Iron Eagle

From Conservapedia
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ed Poor (Talk | contribs) at 02:03, October 8, 2007. It may differ significantly from current revision.

Jump to: navigation, search

Iron Eagle (1986) is a movie about a hotshot teen pilot whose father's plane was shot down by MIG's of an Islamic country over the Mediterranean Sea.

Doug Masters spent more time on a jet fighter simulator than doing his homework, so his grades were not good enough to get into the Air Force Academy. To avenge a prank against his girlfriend, Doug challenges the town bully to a plane vs. car race through Snake Canyon - but the bully (and his gang) are cheats.

The confrontation with the bullies mirrors an attack on Doug's father - who had been flying in international airspace when shot down, so he could be held hostage. The film doesn't say which country was involved, only that it claimed a "200 mile limit" while the US only recognizes 12. Sounds a lot like Libya; see Gulf of Sidra incident.

After hearing the bad news about his dad - and the fact that the US is planning no military response, Doug borrows some time on the world's most expensive video game (an F-16 flight simulator vs. MIGs). He finds out the pilot whose simulator time he borrowed is Colonel Charles Sinclair (USAF Reserve), the airplane mechanic who helped him win the Snake Canyon bet. They have a tense conversation about rescuing Doug's dad.

The next day, Doug graduates from high school, reflecting on the inspiring words of the valedictorian's speech: "Be grateful for the freedom and sustenance we received, and believe in ourselves."

Lou Gosset applies his "flair for projecting quiet authority" [1] to his characterization of an airplane mechanic willing to help Doug plan a clandestine rescue mission.

This movie's evil twin is the ultra-liberal "Top Gun".
  1. [1]