Devil Dogs of the Air (1935) Poster

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6/10
Semper Fi...UH-RAH...
xerses1324 July 2007
Standard service triangle film centered around the United States Marine Corp (U.S.M.C.) and its Aviator training program, circa 1935. Warner Brothers (WB) standby director Lloyd Bacon provides his usual workmen like effort in another air oriented screenplay by John Monk Saunders. If it is in the 'air' either Saunders or Frank 'Spig' Wead was going to have a hand in it. Their plots are so similar as to be interchangeable.

The Nuts; Lieut. Bill Brannigan (Pat O'Brien) invites friend and hotshot pilot Tommy O'Toole (James Cagney) to join the U.S.M.C. Reserve Aviator training program. O'Toole arrives and promptly starts to move in on Brannigans main squeeze, Betty Roberts (Margaret Lindsay) and get under everybody else's skin. Usual competition in the air and for the attentions of Betty with a predictable conclusion.

The film featured the usual complement of the WBs contract players all who do a competent job. Except, Frank McHugh, who normally provides light comedy relief. In this film though he was way over the top and irritating, so bad that you wanted him to walk into a propeller (rotating). O'Brien also seemed too earnest, shouting most of his lines while Cagney was a little to coy. Margaret Lindsay a attractive and competent actress made the most her role. Ms. Lindsay by her own admission only took her career as seriously as it needed to be without the drive of Crawford, Davis, De Havilland or Stanwyck.

The best part of the film had little to do with the principals, but actual maneuvers (wargames) by the United States Navy (U.S.N.) and the U.S.M.C. In the film the U.S.N. represented the BLUE Force (true) while the enemy was BROWN Force (misnomer). Those familiar with WAR PLAN ORANGE know that the BROWN Force was actual ORANGE, Imperial Japan. The ORANGE (and other) war plans were a series of studies initiated by Theodore Roosevelt when he was Under Secretary of the Navy. They were continuously gamed and updated to reflect changing requirements and technology, up to their absorption by RAINBOW FIVE, war on a global scale. Watching the filmed maneuvers you can easily pick up on what the U.S.N. was doing and how it applies even today. For more detailed knowledge consult WAR PLAN ORANGE: The U.S. Strategy to Defeat Japan 1897-1945 by Edward S. Miller.
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5/10
Some Good, Some Bad Equals 'Just Fair'
ccthemovieman-113 October 2005
So far, I have to agree with what each of the four previous reviewers said, meaning some good, some bad.

THE BAD - Not much of a story.....supporting actor Frank McHugh in an annoying role (annoying with his singing the same stupid song after every sentence)......James Cagney with a laugh that gets annoying after awhile.....a weak romantic angle....showing "training exercises" as part of the climactic scene was somewhat interesting but provided no drama if these fliers were facing an enemy at war......Pat O'Brien an unrealistically too good a sport at the end. (He proposes to Lindsay who turns him down and then incredulously asks, "I didn't hurt your feelings did I?" duh... And he answers something like, "No, it''s okay." Yeah, right!

THE GOOD - The same cocky Cagney character who is always entertaining, always elevating a film...Some wonderful aerial shots and stunt flying in some terrific-looking bi-planes......... Margaret Lindsay's wisecracks and pretty face....Two dramatic scenes with Cagney trying to land a damaged plane.

Summary; So-so entertainment, more if you are an airplane enthusiast or a Cagney fan (which I am) but certainly on the lower of echelon of his films.
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7/10
Jimmy and Pat take to the skies
bkoganbing3 July 2005
The real founders of the buddy film James Cagney and Pat O'Brien after making their debut in Here Comes the Navy essentially reprise their roles in Devil Dogs of the Air for the Marines.

O'Brien is the no-nonsense flight instructor for the Marines who's written to an old Brooklyn pal James Cagney urging him to join the Corps. Cagney is a circus flier who pretty much knows the flying game inside out.

But he's Cagney and of course he KNOWS he knows it. That does not make for good discipline. But it does make for good raffish, knockabout comedy that Cagney/O'Brien films are known for. Of course there's a girl involved, in this case Margaret Lindsay. Need I say who she winds up with.

The only jarring note in this film is Frank McHugh. During the hey day of the studios, I think Warner Brothers was incapable of making a film without either Frank McHugh or Alan Hale. I usually enjoy Frank McHugh, but in this film he's downright annoying. He's in the medical corps and frustrated because he feels his training is being wasted because no one is ever injured in a crash or otherwise. McHugh is positively ghoulish in awaiting some accident to befall SOMEONE in the film.

However James Cagney is his usual cocksure and charming best and that carried a lot of Warner Brothers films to profit. We the audience profit also by that bouncy Cagney charm.
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7/10
"You know you're doing things to me, don't ya baby?"
utgard1416 August 2016
Pretty much a stock Cagney plot with the backdrop this time being the US Marine Corps. Pat O'Brien plays a disciplined and responsible officer who has to teach cocky young upstart pilot Jimmy Cagney the ropes. This time the girl that comes between them is Pat's girlfriend, Margaret Lindsay. It seems like it's always either Pat's sister or the girl Pat is in love with. Whichever it is, you can bet money that Cagney will win her heart by the end of the picture. Also we have Frank McHugh in a standard Frank McHugh role of the funny and likable sidekick. This is basically a remake of Here Comes the Navy. Despite the familiar plot, it's a good movie. The cast is great (Cagney is having a ball) and the aerial photography and plane stunts are impressive. It's a bit by-the-numbers for many people but chances are if you're watching this you're doing so because you like Cagney movies like this one.
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6/10
except for the aerial work, nothing much
blanche-25 July 2016
Devil Dogs of the Air is a typical Warner Brothers film with a typical Warner Brothers cast, not that that's a bad thing at all. The movie stars Jimmy Cagney, Pat O'Brien, Margaret Lindsay, and Frank McHugh.

Cagney plays a cocky flier, Tommy, whose friend Brannigan (O'Brien) encourages him to enlist in Marine flying school.

The first thing he does is fall for Brannigan's girlfriend Betty (Lindsay) who can't stand him. We all know what that means.

It turns out that Tommy is a remarkable flier and, though the friendship between the two men seems to suffer, everybody has to admit that Tommy knows what he's doing. And he keeps going after Betty.

Predictable, but the good cast brings it up a level as do the flying sequences. The planes look like what the Wright Brothers invented, and they do some amazing things.

If you're an airplane fan, you will enjoy this, though you might mix it up with some of Warners other flying films. But it has the US Navy dirigible, the early planes as I mentioned, and some fabulous stunts.

I have to one day count up how many films Cagney, O'Brien and McHugh made together. I know McHugh and Cagney made 11, and that all three were friends. They worked together very well.
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6/10
not very good
KyleFurr213 October 2005
This movie was directed by Lloyd Bacon and stars James Cagney and Pat O'Brien. This is probably one of Cagney's worst pictures and also one of the worst Cagney and O'Brien made together with the exception of The Irish In Us. Just a year later Cagney and O'Brien would go on to make Ceiling Zero with Howard Hawks which is a much better movie and you should watch that one instead. There isn't much to the plot like Cagney wanting to join the marines and winds up having to learn how to fly by his old friend O'Brien who is a Lieutenant. O'Brien is engaged to Margaret Lindsay but even after Cagney finds out he doesn't even care and still goes after her. There isn't much to the movie and you should watch one of Cagney's better movies instead.
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7/10
A great companion piece to HERE COMES THE NAVY
planktonrules26 January 2008
Jimmy Cagney plays (what else) a brash young flier who is convinced by his buddy, Pat O'Brien, to enlist in the US Marine flying school. Once there, he initially makes a nuisance of himself and even tries to horn in on O'Brien's girl--creating a lot of tension. The trouble is that Cagney is so talented and amazing as a flier that everyone but O'Brien soon forgets his initially brash ways. Will the friendship fizzle for good, will Cagney and O'Brien both prove themselves and rise above it all AND who will cute Margaret Lindsay fall for by the end? You'll just need to tune in to forget.

While I will admit that the plot of this film is highly reminiscent of many Warner Brothers and Jimmy Cagney films (such as CAPTAINS OF THE CLOUDS), it also is quite entertaining and very exciting to airplane buffs like myself. Because of this, I liked it quite a bit and another person could easily dismiss it as "just a piece of fluff"--which, at times, it unfortunately is. However, watching the great aerial stunts, seeing the US Navy dirigible, ships and early airplanes was quite a thrill for me and really kept my attention. In many ways, it's a great companion piece to a film he made shortly before this, HERE COMES THE NAVY. Not surprisingly, the plots are somewhat similar, but HERE COMES THE NAVY offers even more amazing scenes--dirigibles in closeup scenes as well as being set aboard the ill-fated USS Arizona (which was destroyed at Pearl Harbor less than a decade later).

So, for aerial buffs, I'd give this an 8. For the rest, a 6. Splitting the difference, a 7 seems appropriate.
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4/10
Crash and burn.
lianfarrer4 November 2007
Warning: Spoilers
DEVIL DOGS OF THE AIR has all the ingredients for a delectable dish, but the ineptitude of the chefs produced an unpalatable, unsavory stew. The story idea came from John Monk Saunders—who, in such films as WINGS, ACE OF ACES, THE DAWN PATROL, and THE LAST FLIGHT, created complex, interesting characters and compelling, dramatic situations. In DEVIL DOGS OF THE AIR, the characters are uniformly one-dimensional and unlikeable, the plot completely lacking in drama and credibility.

I'm huge fan of James Cagney and the brash, cocky, vital energy he brought to the screen. In this film, though, he's completely obnoxious, with no trace of any redeeming qualities underneath the outsized ego. I found myself rooting for stalwart Pat O'Brien to smack that arrogant smirk off his face and also win the girl at the end of the picture. Too bad it didn't happen that way. The reconciliation between O'Brien and Cagney in the penultimate scene feels unprepared and unconvincing.

The more I see of Margaret Lindsay, the less I think of her as an actor. (Check out her incredibly amateurish and hammy turn in BABY FACE and you'll see what I mean.) Here she's stiff and charmless; so much so that it's hard to fathom why Cagney would pursue her so ardently and why she would choose him over O'Brien in the end. She seems much better suited to the dull, dependable guy.

As others have commented, the usually delightful Frank McHugh is given one not very amusing routine that he repeats ad nauseam. Another waste of talent in a film that could have, should have been a lot better.

The plot is riddled with non-sequiturs and illogic. For example, when Lindsay gets her mother's check back from Cagney, why do they go through the elaborate business of endorsing it and countersigning it, when all she needed to do was tear it up? And would Lindsay really have been given free rein to roam around the military base, even riding around the airfield during operations? In the scene where O'Brien proposes to her, it's amazing how long it takes her to figure out where the conversation is heading ("I have something important to ask you." "I've been talking to real-estate agents, and we could rent an apartment really cheaply... furnished even.") And she still looks totally shocked when he finally pops the question.

The aviation sequences are probably of great interest to enthusiasts, but for this lay viewer they went on a bit too long and quickly became repetitious. The big finale, featuring the simulated air and sea attack, was completely devoid of dramatic tension.

I wish I could send this dish back to the kitchen and tell the chefs to re-think the way they combined their ingredients. Maybe they'd produce something more satisfying.
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5/10
Great historic Fleet Marine Force shots
Jim Tritten12 November 2003
Predictable and formula story that has been re-used by virtually the same cast. I personally ignored the story (partially due to the over-acting by Jimmy Cagney) and concentrated on the historic shots of early Marine Corps aviation and the Fleet Marine Force preparing for amphibious operations before there were Higgins Boats. Some really great flying shots. Who cares who got the girl! A must for aviation enthusiasts.
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9/10
It works for me
jann-611 April 2001
Personally I'm not with Maltin at all on this one. This is a comedy and a darn funny one. Cagney is as electrified as ever, and O'Brien and Lindsay play their parts to the hilt as well. Personally I was slightly bored by the flying scenes, but if you like that sort of thing, you've got that in this movie as well. On a scale of one to five, I give it three and a half.
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5/10
Not up to the quality of most of Cagney's films
AlsExGal2 December 2023
James Cagney is a cocky stunt pilot who joins Pat O'Brien's beloved Marine Corps flying squad in Devil Dogs of the Air (1935). Taking the worst of the Cagney persona and upping it by a factor of at least 10 he is reduced to a boorish lout that insanely laughs at his own doings while stumbling into stealing O'Brien's girl, Margaret Lindsay. The execrable Frank McHugh adds to the agony as a braying jackass constantly repeating the same musical phrase as some sort of "comic" "relief." You could practically see the pages being torn from the script as it goes to the inevitable conclusion in high, inexplicable speed. The big flying sequence turns out to be a practice mission (it was between the wars, so...) and is about as exciting as watching a practice mission.

The studios had a hard time making quality films that conformed to the demands of the production code, particularly in the first few years of its existence, 1934-1938. So I lay the blame for the inanity and lack of entertainment value of this one on said production code. A much better film about flyers - though commercial not military - is Ceiling Zero from 1936, also starring Cagney and O'Brien. I'd recommend that one instead, but unfortunately rights problems make it unavailable.
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Fun Cagney
Michael_Elliott27 February 2008
Devil Dogs of the Air (1935)

*** (out of 4)

James Cagney and Pat o'Brien stars in this Warner drama about two Marine pilots who start out as friends but soon turn to enemies when they fall for the same woman (Margaret Lindsay). I had recorded this thing back in March but just now got around to watching it because I thought it would be your typical pilot movie and it pretty much is but there's still a lot going for the film. The star of the film is without a doubt all the flying shots, some of which are just downright terrific including a great scene where Cagney and O'Brien are on a plane, which catches fire. Cagney is his usual great self, although the I think the screenplay makes him too much of a wise guy because you really dislike this guy even though that wasn't the films intent.
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5/10
Speaking of dogs...
Paularoc2 May 2012
Warning: Spoilers
I usually like Pat O'Brian and James Cagney movies. In this one, Cagney is his usual brash self – actually he is arrogant, self-centered and insufferable. In every respect O'Brian is the better man (and as good a pilot as Cagney to boot). Cagney sums up his character when at a dance he says to Margaret Lindsay: "That's me, I promise a lot and give a little." So, of course, Lindsay chooses Cagney and not O'Brien. Implausibly, O'Brien is a good sport about losing out to Cagney (but at least he does transfer out of the unit so he won't have to be around the schmuck anymore). McHugh was wasted in this film and as many reviewers have said the character he plays is extremely annoying (and indeed ghoulish given how much he hopes one of the pilots will get hurt).. The aerial stunts and flying scenes were very good and exciting and the war maneuvers were as well but, for me, went on way too long. That said, this film would be a real treat for aviation enthusiasts.
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10/10
A chuckle a minute
jonerogers7 January 2019
Another great from the Lovable Cagney, a chuckle a minute from him in this and three other fabulous actors in this Early Print, Pat O'Brian, Frank McHugh and Margaret Lindsay.

The film is essentially the story of Stunt Pilot Tommy O'Toole (Cagney) who enters the realm of the Marine Corps under the wing of Lieut. Brannigan (O'Brian) but he is not Tamed easily, constantly going against the rules and 2nd to that he has O'Brian's Gal in his sights and its never good for the opponent with regards Cagney as he really does normally get his wishes met.

Cagney pursues the girl and wins her over, O'Brian is unlucky in love and you cannot help feeling sorry for him and his soft hearted approach. We have a lot of chuckles in this film from Cagney and McHugh doesn't fail in giving us some laughs too. I know others have reviewed this as negative for McHugh saying he was wasted in this print but i say not, he does have a small part and its repetitive but it hits the spot and made me laugh a lot.

There is some great stunts filmed in this film and some great laughs to boot, well worth a look especially if you love Cagney.... 10/10
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