Task Force

1949 "Nothing ever like it ! Nothing you ever liked more !"
6.5| 1h56m| NR| en
Details

After learning the finer points of carrier aviation in the 1920s, career officer Jonathan Scott and his pals spend the next two decades promoting the superiority of naval air power. But military and political "red tape" continually frustrate their efforts, prompting Scott to even consider leaving the Navy for a more lucrative civilian job. Then the world enters a second World War and Scott finally gets the opportunity to prove to Washington the valuable role aircraft carriers could play in winning the conflict. But what will it cost him and his comrades personally?

Director

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Warner Bros. Pictures

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Reviews

Listonixio Fresh and Exciting
BoardChiri Bad Acting and worse Bad Screenplay
filippaberry84 I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.
Bob This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
grantss Weak script, and historically not very accurate. The battle scenes, mostly taken from actual WW2 battle footage, were certainly worth watching though.
Benedito Dias Rodrigues After leaves U.S. Navy Admiral Jonatham L Scott reminder in flashback your career since World War I until World War II and your fight to developing news aircraft carrier that will be in near future the main force in kind of war about to come....semi-documentary movie hosted by Gary Cooper...but there an interesting twist in half of movie black and white for color mainly because have to use color footage from that time....however an interesting movie as study historic events!!!
jacobs-greenwood Written and directed by Delmer Daves, this unremarkable war drama uses several real events concerning the development of aircraft carrier warfare, from the original U.S.S. Langley and bi-plane aircraft of the 1920's through the U.S.S. Enterprise (among others) during World War II, as its backdrop (even jet fighters flying in formation are shown at the end of the picture).Initially thought to be too vulnerable to fund relative to battleships (e.g. slugging it out since 1812), the carrier became the Navy's most strategic weapon around which much of the rest of fleet was built to support. Six years before Gary Cooper would play Billy Mitchell, a visionary who predicted the advancement and strategic significance of the airplane in Naval battles, he played (a fictional) Jonathan Scott, a Navy pilot who finds himself in a similar position with regards to the aircraft carrier.The film actually begins (and ends) with officer Scott's retirement from the Navy, four years after the end of the Pacific campaign and WW II. Therefore, the story is told in flashback beginning in the early twenties when Scott was just a seaplane pilot being told he'd have to takeoff and land on a deck 65 feet wide, that of the only early carrier (a ship not decommissioned due to budget cuts), the Langley.The plot progresses through years of struggle with (e.g.) Congress over the acceptance of this new technology, up to Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor and 'our' subsequent hit and run strategy and tactics that led to the significant Battle of Midway victory etc..Most of the film is in B&W, but the last portion (about 20 minutes) of the movie is in color; it appears to consist of stock footage of the actual battles, ostensibly taking place as more than a dozen newly outfitted carriers advance towards Okinawa: the carriers' defense weaponry against enemy aircraft and Kamikaze attacks as well as planes crash landings on their decks are shown.The background story that holds everything together is that of Scott's life and Navy career. His initial flight commander, who during the course of the story becomes an Admiral who's also his superior officer, is Pete Richard, played by Walter Brennan (of course, their last of 8 films together). Jane Wyatt plays Mary Morgan, the wife of another early carrier pilot (Rory Mallinson, uncredited) who's killed that later becomes Scott's wife. Wayne Morris, who actually served in the Navy during World War II himself and became a highly decorated flying ace, plays McKinney, a student of Scott's at the Annapolis Naval Academy that becomes a dive bomber; Julie London plays his wife, the former Miss Barbara McKinney. Bruce Bennett plays McCluskey, someone who served with Scott while he was (being punished for speaking out of turn and) 'flying a desk', stationed at the Panama Canal, until they were both called to serve on a new carrier (the Saratoga; Jack Holt plays wing commander Reeves, who'd also served with Scott back in the 1920's). Stanley Ridges plays Senator Bentley and Art Baker plays Senator Vincent; both of whom argue over the value of the carrier to the fleet and future warfare with Admiral Ames (Moroni Olsen; Laura Treadwell, uncredited, plays his wife). John Ridgely plays Scott's oldest friend, Dixie Rankin, a fellow pilot from the early days whose wife Ruth (Mary Lawrence, uncredited) is killed during the Pearl Harbor raid. Apparently Edmond O'Brien is the uncredited voice heard on radio announcing the attack. Kenneth Tobey (uncredited) also appears very briefly as Captain Ken Willliamson, a man who's escorting and/or dating Mary at a Washington D.C. function before Scott arrives.
btillman63 As someone who knows a great deal about naval aviation history, I give "Task Force" high marks for accuracy and atmosphere. The central event is the 1942 Battle of Midway, which is SO much better than the egregious 1976 film. The attention to detail in TF is about 900% better than "Midway", with far better characterization to boot.