The Court-Martial of Billy Mitchell | |
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1955 theatrical poster
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Directed by | Otto Preminger |
Produced by | Milton Sperling |
Written by |
Milton Sperling and Emmet Lavery Dalton Trumbo (uncredited) Michael Wilson (uncredited) Ben Hecht (uncredited) |
Starring | Gary Cooper |
Music by | composed and conducted by Dimitri Tiomkin |
Cinematography | Sam Leavitt, A.S.C. |
Edited by | Folmar Blangsted, A.C.E. |
Production
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Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release date
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Running time
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100 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $3 million (US) |
The Court-Martial of Billy Mitchell is a 1955 film directed by Otto Preminger. It stars Gary Cooper as Billy Mitchell, Charles Bickford, Ralph Bellamy, Rod Steiger and Elizabeth Montgomery in her film debut. It is based on the notorious court-martial of General Billy Mitchell, who is considered the founder of the U.S. Air Force. When it was released, Mitchell's sister Ruth, who served in World War II with Yugoslavian Chetnik guerrillas and later wrote a book about her brother, toured doing publicity for the film.
Brigadier General William Mitchell tries to prove the worth of the Air Service as an independent service by sinking a battleship under restrictive conditions agreed to by Army and Navy. He disobeys their orders to limit the attack to bombs under 1,000 pounds and instead loads 2,000 pounders. With these, he proves his aircraft can sink the ex-German World War I battleship Ostfriesland, previously considered unsinkable. But his superiors are outraged.
Politically vocal, he is demoted to colonel and sent to a ground unit in Texas. A high-profile air disaster occurs in which his close friend Zachary Lansdowne is killed, the crash of the dirigible USS Shenandoah. This is followed by a second disaster in which six planes, poorly maintained because of lack of funds, flying from a base on the California coast to Fort Huachuca, Arizona, crash.