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Based on the 1993 non-fiction book Howard Hughes: The Secret Life by Charles Higham, the film illustrates the life of Howard Hughes, an air travel pioneer and supervisor of the film Heck's Angels The film represents his life from 1927 to 1947 throughout which time Hughes came to be a successful film manufacturer and an aeronautics tycoon while concurrently expanding more unstable because of extreme obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).

Ironically, regarding this customer is concerned one of the most stirring, most unforgettable moment in Martin Scorsese and John Logan's The Pilot isn't the (unquestionably remarkable) aerial fight at the start of the movie, or the airplane collision later on, or any one of the social goings-on.

It is a historic epic that concentrated on an essential period in the life of Howard Hughes one of one of the most perhaps crucial and famous guys of the twentieth century. Even if it's not a full success, nor one of his finest motion pictures, I still find it to be more enjoyable than most of scrap Hollywood blacks out on a regular basis.

Appearing at 169 mins, The Pilot tries to stay aloft, however like Howard Hughes' much-too-heavy and much-too-big Spruce Goose (a.k.a. The Hercules), this cinematic jumbo can keep itself in the air just a few minutes each time. Leonardo DiCaprio as Howard Hughes and aviator nation sale Cate Blanchett as Katharine Hepburn The Pilot pictures: Miramax Warner Bros