Sunday, October 25, 2009

For Conservative Movie Lovers: John Ford, John Wayne, & "They Were Expendable" Part II


Last week I posted part I of Leo Grin's article about John Ford and his experiences during World War II. I have now posted a link to Part II of his article that deals with the Battle of Midway and the Academy Award wining Documentary John Ford made of the battle.

June 4, 1942. The Battle of Midway. John Ford was on his back, covered in debris, unconscious. All around him bombs were dropping, buildings were erupting into monstrous fireballs, and young marines were dodging deadly lines of machine-gun strafing sent down by Japanese fighter planes. Ford and his assistant, young Jack MacKenzie Jr. (whose father was an RKO cinematographer) had been perched on the roof of a power station on Eastern Island, brazenly filming the morning attack by the Japanese and reporting enemy plane positions to headquarters, when a bomb landed a scant twenty feet from their position. The shockwave was so great that MacKenzie later recalled he was “bounced flat on my face by the terrific explosion,” adding, “we almost lost Commander Ford.”


Te read the rest click on the title for a link