Wings (1927)

Wings (1927)
10 / 10

Wings is the first film to win Best Picture at the Academy Awards. It is also the only silent film to win that award. William A. Wellman directed it. He had been a WWI fighter pilot himself, which is why the aerial sequences look the way they do. The film cost approximately two million dollars to produce, which made it one of the most expensive American films ever attempted at the time. It runs about two and a half hours. It is one of the great achievements of the silent era.

The plot is the kind of thing that became cliché only because Wings did it first. Two young men from the same small town, one rich and one poor, both in love with the same girl, both join the Army Air Service. They become friends. They fly missions over France. One of them dies. The girl who matters most loves only one of them and the audience knows it the entire time.

The Aerial Sequences

Wellman had real WWI aircraft. He had a fleet of American military planes loaned by the War Department. He had three thousand five hundred infantry from Fort Sam Houston for the ground sequences and one hundred and sixty-five pilots for the air. The Battle of Saint-Mihiel reenactment is one of the most ambitious sequences in any silent film and one of the most ambitious sequences in any war film of any era.

The dogfights are real footage. Real planes flown by real pilots, many of them WWI veterans, performing the maneuvers Wellman demanded with cameras mounted on the wings. Several pilots refused to fly the requested shots because they considered them too dangerous. Wellman flew them himself to prove it could be done. People got hurt during production. One pilot was killed.

For Writers

When the writer has direct experience of what they are writing, the work has a texture that research cannot replicate. Wellman knew what an aircraft sounded like at six thousand feet because he had flown one. He knew what a pilot saw, smelled, and worried about. The lesson is to write what you know, but understood properly. Not “only write about subjects you have lived.” Write the parts you know firsthand with maximum specificity. The parts you do not know firsthand will benefit from the credibility you established in the parts you do.

The Romance

Clara Bow plays Mary Preston, the girl next door who loves Jack Powell (Charles “Buddy” Rogers). Jack is in love with Sylvia Lewis (Jobyna Ralston), who loves David Armstrong (Richard Arlen). All three young men go to war. Bow’s name is above the title. She was the bigger star in 1927. The film knows this and gives her one of the great silent-era performances, including a scene in Paris where she is mistaken for a prostitute and has to play the role to keep Jack from being arrested for being drunk.

The Paris sequence is the best comic sequence in the film. The bubbles in the champagne become animated bubbles floating across the screen. The audience watches Jack become drunk through the camera becoming drunk. It is the kind of effect a sober era would have struggled to invent. 1927 invented it.

For Writers

Tonal range in a war story is harder than depth in any single tone. Wings runs through romance, comedy, aerial combat, friendship, grief, and death without breaking. The trick is that each tonal shift is anchored in the same characters. The audience accepts the Paris champagne sequence and the Saint-Mihiel reenactment in the same film because Jack is the protagonist of both. The lesson is that consistent character allows tonal variety. Inconsistent character makes any tonal shift feel like a different film.

The Death Scene

David is shot down behind German lines. The Germans capture him in a farmhouse. He escapes by stealing a German plane. He flies back toward the Allied lines. Jack, not knowing it is David, shoots him down. Jack lands and discovers what he has done. The two scenes are filmed in close-up. There is no intertitle on the kiss. The film does not flinch. The death scene includes a kiss on the lips between the two men. In 1927.

The studio did not cut it. The Academy did not punish it. The audiences in 1927 watched it and went home. The historical record of how the film was received does not suggest that the kiss was controversial. The men in 1927 understood that men in the trenches loved each other. The film says so plainly. Modern audiences sometimes have to be reminded.

For Writers

Some forms of love and grief between men were easier to depict in 1927 than they have been in later eras. The death scene in Wings does what later war films have circled around without committing to. The lesson is that periods do not get more enlightened in a straight line. What you can write in 2026 is not necessarily more honest than what could be written in 1927. Read the work of earlier eras with the assumption that they may have known things you have to relearn.

Craft Note

William A. Wellman directed. Clara Bow, Charles “Buddy” Rogers, and Richard Arlen led the cast. Gary Cooper had a small role that helped launch his career. Jobyna Ralston as Sylvia Lewis. Approximately two million dollar budget. Filmed at Kelly Field in San Antonio with War Department cooperation. Three thousand five hundred infantry and one hundred and sixty-five pilots involved. First Academy Award for Best Picture. Released August 1927. Paramount restored the print in 2012.

The Verdict

10/10. The foundational American war film and one of the great silent films. The aerial photography has aged better than almost anything in the silent era. The romance plot is sturdy. The death scene is brave in a way few war films since have managed. Watch the 2012 Paramount restoration. Watch it on the largest screen you can find.


FAQ

Is Wings really the first Best Picture winner?

Yes. It won the Academy Award for Outstanding Picture at the first ceremony in 1929 for the 1927-28 eligibility period. The award was renamed Best Picture in later years.

Is Gary Cooper really in it?

Yes, briefly. He has a short scene as a Cadet White and dies in a training accident before the protagonists ship overseas. The scene helped launch his career.

Is the aerial footage real?

Yes. Real WWI-era aircraft, real pilots, real cameras mounted on the planes. One pilot was killed during production. Wellman flew several of the most dangerous shots himself.

How long is it?

Approximately one hundred and forty-four minutes for the restored version. Some original prints ran longer.

Is it really silent?

The original 1927 release was silent with a synchronized music and sound effects track using the Vitaphone system in some theaters. The 2012 restoration includes a new synchronized score.

How does it compare to later WWI aviation films?

Better than most. The Blue Max and The Great Waldo Pepper are notable later entries. The Dawn Patrol exists in 1930 and 1938 versions. None of them have the production scale of Wings.

Should I watch this?

Yes. Foundational viewing for anyone interested in cinema or in the First World War.

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