The Battle of the Eagles

1979
6.6| 2h10m| en| More Info
Released: 01 July 1979 Released
Producted By: Jadran Film
Country: Yugoslavia
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

The first Yugoslav Partisan air force unit. Loosely based on historical facts.

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Reviews

theFoss I bought "50 Combat Classics" for 10 bucks at Walmart, not expecting much, and the version of Partizanska Escadrila, called "Battle of the Eagles" on Disc 8 lived down to expectations. This is not to say my 10 bucks were wasted, there have been some pleasant surprises in the 50 films, but this was not one of them. The film included on this DVD set, is the chopped up, and dubbed version, as described by other reviewers.As is clear from the IMDb summary for Partizanska Escadrila, this is a Yugoslavian production from 1979. Why somebody felt compelled to produce a pure propaganda piece 34 years after the War, WWII, is a mystery to this reviewer.It is hard, for me, to judge acting or actor ability with a dubbed film, but, while there are an abundance of stereotypical, war movie characters, there are no obvious instances of histrionics or blatant overacting. On the checklist of characters, there is the cool, firm, competent leader (the Major). The free-spirited, skilled, and reckless pilot. The sullen, sulky, reluctant, volunteer (the non-communist that steals a plane from the Germans, to serve the homeland). His doomed sidekick, who has to earn his trust. The goofy kid, that rises from incompetence to hero. The quiet woman of compassion, who loves the leader (the radio operator). The goofy kid's, every-woman, love interest, who sacrifices all to be near him. All the stock characters seem covered.The action in this film requires a major suspension of belief, as the hopelessly outnumbered heroes, in hopelessly outdated planes, take on a supposedly modern Air Force AND Army on equal terms. By equal terms, I mean that there are losses on both sides, and there are mission successes on both sides. (The Luftwaffe, when fighting planes of the quality depicted in this film, swept away the entire organized Air Forces of THREE countries (Poland, Holland, Belgium) in less than a week, cumulatively.) The climactic air duel, pits the Major, leader of the partisans, against the evil, I guess (more on this later), German Gestapo officer. What a policeman, which is what the Gestapo was, is doing in a Luftwaffe fighter, is, yet another, mystery to me.About the Gestapo guy...I guess he is evil, but, as I speak nearly no German, at all, I cannot be sure. That is because on the dubbed version provided in this film collection, ONLY THE YUGOSLAV DIALOGUE IS DUBBED IN English! The DAMN Germans SPEAK ONLY UNTRANSLATED German! The only German word I could even correctly translate myself was the "Scheiß" (shit), as the sullen guy stole the German plane. So, nearly a third of this film was incomprehensible to this viewer! In summary, a somewhat predictable Yugoslavian flag waver of limited entertainment value to this monolingual English speaking viewer. Not the worst film I've seen in the aforementioned DVD collection, but not nearly good enough to warrant a repeat viewing.
jt_3d Okay, I guess it's not realistic. Being unfamiliar with the history of the Partisan Air Force, I can't say. But it is a pretty good story and hearkens back to the beginning of aerial bombing; simply tossing bombs out the side of a biplane. It's interesting watching the unit grow from a couple of biplanes to a real air force by stealing planes from the enemy and being on the run from the same enemy. So as a flying war story, it's pretty good. But the 102 minute version is indeed poorly hacked up and since that's the one I saw, that's the one I have to vote on.Very clichéd. Boy meets girl but he is too busy running the outfit to give her the time of day, until it's too late, and then only to fly back over the base after the climatic final mission and call her name on the radio and then disappear mysteriously ala the ending of Fighter Squadron I believe it was, where the hero spirals down into the clouds, leaving their fates unknown. Other boy meets other girl, boy becomes hero and wins girl, girl becomes dead. The only thing missing was him becoming enraged and destroying the enemy single handed. As mentioned, the partisans are dubbed in English but the Germans speak German without subtitles making those scenes pretty pointless unless you happen to speak German. Even then I think they could have been cut in favor of fleshing out the partisan parts. But I guess they were trying to set up the final battle between two opponents who had been playing cat and mouse throughout the movie. It doesn't really work, especially when you can't understand what the cat is saying.Other than that, it's a fairly decent war story which suffers from poor editing and poor model effects, though they do know how to blow stuff up.P.S. As a note to whomever is in charge of stuff like this: The US version is named The Battle of the Eagles. Yet Eagle (Adler) is what the German pilots called themselves in this movie. Sort of confusing, don't you think? Rather than naming it after the bad guys, maybe it should have been named something like, oh say Partisan Squadron. duh. 5/10 from me.
v-tadic It really amazed me to see that someone would take so much time to assess such a bad movie. The beginning (of the film) had some truth in it. The Partisan "AF" was started in 1943 when two communist pilots from the Croat Ustashi AF deserted, together with their observers, in Breguet 19 and Potez 33, respectively. The aircraft saw some action in strafing and hand-bombing, but didn't last very long. One crew was killed and the other survived, the pilot being killed later while flying a Spitfire Vc. The real Partisan squadrons were established when RAF detached two of its (Yugoslav) squadrons of Spitfire Vc and, Hurricane IIc , respectively, manned by Ex Yugoslav Royal Airforce pilots, and allotted them to Tito's forces on the Island of Vis. Even those were never engaged in air-to-air activities, but strictly for ground support. So the film was one giant cow manure, to put it mildly, and the lowest point for its, otherwise not at all bad, director. By some quirk of fate I was present on the filming of the last sequence of the movie, when dozens of German aircraft were destroyed (Yugoslav 522 trainers, used also in the flying sequences) on the Mostar military airport. The pyrotechnics were impressive, and the Scotch served lavishly by the film crew was even better. Otherwise, the film was a shameless lie was and frequently joked about by the contemporary audience.
iaxa Partizanska Eskadrila was an obsession of every kid in early eighties (making me no exception). It tried to follow the contemporary Hollywood action scheme and presented advanced visuals for that time. Partisans and Germans were the inspiration for Yugoslav movie makers for forty years. They colonized nearly every genre, of course action movies were the most convenient ground for them. However after seeing it twenty years later it amazed me how many similarities it features to - the first Star Wars movie: The protagonists: Dalibor (Luke Skwalker ) – the young unexperienced partisan fighter who during the film fulfills his ambition to become a pilot and a hero at the end Vuk (Han Solo) – a stubborn pilot who steals the German plane and does not fit entirely into the partisan unit (he doubts in partisans, but hate Germans) until the victorious ending. Major Dragan (Obi Wan) the wise but determined squadron leader Major Dragan, who gained much experience in a previous (Spanish civil) war. He even mysteriously flies away at the end of film wounded in a plane, which we don't see being destroyed. The elements of the film story include (just the most evident elements): -stealing something (a plane) from the enemy base what provokes "special measures" from the Germans, whose Vader is impersonated by a merciless SS Klauberg. -infiltrating the enemy airport (death star), causing mayhem and then escaping -the final the attack of the entire squadron with a goal to destroy a "heavily protected" bridge in a canyon where the partisans battle both enemy planes and ground defense and when the negative character is also defeated -The most evident similarity, which looks a bit funny in both films is the ending scene in film where the three heroes got awards and march through the line up of their fellow fighters and admirers. No, wonder the Partizanska Eskadrila was released in 1979 in a time when SW "A new hope" was a widely admired film.