[Ant]
> Errol Flynn...can always be trusted to let you down at critical moments!

Ant,
Is this what you're referring to?

"During pre-war operations from an aircraft carrier off Hawaii, the VB-3 dive 
bombing squadron (bearing the "High Hat" emblem of Bombing Squadron Four) 
arrives in a wingover approach to Honolulu; one of its pilots blacks out during 
the high speed dive and crashes. At the base hospital in Honolulu, LCDR Joe 
Blake (Fred MacMurray) is concerned that LT "Swede" Larson (Louis Jean Heydt) 
will not survive. U.S. Navy Doctor, LT Doug Lee (Errol Flynn), convinces the 
Senior Surgeon (Moroni Olsen) to operate but the pilot dies on the operating 
table. After Blake blames Lee for rushing the surgery, the doctor decides to 
become a flight surgeon, and winds up being trained at the U.S. Naval Air 
Station in San Diego by a number of instructors, including his nemesis, LCDR 
Blake. A sub-plot involving the romantic adventures of Blake, Lee and a group 
of mechanics, introduces Mrs. Linda Fisher (Alexis Smith) as a love interest 
for the two rivals, Blake and Lee.
On completion of his flight training, LT Lee is posted as an assistant to a 
senior Navy surgeon, CDR Lance Rogers (Ralph Bellamy), who is working to find a 
solution for altitude sickness that affects pilots in dive bombers. Lee flies 
with Blake as his pilot in a camera-equipped aircraft and observes Blake 
blacking out. He experiments with a pneumatic belt that will keep blood above 
the heart and successfully flight tests it himself, although he disobeys 
regulations in flying by himself. Even though he has qualified as a pilot, Lee 
is still not trusted, considered a "grandstander" and a "vulture", always there 
when someone crashes. His judgment over pilots' ability to fly is further 
resented when he grounds a pilot, LT Tim Griffin (Regis Toomey), who is 
suffering from chronic fatigue. In anger, Griffin quits the U.S. Navy, and 
joins the Royal Air Force (RAF) in Canada but visits his old squadron when he 
is ferrying a new fighter from the Los Angeles factory. On his return flig
 ht, Griffin suffers from fatigue and dies attempting to land at an emergency 
field, completely misjudging his approach.
LCDR Blake finally accepts that the flight surgeon is trying to help pilots 
survive dangerous high altitude flying, and volunteers as a "guinea pig" pilot 
for aerial experiments. The first flight test of a pressurized cabin nearly 
ends in disaster when the aircraft ices up and Blake passes out, forcing Dr. 
Lee to take over. After ground testing of a new invention jointly developed by 
Lee and Blake, a pressure suit, Blake is told that he did not pass his most 
recent physical and will be grounded. Taking off without permission, Blake 
carries out the aerial testing of the new suit anyway, but when the oxygen 
regulator fails, he loses consciousness and fatally crashes. His notes are 
salvaged from the wreckage, however, and mass production of the suit can begin. 
In the final scene, Blake's self-sacrifice is acknowledged while Rogers and Lee 
are honored for their pioneering work in protecting pilots flying at high 
altitude."
[Wikipedia, Dive Bomber (film)]

Craig   

 


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