The Aviator.
Based upon the 1993 non-fiction publication Howard Hughes: The Secret Life by Charles Higham, the movie illustrates the life of Howard Hughes, an air travel pioneer and supervisor of the movie Hell's Angels The movie depicts his life from 1927 to 1947 throughout which time Hughes came to be a successful movie manufacturer and an aviation magnate while at the same time expanding more unpredictable as a result of serious obsessive-compulsive condition (OCD).
Actually, as far as this reviewer is concerned the most mixing, most remarkable moment in Martin Scorsese and John Logan's The aviator nation sweatshirt lightning bolt isn't the (undoubtedly remarkable) aerial battle at the start of the film, or the aircraft crash later, or any of the interpersonal goings-on.
It is a historic legendary that focused on an essential duration in the life of Howard Hughes among the most arguably important and well-known guys of the twentieth century. Also if it's not a complete success, neither among his best flicks, I still discover it to be more amusing than most of junk Hollywood blacks out on an once a week basis.
Clocking in at 169 minutes, The Aviator attempts to remain up, but like Howard Hughes' much-too-big and much-too-heavy Spruce Goose (a.k.a. The Hercules), this cinematic jumbo can maintain itself airborne just a couple of minutes each time. Leonardo DiCaprio as Howard Hughes and Cate Blanchett as Katharine Hepburn The Pilot photos: Miramax Warner Bros