It's in the Air (1938 film)


It’s in the Air is a 1938 British comedy film written and directed by Anthony Kimmins and starring George Formby, Polly Ward and Jack Hobbs. The film was released in the United States with the alternative title George Takes the Air in 1940. The film depicts Great Britain's preparations for war with ARP warden training, mock air attacks dropping poison gas bombs and the deployment of antiaircraft weapons in the streets.

Plot

After George Brown is rejected as an air-raid warden, he wears his brother-in-law's Royal Air Force uniform and realises that his brother-in-law has left behind some very important papers in the pockets. He delivers the despatches to a nearby RAF station, whereupon George is mistaken for a despatch rider from headquarters. Although he becomes the butt of jokes from his corporal, George stays indefinitely at the RAF air base. He soon falls in love with the sergeant major's daughter Peggy, a base NAAFI girl, and when Corporal Craig, who also fancies her, discovers his real identity, he threatens to report George.
On the day of an annual inspection, George attempts to escape the base and finds himself in a Hawker Audax aircraft that is being readied for a test flight. While the inspector watches, George's aerial display is memorable and the inspector insists that George should be commended. George manages to land the aircraft and is accepted as a flyer by the RAF.

Cast

Production

It’s in the Air was partly produced at the former London Air Park in Feltham, Middlesex. The scenes of the air-raid exercise at the opening of the film are taken from the scenes of an aerial attack in Alexander Korda's Things to Come.
The aircraft featured in It’s in the Air are:
The film's art direction was led by Wilfred Shingleton.

Soundtrack

Reception

In a contemporary review for The New York Times upon the film's American release, critic Bosley Crowther called It's in the Air "little more than a decidedly up-to-date slapstick farce" but wrote: "Folks who won't believe that the British are still able to laugh—those Britishers, that is, who dare to enter movie theatres—should catch it, if for no other reason than to bolster their admiration for these doughty island people.... As a specimen of war-time culture it should not be overlooked."
In his 1984 book Celluloid Wings: The Impact of Movies on Aviation, aviation-film historian James H. Farmer described It’s in the Air as "ast-paced, typically British slapstick humour."