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The Last Flight

Play trailer Poster for The Last Flight 1931 1h 20m Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
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Tomatometer 3 Reviews 60% Popcornmeter Fewer than 50 Ratings
American pilots (Richard Barthelmess, Johnny Mack Brown) surround a single woman (Helen Chandler) in Paris after World War I.

Critics Reviews

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Sean Axmaker Parallax View 05/04/2012
Where most of the memorable artifacts of pre-code cinema liked to flaunt its defiance of social decorum, The Last Flight makes an effort to shake up and unsettle the viewer, and it succeesds. Go to Full Review
Dennis Schwartz Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews 10/21/2010
A
A rarely seen gem. Go to Full Review
Dan Callahan ToxicUniverse.com 02/02/2005
The Last Flight is a bracing tale of the Lost Generation, and one of cinema's least known masterpieces. Go to Full Review
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Audience Reviews

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11/04/2010 One of the best movies I've ever seen and one that is almost totally unknown. In 1919 Paris, four American fliers, shattered by their experience in World War I, drink themselves into oblivion. There is little real story, and much of the film is the characters revealing (or not revealing) themselves through conversation. It's very similar to those two great 90s indies about Americans in Europe, Before Sunrise and Barcelona. It's so similar to those and so unlike other 1931 films, it seems utterly out of time. A superb film about alcoholism, life after war, the expat life, the death wish, and the Lost Generation. See more Read all reviews
The Last Flight

My Rating

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Movie Info

Synopsis American pilots (Richard Barthelmess, Johnny Mack Brown) surround a single woman (Helen Chandler) in Paris after World War I.
Director
William Dieterle
Screenwriter
John Monk Saunders
Distributor
First National Pictures Inc.
Production Co
First National Pictures
Genre
Drama
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Aug 29, 1931, Original
Runtime
1h 20m