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The First of the Few Poster

The First of the Few

The thrilling human story behind the plane that licked the Luftwaffe!
1942 | 118m | English

(2276 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Details

This 1942 fictionalized biopic chronicles the true story of how two of the most remarkable men in aviation history - visionary Spitfire designer R.J. Mitchell and his test pilot Geoffrey Crisp - designed a streamlined monoplane that led to the development of the Spitfire.
Release Date: Sep 14, 1942
Director: Leslie Howard
Writer: Miles Malleson, Anatole de Grunwald, Henry C. James, Katherine Strueby
Genres: Drama, War
Keywords world war ii, biography, aviation, spitfire
Production Companies British Aviation Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 02, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Leslie Howard R.J. Mitchell
David Niven Geoffrey Crisp
Rosamund John Diana Mitchell
Roland Culver Commander Bride
Anne Firth Miss Harper
David Horne Mr. Higgins
J.H. Roberts Sir Robert McLean
Derrick De Marney Squadron Leader Jefferson
Rosalyn Boulter Mabel Lovesay
Herbert Cameron MacPherson
Toni Edgar-Bruce Lady Houston
Gordon McLeod Major Buchan
George Skillan Mr. Royce
Erik Freund Messerschmitt
Fritz Wendhausen Von Straben
John Chandos Krantz
Victor Beaumont Von Crantz
Suzanne Clair Madeleine
Filippo Del Giudice Bertorelli
Brefni O'Rorke The Specialist
Gerry Wilmot Radio Announcer
Jack Peach Radio Announcer
Name Job
Leslie Howard Director
Miles Malleson Screenplay
Anatole de Grunwald Screenplay
Henry C. James Original Story
Katherine Strueby Original Story
Paul Sheriff Art Direction
W. Percy Day Art Department Coordinator
Sidney Cole Technical Supervisor
Douglas Myers Editor
Phil C. Samuel Production Manager
Harry Miller Sound Editor
John Dennis Recording Supervision
Muir Mathieson Original Music Composer
Adrian Brunel Production Manager
Jack Hildyard Camera Operator
Georges Périnal Director of Photography
George Pollock Assistant Director
William Walton Original Music Composer
Name Title
Leslie Howard Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

Leslie Howard had a hand in just about everything here, and has delivered quite a poignant story of a dedicated and visionary man who might just have a legitimate claim to really have helped stave off the Nazis. He portrays R.J. Mitchell, a man whose vision was as an aircraft designer. We were still ... using bi-planes at the time and though the engineering of flight was now well established, he was determined to push the boundaries. His bosses at British firm SuperMarine were nervous about the investments - especially when he came up with a plan for the aircraft equivalent of a onesie. He sticks to his guns though, and next thing he, with the help of his accomplished pilot "Geoffrey Crisp" (David Niven), is winning the Schneider Trophy and pushing speed records from 200+ mph to 400+ mph. All of this development is coming at a time when the Germans are ignoring the Versailles treaty and rearming. There are plenty of Britons pushing for a similar programme, especially the vocal Lady Lucy Houston (Toni Edgar-Bruce) who donates the not inconsiderable sum of £100,000 so he can work with Rolls-Royce to take it's embryonic "Merlin" engine and fit it to a nimble fighter aircraft - the "Spitfire". Though it is Howard who takes centre stage, I think it's actually Niven who works the best here as the enthusiastic pilot who manages to motivate his friend whilst helping to manage his increasingly obsessive behaviour alongside wife Diana (Rosamund John). There's a sense of excitement as their peacetime racing enterprises illustrate the pre-eminence of this British team and then a sense of accruing menace as they realise those across the channel were playing nice whilst looking to Hermann Goering to fund an expansive programme of military Messerschmidt production. It does run a little to sentiment towards the end, but there is ample action, a bit of mischief and a lively score from William Walton make for a slightly rose-tinted but entertaining and sometimes quite informative watch.

Jun 03, 2024