Steike bra sak dette, men litt kronglete å komme til denne kinoen.

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“Falklands’ Most Daring Raid” is
a gripping film that tells the humorous yet heroic story of how a
crumbling, Cold-War era Vulcan flew the then longest range bombing
mission in history and how a WW2 vintage bomb changed the outcome of the
Falklands War.
On
30th April 1982, the RAF launched a secret mission; to bomb Port
Stanley’s runway, putting it out of action for Argentine fighter jets.
The safety of the British Task Force depended on its success. But the
RAF could only get a single Vulcan 8,000 miles south to the Falklands as
just one bomber needed an aerial fleet of thirteen Victor tanker planes
to refuel it throughout the 16 hour round-trip. From start to finish,
the seemingly impossible mission was a comedy of errors, held together
by sheer British pluck and ingenuity. On the brink of being scrapped,
only three of the ageing nuclear bombers could be fitted out for war,
one to fly the mission and two in reserve. Crucial spare parts were
scavenged from museums and scrap yards – one vital piece found as an
ashtray in the Officer’s Mess. In just three weeks, the Vulcan crews had
to learn air-to-air refuelling, which they hadn’t done for twenty years
and conventional bombing, which they hadn’t done for ten. The RAF
scoured the country for old WW2 iron bombs and complex refuelling
calculations were done the night before on a £5.00 pocket calculator.
With
a plan stretched to the limit and the RAF’s hopes riding on just one
Vulcan, the mission was flown on a knife-edge; fraught with mechanical
failures, unreliable navigation, electrical storms and ultimately not
enough fuel. Of the Vulcan’s twenty-one bombs dropped, only one found
its target. But that was enough to change the outcome of the war… | |
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