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Only Angels Have Wings, film review: Spectacular aerial sequences and fatalistic machismo

(U) Howard Hawks, 121 mins. Starring: Cary Grant, Jean Arthur, Rita Hayworth

Cary Grant and Rita Hayworth in ‘Only Angels Have Wings’
Cary Grant and Rita Hayworth in ‘Only Angels Have Wings’

Who said only the British had stiff upper lips? One of the pleasures of Howard Hawks' 1939 classic, re-released in a 4K restoration, is the utterly phlegmatic way the pilots of Barranca Airways in a remote corner of Latin America react to the death of colleagues. All that matters is getting the mail out on time. Inwardly, they may be be in turmoil but none of them, least of all the boss, Geoff Carter (Cary Grant), shows any emotion.

This is the quintessential Hawks movie, combining spectacular aerial sequences with the fatalistic barroom machismo of the pilots off duty.

Jean Arthur is almost as much the archetypal Hawkes-ian woman as Lauren Bacall. She is glamorous but tough and self-reliant; she doesn't feel sorry for herself, however badly Carter treats her.

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