After I saw Ford v Ferrari, I got the taste for going to the cinema, and Midway was on at the same "flea pit" and at £4.99, I thought it worth seeing. It actually cost me more to park (£8.00 for F v F and £6.00 for Midway).
I have taken great interest in the Pacific War, as my father was briefly involved flying Seafires off HMS Implacable May - August 1945, and actually landed on the USS Essex in Aug '45 when he was running out of fuel.
He appears in this Pathe News film at 2.56-3.02 on the extreme left. He was 20 years old then.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SVZlWtJ7-c&t=194sThis is a review of his time on the Essex.
http://www.armouredcarriers.com/-documentAfter he died in 2005, I went to Johnson City to the annual USS Essex reunion in 2006, and they gave me that photo of his wingman, Ken Newton, who ended up in the barrier when his tail hook broke, as Seafires were much lighter than US aircraft, and even though the wire tension was at its slackest (I found this out from the deck commander in 2006), it was still too tight for a Seafire.
Anyway, back to the film, I thought the special effects were excellent, and they got most of the facts accurately, but they missed out on the US torpedoes being useless, being untried in combat.
I met Dallas Isom from Utah in London, he took great interest in Midway, and went to Japan to speak to survivors to see what happened from their point of view. It seems it took ages to change the frames onto the planes that carried torpedoes, as they were armed to bomb Midway, found the carrier fleet, and decided to change to attacking the carriers with torpedoes. Apparently they had to have the frames fitted below deck, 4 planes at a time, and this took ages. With the planes fuelled and armed waiting to take off, by chance the last squadron of SPDs found the carriers, and bingo, they were caught with their pants down, 3 carriers in 5 minutes, changing the whole tide of the War in the Pacific. Dallas Isom wrote a book recently on this subject.
https://www.amazon.com/Midway-Inquest-Japanese-Twentieth-Century-Battles/dp/0253349044I was just wondering what our friends in the USA thought of this film, was it realistic enough, was it accurate enough? After all it must rank as one of the US Navy's greatest victories.
It seems most US Europa owners must have had fathers who were involved in all this.