Dragonfly Squadron (1954) Will Put You Deep In The War
Here is something really novel that Bob Furmanek, Greg Kintz, and Jack Theakston have come up with: a 50's war actioner shot in 3-D but released flat only back in January 1954. Never shown stereo to the public till now, Dragonfly Squadron arrives next week on Blu-Ray from Olive Films. It is a crack job of depth retrieval from the Furmanek team, and compelling demo of what expertise can achieve outside corporate structures where overhead would make such a project prohibitively expensive. Furmanek, who is among other things Home Theatre Forum's resident guru on 3-D and widescreen matters, has cracked the code for economy presentation of depth, he and Kintz/Theakston putting a marketplace on notice that 3-D is doable for home viewing at a right price. How they did it is told at dazzler site 3-D FilmArchive, where details of the restoration accompany Furmanek's history of Dragonfly Squadronrollout amidst a fad in freefall, depth by '54 avoided "like the plague" by showmen who only months before lauded it as salvation for the theatre business.
Dragonfly Squadron is a
I call Squadron's a comfort cast, Hodiak-Britton supported by Bruce Bennett, Gerald Mohr, Harry Lauter, Frank Ferguson ... faces I increasingly prefer to stars out of higher bracket. These were players who made bigger names look good, and it's nice to see them leading a charge, whatever the budget circumstance. Fun is found in youngsters among the group: Fess Parker with one or two lines and demeanor Disney would figure ideal for Davy Crockett, a robust and Sgt. Rock-ish Chuck Connors, all gritted teeth and slit eyes as he barks dialogue at underplaying Hodiak. Wonder if the older man thought, This was me, ten years ago, as Connors spat lines toward gallery that was big-time stardom (which he'd achieve, but on smaller screens). Watching Dragonfly Squadron flat would be enjoyable enough; what's added by 3-D makes it a must. Universal,
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