Nelson Mail

Polish pilot drama lacks polish

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Review Hurricane (M, 107 mins) Directed by David Blair Reviewed by James Croot ★★★

Having already witnessed the Germans lay waste to Warsaw and paralyse Paris within a year of World War II starting, Jan Zumbach (Iwan Rheon) is determined to do all he can to stop them winning total control of Europe.

Managing to evade their clutches in France by posing as a Swiss watch salesman, the Polish pilot, like some of his compatriot­s, makes his way to England in the hopes of joining the RAF.

However, despite their own somewhat parlous state, the Brits are suspicious of these foreign flyboys. Particular concerns about a lack of English and knowledge of imperial measuremen­ts see them deemed fit only for bombing duty until the authoritie­s are forced to admit they need all the help they can get and that these Poles have plenty of aerial skills and nous.

Under the watchful eye of Canadian John Kentowski (Hacksaw Ridge’s Milo Gibson), the 303 Squadron begin to more than prove their worth, although there are still those jealous of their prowess, fearlessne­ss and ability to woo the local ladies.

Alternativ­ely titled Mission of Honour in some countries, director David Blair (TV’s Accused and The Street) works best when focused on the derring-do and dogfights, rather than contrived romantic dalliances.

Yes, as with the superior, similarly set 2001 Czech tale Dark Blue World, the story is sidetracke­d by the new pilots’ liaisons with some of their workmates.

Here, there’s even a whole subplot involving good-time girl Phyllis Lambert (Crooked House’s Stefanie Martini) suffering sexual harassment at the hands of her superiors.

While it allows for a welcome added dimension to Martini’s character arc, it is frustratin­gly left unresolved, as if it was forgotten about in the edit suite. It’s one of a few annoying loose ends throughout the near two-hour running time, as secondary characters’ stories are picked up and then dropped.

Thankfully, there’s some solid action sequences (shot using a combinatio­n of replicas, a real Hurricane, visual effects and what looks like archival footage), a dash of cross-cultural humour and an impressive performanc­e from Game of Thrones’ bad boy Rheon (who played the villainous Ramsay Bolton on the fantasy drama).

Blair makes great use of his main man’s pallid complexion and insomniac eyes to create a character clearly haunted by all that he has witnessed.

Delivering plenty of tears and triumph before tea time (albeit with a nasty true-life sting in its final text summary), Hurricane could just have benefited from a slightly tighter focus.

 ??  ?? Game of Thrones’ Iwan Rheon is on piloting duties in Hurricane.
Game of Thrones’ Iwan Rheon is on piloting duties in Hurricane.

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