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The Great Waldo Pepper

  • 1975
  • PG
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
7.2K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,250
14,077
The Great Waldo Pepper (1975)
After WW1, an ex-pilot takes up barn-storming and chance-meets a former German ace fighter pilot with whom he co-stars in Hollywood war movies depicting aerial dog-fights.
Play trailer3:13
2 Videos
53 Photos
AdventureDrama

After WW1, an ex-pilot takes up barn-storming and chance-meets a former German ace fighter pilot with whom he co-stars in Hollywood war movies depicting aerial dog-fights.After WW1, an ex-pilot takes up barn-storming and chance-meets a former German ace fighter pilot with whom he co-stars in Hollywood war movies depicting aerial dog-fights.After WW1, an ex-pilot takes up barn-storming and chance-meets a former German ace fighter pilot with whom he co-stars in Hollywood war movies depicting aerial dog-fights.

  • Director
    • George Roy Hill
  • Writers
    • George Roy Hill
    • William Goldman
  • Stars
    • Robert Redford
    • Bo Svenson
    • Bo Brundin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    7.2K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,250
    14,077
    • Director
      • George Roy Hill
    • Writers
      • George Roy Hill
      • William Goldman
    • Stars
      • Robert Redford
      • Bo Svenson
      • Bo Brundin
    • 47User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
    • 60Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:13
    Official Trailer
    The Great Waldo Pepper: A Great Stunt
    Clip 1:53
    The Great Waldo Pepper: A Great Stunt
    The Great Waldo Pepper: A Great Stunt
    Clip 1:53
    The Great Waldo Pepper: A Great Stunt

    Photos53

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    Top cast47

    Edit
    Robert Redford
    Robert Redford
    • Waldo Pepper
    Bo Svenson
    Bo Svenson
    • Axel Olsson
    Bo Brundin
    Bo Brundin
    • Ernst Kessler
    Susan Sarandon
    Susan Sarandon
    • Mary Beth
    Geoffrey Lewis
    Geoffrey Lewis
    • Newt
    Edward Herrmann
    Edward Herrmann
    • Ezra Stiles
    Philip Bruns
    Philip Bruns
    • Dillhoefer
    Roderick Cook
    • Werfel
    Kelly Jean Peters
    Kelly Jean Peters
    • Patsy
    Margot Kidder
    Margot Kidder
    • Maude
    Scott Newman
    Scott Newman
    • Duke
    James S. Appleby
    • Ace
    Patrick W. Henderson Jr.
    • Scooter
    James N. Harrell
    • Farmer
    • (as James Harrell)
    Elma Aicklen
    • Farmer's Wife
    Deborah Knapp
    • Farmer's Daughter
    John A. Zee
    John A. Zee
    • Director, Western Set
    John Reilly
    John Reilly
    • Western Star
    • Director
      • George Roy Hill
    • Writers
      • George Roy Hill
      • William Goldman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    6.77.2K
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    Featured reviews

    krazykat29

    One of the Great movies of the seventies

    This movie is made by some of the same players that made Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (Writer, Director and Actor). Unfortunately, it doesn't have nearly the acclaim. Perhaps because the ultimate tone of the movie is darker, the movie still captures that fun that permeates Butch Cassidy.

    In terms of the aerial stunts and flying sequences, not only does the hold up to the modern movies like 'Flyboys', it is in fact, much better. Visually just as complete, you also know these are the real deal.

    The script is brilliant. At the end of this film, one is forced to wonder why this level of movie so rarely is ever seen today.

    You can read the other reviews for plot points, and details. Suffice to say that if you are a fan of movies with planes, actions, love, tragedy cool war history lover, or Hollywood of the early thirties, you'll eat this movie up.

    Now lets get a DVD of this that is worthy!
    8info-3622

    Classic "Biggles Opera" - Redford at his most handsome!

    This is a well shot film (the light in the Prarie scenes are beautiful) about why people love flying and how it gets into their bones to the point where they will take great risks with their lives as well as other people's!

    Redford looks heroic and every bit the Ladies Man especially in uniform.

    The aerial sequences are terrific with some really risky stunts and shots. Made in 1975, there are no CGI effects - everything is real and raw.

    I felt the film to be a little slow at times but it's a film for grown ups so we can take that speed, can't we?

    Scott A. Frisina's review on the main page is as good a synopsis as anyone can give - that's how it is - read it then see this excellent film.
    8splat99

    Still great after all these years

    I first saw this film in the theater almost 30 years ago and have caught it a few times on TV since. Finally, I was able to find a DVD copy on E-Bay (apparently it is not currently available on DVD through normal means) and I am glad I did so. This movie has stood the test of time. It is both fun to watch and has some depth to it - it is not just a piece of fluff.

    The casting is excellent - not a single actor is unfit for the part. Redford's looks and charisma, coupled with the fact that while he is still pretty young he does have a few visible age lines, make him perfect for the part of a debonair flyboy, ten years removed from World War I, who is stubbornly resisting the increasing regulation of flying as a profession. Bo Svensen is a great complement as the slightly older, more experienced, and more even-keeled Axel Olsson. Geoffrey Lewis' Newt Potts, Pepper's old squadron commander, represents the future that Pepper is trying to avoid. Ed Herrmann is the embodiment of the "seat of your pants" spirit of the early aircraft producers. Phil Bruns is a convincing "carnival barker" as Doc Dillhoeffer. And the Swedish actor Bo Brundin puts in a great turn as Ernst Kessler, German fighter ace turned barnstormer, who has long since realized that the bravery and chivalry he found in the air (both among comrades and opponents) is rarely found on the ground.

    Kessler is based on Ernst Udet, the second-highest scoring German ace of WWI. Udet barnstormed after the war, had a shortened version of "Lola" painted on his Fokker D-VII, and had a fight similar to the epic battle that is an important subplot in the movie. Thus it is a nice touch that Udet is shown in the opening photo montage. (It's also good that no sequel was made - I'd hate to see the Kessler character return to Germany, join Hitler's Luftwaffe and commit suicide.)

    This is also notable, on a personal level, as the first place I ever saw Susan Sarandon. I've been a fan ever since. Hell, she still looks great.

    The flying sequences are magnificent. There's no CGI here, folks. These are real aircraft - beautiful replicas of Curtiss Jennies, Standard E-4's, and of course the Sopwith Camel and Fokker Triplane (plus a few others) - doing real stunt flying. The talented stunt pilots are credited under the umbrella of Tallmantz Aviation, which I'm guessing was formed by legendary stunt pilots Frank Tallman and Paul Mantz. Tallman himself flew in this film (and died in a crash three years later; Mantz died making "Flight of the Phoenix," another of my favorite flight movies, in 1965.) And the climactic sequence, while it may seem unlikely to some, is actually based (perhaps loosely) on a similar incident that occurred during the filming of either "Hells' Angels" or "Wings" in the late 1920's. The only possible anachronism that I can spot is Kessler's stunt plane, which looks a little too advanced for 1928. But I could be wrong there.

    Beautiful aircraft, great flying sequences, fine acting, and even a real plot - what more could you want?
    7slkanger

    Waldo Pepper

    Being a Big Robert Redford fan for years, I have seen this movie numerous times and just got the DVD of it. It makes you stop and think of the chances these young took back in the dirty 1930's to fly these machines. My dad use to tell us about how these small towns (he was from Nebraska too, just like the movie)had these air shows. One time he saw a dare devil, like the one in the movie, crash and burn to death in from of hundreds of people. They just don't make movies like the one Redford did, any more! I have a fear of heights and every time I saw that girl on the wings standing there, my heart will drop and my palms get sweaty!
    8bkoganbing

    When the airplane was a big toy

    Robert Redford got one of his best roles in The Great Waldo Pepper which was directed by George Roy Hill who did right by him with Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid and The Sting. It does a wonderful job of capturing a bygone era of the Twenties when after World War I, the airplane was a big toy played with by some big kids.

    The airplane got invented just in time for use in the war to end all wars. But no one figured out quite what to do with it. In point of fact it didn't have the capacity to drop bombs on the enemy to do that much damage. In the trench warfare days the real function was scouting those enemy lines to see and report on troop dispositions. But the other side did the same thing. So when they met dogfights happened. They were colorful and exciting, but didn't really do much militarily.

    Aces got their reputations like the real life Baron Von Richtofen and Hermann Goering and the fictional Ernest Kessler as played by Bo Brundin here. Waldo Pepper in the Great War came up too late to show his stuff even though his former squadron leader Geoffrey Lewis says he was the most natural flier he ever saw. He had a brief encounter with Brundin days before the Armistice where Brundin let him off. He never got a chance to prove himself.

    Now he proves himself every day in the various flying circuses doing daredevil stunts. People who fly do it for the love it and won't be happy going 9 to 5 on the ground. Redford is at the height of his abilities and this is his frustration that he never got to show his stuff in the arena where it really counted. Redford did a wonderful job in fleshing this aspect of his character.

    But his world is changing, if the military has put aviation on hold there are lots of commercial uses. And a guy named Herbert Hoover who Secretary of Commerce at that time spearheaded the creation of the Civil Aeronautics Agency to regulate air traffic. Airplanes would be hauling mail and people and would soon be large enough to haul freight. Not a world that calls for daredevil daring.

    The Great Waldo Pepper is one of Robert Redford's best films and roles. The Great Robert Redford has this part really nailed down. Some other folks in the cast are a tragic Edward Herrmann who hasn't got the skill as a pilot that Redford has and shows it. Susan Sarandon plays a budding wing walker who also perishes tragically in one of her early roles. George Roy Hill assembled a great supporting cast to back up Redford.

    In the end it's Redford who makes The Great Waldo Pepper great.

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    Related interests

    Still frame
    Adventure
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Waldo is recounting his fight with Kessler at the start of the movie, he mentions that his guns jammed and Kessler, seeing that he was helpless, saluted then flew away. This actually happened to Ernst Udet (on whom Kessler is based) when flying against the French ace Georges Guynemer in 1917, only it was Udet (at that time inexperienced) who had the jam and Guynemer (a high scoring ace) who let him go.
    • Goofs
      When Ezra and Waldo drive up to the farmhouse in Ezra's pick-up it is very obvious that the truck looks far too old for the 1920's time frame of the movie. In the late 1920's that truck would have been new or nearly new. Instead, it is obviously 40 or 50 years old (which is just about exactly the age it would have been when the movie was released in 1975).
    • Quotes

      Dillhoefer: Now, here's what we do. We put her up on the wing...

      Duke: And she'll fake being afraid...

      Dillhoefer: Right.

      Duke: And the wind will blow her clothes off!

      Dillhoefer: Yes! Yes!

      Waldo Pepper: Wait! Why would the wind blow her clothes off? When I'm wing-walking, the wind doesn't blow MY clothes off.

      Dillhoefer: Fool! Nobody wants to come and see YOU with YOUR clothes off!

    • Connections
      Featured in Hooper (1978)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 13, 1975 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El carnaval de las águilas
    • Filming locations
      • Floresville, Texas, USA
    • Production companies
      • Jennings Lang
      • Universal Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $5,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $20,642,922
    • Gross worldwide
      • $20,642,922
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 47m(107 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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