barnstorming pilots of the 1920's. Redford is a daredevil who regrets having missed the chance to trade shoot-outs with the great aces of WW1 .
He feels his passion is not in line with the collective (A hidden homage to The Rules of Game) . look for a young and beauty actress in her beginnings : Susan Sarandon .

Rating
DateNovember 05, 2003
SummaryGreat Waldo Pepper - a must see
Content
This movie is a winner. For History buffs, it will take you down "memory lane" or show you how it was during the great

barnstorming era. Robert Redford is the Great Waldo Pepper, a World War I "flying ace," who never saw combat because of his value as an instructor, thus he missed the actual fighting. He yearns for the chance to use his skills in combat against Germany's ace, von Kessler. Coincidently, Kessler is in America and it so happens he flys action scenes for a movie company, based on his life as a fighter pilot. Pepper befriends Kessler on the movie set and both face each other in "actual combat." The finale is not only thrilling, but touching.
Buy it, see it, enjoy it.


Rating
DateApril 30, 2003
SummaryI Know What It's Like
Content
Growing up this was significant to me, because I had already seen Jeremiah Johnson and other countless Redford films. Also recently, I moved to Elgin, Texas, just 2 miles from where Redford's airplane was filmed flying through the center of a historical small town! The pictures and newspaper articles are in the town's railroad depot museum. The town hasn't changed much since then and is very historical to this day.

Rating
DateJanuary 12, 2003
SummaryThe word "great" also describes the movie
Content
This movie has special significance for me because I first saw it as a teenager. Yet it holds up as a great movie for me 28 years after it was made (unlike some others I could name).

I like Robert Redford in almost anything, and he's at his best here as a barnstorming pilot in the 1920s who pretends to have seen more action in World War One than he did. He made me feel for the character when he said, "It should have been me" after rival flyer Axel Olsen exposed him as a "four-flusher" for claiming he was a key figure in a famous battle.

Pepper finally gets his chance to go up against the German World War One ace Ernst Kessler (perhaps loosely based on the real German ace Ernst Udet) as a stunt pilot in a movie crew.

The dialogue scenes between Pepper and Kessler leading up to the climactic dogfight are the best part of the movie, even though Kessler's lines seemed to be written more in the interest of serving the plot than in serving the character.

The idea that Kessler was a man who only felt at home in the air, for whom nothing worked out well on the ground, resonated with me, as it did with Pepper, who felt the same way.

In closing, I'd like to mention the beginning of the movie when Waldo Pepper lands at a small town in Iowa to offer airplane rides. He promises a free ride at the end of the day to a boy named Scooter if he will tote a 5-gallon gas can back and forth from the filling station to keep Pepper's plane fueled.

The song that plays over the opening credits during this sequence has stuck with me for 28 years. I heard it again in 1992 while attending a boot camp graduation ceremony at the Great Lakes Naval Recruit Training Command and remembered it from the movie. I don't know the name of it, but I love that song.

Anyway, at the end of the day Scooter asks for his free ride and Pepper says he only promised that to get him to haul gas. He never takes kids for rides. Whether the character is kidding or not isn't clear, but it certainly seems that Scooter (and his dog) get the best ride of the day.

That sequence establishes Pepper as a decent, if somewhat slippery character and gets the movie off to a good start.

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