Movie Review

Test Pilot

"They're yours... in a heart-walloping love story!"

Directed by: Victor Fleming

Starring:

Test Pilot Movie Poster

US Release Date:
April 22nd, 1938

Average:

Reviewed on: August 24th, 2003
Gable and Loy.Test Pilot is a well acted comedy/drama with an all star cast. With humor, drama and action this movie succeeds in many ways. The cast is only occasionally bogged down by some melodrama.

Gable plays Jim, a cocky, party boy pilot. Tracy is his straightlaced, serious minded mechanic and best friend, Gunner. Upon testing a plane on a cross country flight, Jim lands in a Kansas farmer's field. The farmer's daughter, Ann, played by Loy, falls madly in love with Jim and he with her.

The early part of their relationship is filled with funny scenes. She gets excited at a baseball game, so Jim sides with the team she hopes will lose just to get her going. In another scene Jim and Gunner go shopping for a nightgown for Ann as she watches from a distance laughing. When all three are in a cab together Jim says to Gunner, 'I rue the day, I'm picking up words. She went to college.'

Gable and Tracy. The movie also has many dramatic scenes. Some work well. Such as the one where Ann and Gunner discuss just how hopeless her marriage to Jim is. Other scenes have some overly melodramatic dialogue such as when Ann says to Jim, 'It was a thrill to see you come out of the sky. It will be a greater one to see you disappear in it.'

Gable is one of my favorite old time movie stars. He always played an 'I don't give a damn' character, who really did. It just takes a good woman and an hour and a half of celluloid to discover it.

Tracy is in the thankless supporting role. Gunner is in the thankless role of best friend to someone who is in love. Gunner is the guy who wakes up Jim after a 5 day drunken bender. Gunner is the guy who complains to Jim that he thinks too much about women and not enough about his job.

The movie is really a love triangle between the three leads. Gunner and Ann share revealing scenes that Jim is not privy to. They never have a romance but they understand each other in ways that Jim and Ann do not. This is a great character story.

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Reviewed on: August 3rd, 2004
Test Pilot movie poster. Eric's right. This movie features three great stars at the peak of their talents in a story that is both funny and dramatic.

Clark Gable, Spencer Tracy and Myrna Loy. They don't make 'em like that anymore.

After a decade in Hollywood Gable had perfected the daring, hard-drinking, masculine, ladies man. It was a character that he would own for the next twenty years. Cooper and Grant were too pretty and Cagney and Bogart too rough; Gable had the best of both worlds. He was ruggedly handsome and charmingly cocky.

Tracy was simply THE most natural actor in front of the camera and he didn't need any "Motivation" like the later Method generation. He just went out there and talked and made you believe every word.

Myrna Loy was just about the perfect woman. She was beautiful, glamorous and sophisticated. She was also a great sport with a winning sense of humor. In Test Pilot she proved she could handle drama as well as comedy. Although it is a bit of a stretch to accept that until she met Gable's Jim, she was, "Just a country girl sittin' on a fence on a farm in Kansas."

Spencer Tracy does have a rather thankless role but then what other man in a Clark Gable movie didn't? Audiences, after all, weren't paying good money to see him kiss Myrna Loy.

Eric didn't mention the many aerial scenes in Test Pilot. Some of them are quite good. Especially the one where Gunner is killed. His death scene is reminiscent of the silent classic Wings. Movies today rarely show such a close emotional bond between men. It is out of fashion. The relationship between Jim and Gunner is sentimental chivalry. Jim is the most important person in Gunner's life. Gunner takes care of Jim and Jim inspires a hero worship in Gunner. Gunner's last words are that he would come back only for Jim as tears run down Jim's face. It is a powerful moment.

One bit of trivia that I find amusing is connected to the scene where Jim's boss, Mr. Drake, rides in a jeep with General Ross. It's amusing because of the actors not because of the characters. Mr. Drake is played by Lionel Barrymore and General Ross is played by Samuel S. Hinds, both of them are best known today as Old Man Potter and Peter Bailey in It's a Wonderful Life.

One thing I love about classic Hollywood movies is the fact that they wear their hearts on their sleeves. They are straightforward and honest. What you see is what you get. Watch Test Pilot and see for yourself.

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Photos © Copyright MGM (1938)

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