sovay: (PJ Harvey: crow)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2022-01-20 03:19 pm

We are having a party, myself and I

Hardy Krüger has died. At a respectable and unsurprising age, but I am still feeling slightly bereft.

I imprinted on him almost before I knew to care about actors. It took me years to recognize Heinrich Dorfmann in The Flight of the Phoenix (1965) as a deliberately difficult character with his monofocus and his cold equations and his slide-rule arrogance that's just as dangerous as the threatened traditionalism of the seat-of-the-pants pilot played by James Stewart because he was my favorite character from the first time I saw the film and the one I still gravitate toward among its embarrassment of character actors, sand-blond in his rimless octagonal glasses and his relentless faith in engineering. He's the outsider, the one German in a cast of predominantly British and Americans, his nationality thrown in his face with the war he was too young to fight in: "That's it, then, that's why they never won—they didn't have old Heinrich!" He's intelligent and anoraky and his people skills are so terrible that calling them ass would be an insult to the human posterior. If only the rest of the survivors knew, his chilly, rational, logical plan is even crazier and more quixotic than it looks. I spent my childhood building model rockets and the occasional plane and I loved him. I don't know how many times I had seen the film before it occurred to me to wonder whether I was supposed to.

For that degree of love, I saw the actor in surprisingly little else. He was marvelous as Oberleutnant Franz von Werra in The One That Got Away (1957), effortlessly and ironically drawing the audience into the adventures of the only Axis POW to escape successfully from Allied custody during World War II. I'm not sure it counts that I saw him in A Bridge Too Far (1977) because everyone was in A Bridge Too Far, but his name in the cast list was one of the reasons I sought it out. I have been trying for years to get hold of Blind Date (1959) not just because it's a late noir by Joseph Losey, but because Krüger sings in it. My mother has always spoken fondly of Sundays and Cybèle (1962). In recent years I was glad, if that's the right word for something that should not have been necessary, to see that he had become an activist against the rise of fascism and the far right, citing his own experiences as the child of Nazis and a teenage conscript into the Wehrmacht. I liked knowing he was in the world. He isn't and his films are and that's what happens with artists.
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

[personal profile] davidgillon 2022-01-20 11:43 pm (UTC)(link)
It always seemed to bode well if a film had Hardy Kruger in it.
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

[personal profile] davidgillon 2022-01-21 12:02 am (UTC)(link)
Mostly the obvious ones:
The One That Got Away
The Flight of the Phoenix
A Bridge Too Far
The Wild Geese

Plus a couple where I know I've seen the film, but not recently enough to recall his role in them
Hatari
The Secret of Santa Vittoria

And I was like you with regard to his role in The Flight of the Phoenix, my sympathies were always with him rather more than with the others.

davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

[personal profile] davidgillon 2022-01-21 02:26 am (UTC)(link)
I really only recall a giraffe-catching scene* from Hatari, and strongly suspect it would appall me nowadays. I strongly suspect I last saw it as a child, where I'd have missed at least half the implications. Santa Vittoria I have a memory of liking, but couldm't describe a single scene at this point.

* Any other memory is probably smooshed up with watching Daktari at a similar age.
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[personal profile] moon_custafer 2022-01-21 02:39 pm (UTC)(link)
The eventual revelation that he designed model aircraft horrifies the others, but his plan really does involve building what’s essentially a giant toy plane and strapping themselves to the wings instead of spending extra time and energy trying to include a passenger compartment.
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

[personal profile] davidgillon 2022-01-21 06:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Putting my aviation geek hat on, his plan's not unreasonable. In fact it was sort of done at least twice during the WWII era, when Hawker took the outer wings off the Tempest and butted them directly together without the Tempest's centre-section and stuck them under a new fuselage to create the (Sea) Fury, which was very successful. Equally the wings from the piston-engined Supermarine Spiteful were fitted to a new jet-powered fuselage to create the Attacker. At least two projects went in the opposite direction, strapping two fuselages with their outboard wings together with a new centre wing to join them (P-82 Twin Mustang and Ju-88Z Zwilling).

Strapping people to the wing had been done - think of all the wing-walkers in the pre-war stunt era, and there were persistent instances of people doing it to rescue pilots who had been shot done in both WWI and WWII. There's lots of detail complications, but I'd be more worried about the tail than the wing. The big issue would be balance, which they wouldn't be certain of until they were in the air, though you could do a rough calculation.

The aircraft they built for the flying sequences was frankensteined together from several different aircraft types, though none of them the C-119 of the story, and did fly and gain CAA certification as airworthy, though it did eventually crash killing the pilot due to structural failure - ironically in the built-for-the-purpose fuselage, not the frankensteined bits.

ETA: at least one famous British aircraft designer did actually get their start with model aircraft before WWI, though his name isn't popping to mind right now.
Edited 2022-01-21 18:57 (UTC)
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

[personal profile] davidgillon 2022-01-22 02:40 am (UTC)(link)
I initially thought of Tommy Sopwith, but it isn't, if I'd just gone a couple of pages further in the history of Hawkers I was checking I'd have seen that it was Camm I was thinking of. Given he was building full-sized gliders at 19/20 I think we have to say his start with models completely counts.

I'm astonished to realise looking at Wiki that Sopwith's working life came within 5 years of overlapping with mine - he was still a consultant to BAe until 1980, I started with GEC-Marconi in '85. I don't imagine he was doing much at 92, but my flabber is gasted.

Completely off-topic, but did you notice in today's Guardian: The King’s Daughter: Pierce Brosnan’s cursed mermaid stabbing movie finally gets released https://www.theguardian.com/film/2022/jan/21/the-kings-daughter-pierce-brosnan-mermaid
Which seems like the kind of thing to interest/amuse you.


spatch: (Default)

[personal profile] spatch 2022-01-20 11:59 pm (UTC)(link)
This is a lovely write-up and a fine eulogy, particularly of one helluva indelible impression.
selenak: (Default)

[personal profile] selenak 2022-01-21 09:13 am (UTC)(link)
I saw and heard him a couple of years ago at the Frankfurt Book Fair talking about said experiences and the New (Old) Right, and was deeply impressed. I don't know whether you can watch ARTE (German-French broadcaster) in the US, but they put up a good documentary about him in their Mediathek:

https://www.arte.tv/de/videos/082184-000-A/die-hardy-krueger-story/
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[personal profile] selenak 2022-01-22 09:42 am (UTC)(link)
Alas, but I did find something on YouTube for you: Zwei unter Millionen, which was his favourite of his German movies; he also co-produced it, and it was shot on location in Berlin just when the Berlin Wall was built, with the building happening mid-shooting.
dramaticirony: (Default)

[personal profile] dramaticirony 2022-01-21 04:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Such a nice appreciation, thanks for sharing.
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[personal profile] kindkit 2022-01-22 02:28 am (UTC)(link)
I've only seen him in The One That Got Away, but he made a very strong impression on me. It sounds like I should seek out Flight of the Phoenix and Blind Date, as well.

I didn't know about his activism but I'm delighted to hear it. Thank you for writing this.