THE FLYING FOOL (1929) William Boyd, Marie Prevost, Tom O'Brien | Adventure, Comedy, Drama | B&W

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The Flying Fool is a 1929 aviation-themed film produced and distributed by Pathé Exchange as both a silent film and sound film just as Hollywood was transitioning to filming with sound.Tay Garnett directed and William Boyd, Russell Gleason and Marie Prevost starred.

SYNOPSIS
A man protective of his brother checks out the girl his brother is in love with, in order to see if she's the real thing or just trying to take advantage of him. Unfortunately, he winds up falling in love with her himself.

After an World War I aerial battle over French lines, Bill Taylor (William Boyd) is honoured as an ace. After the war, he continues flying as a barnstormer, known as the "Flying Fool". His kid-brother, Jimmy (Russell Gleason), is one of his crew. Jimmy falls in love with a nightclub singer, Pat Riley (Marie Prevost). His older-brother worries that Jimmy may be involved with the wrong kind of girl.

Bill decides to check on Pat out and he finds she is a sweet and home-loving daughter working to provide for her mother. To his surprise, he also falls for her, and this upsets Jimmy.

Both brothers take to their aircraft to decide which of them will win Pat. After a thrilling air "battle," Bill and Jimmy land safely.

CAST & CREW
William Boyd as Bill Taylor
Marie Prevost as Pat Riley
Tom O'Brien as Tom Dugan
Russell Gleason as Jimmy Taylor
Kate Bruce as Mrs. Riley, Pat's Mother
Dan Wolheim as Airport Manager
Dorothy Ward as Mae Hopper

Directed by Tay Garnett
Written by Tay Garnett (scenario), James Gleason (dialogue)
Based on original story by Elliott J. Clawson
Cinematography Arthur C. Miller
Edited by Claude Berkeley
Music by George Green, George Waggner
Production company Pathé Studio
Distributed by Pathé Exchange
Release date June 23, 1929
Running time 63 or 73 minutes
Country USA
Languages Silent film with English intertitles; Sound film version

According to her journal entry for 1929, aviatrix Pancho Barnes flew in The Flying Fool. Noted stunt pilot Frank Clarke along with his friends, Leon Nomis, Roy Wilson and Dick Rinaldi, also flew in the film.

The shooting locale was the Metropolitan Airport in Los Angeles where two Travel Air 4000 aircraft (one painted white with "The Flying Fool" on its fuselage) were flown.

Aviation film historian Stephen Pendo, in Aviation in the Cinema (1985) noted The Flying Fool was an "all dialogue" (another catch phrase for a sound film or "talkie". He also wrote, "noted cameraman Arthur Miller lensed the film."

Aviation film historian James Farmer in Celluloid Wings: The Impact of Movies on Aviation (1984) considered The Flying Fool, an example of a film that benefitted from "... excellent aerial sequences."

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