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・ The Killing Box
・ The Killing Dance
・ The Killing Doll
・ The Killing Field
・ The Killing Fields (album)
・ The Killing Fields (film)
・ The Killing Floor
・ The Killing Game
・ The Killing Game (1967 film)
・ The Killing Game (2011 film)
・ The Kid Stakes
・ The Kid Stays in the Picture
・ The Kid Super Power Hour with Shazam!
・ The Kid Who Batted 1.000
・ The Kid Who Collects Spider-Man
The Kid Who Couldn't Miss
・ The Kid Who Only Hit Homers
・ The Kid with a Bike
・ The Kid with the 200 I.Q.
・ The Kid with the Broken Halo
・ The Kid's Last Fight
・ The Kid's No Good
・ The Kidd Kraddick Morning Show
・ The Kiddie
・ The Kiddies in the Ruins
・ The Kidflix Film Fest of Bed-Stuy
・ The Kidnap Murder Case
・ The Kidnapped Bride
・ The Kidnappers Foil
・ The Kidnapping of Kensington


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The Kid Who Couldn't Miss : ウィキペディア英語版
The Kid Who Couldn't Miss

''The Kid Who Couldn't Miss'' is a 1982 docudrama directed by Paul Cowan. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada, it combines fact and fiction to question fighter pilot Billy Bishop's accomplishments during World War I, featuring excerpts from John MacLachlan Gray's play ''Billy Bishop Goes to War''.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The Kid Who Couldn't Miss )
The film specifically questions accounts of Bishop's solo mission to attack a German aerodrome on June 2, 1917, for which he was awarded a Victoria Cross, and suggests the event was imaginary and that Bishop exaggerated his own accomplishments.
In one particularly contentious scene, his mechanic claims that the damage to his fighter was confined to a small circle in a non-critical area, implying that Bishop had landed his aircraft off-field, shot the holes in it, and then flown home with claims of combat damage. In reality, his mechanic was his biggest supporter in this issue and the scene was entirely fictitious. The mechanic insisted that Bishop had not fabricated the damage.
==Reaction==
After years of controversy over Bishop's record, mainly because very few of his claimed victories were witnessed by anyone else or could be confirmed from surviving German records, the show led to an inquiry by the Canadian government in 1985. The Standing Senate Committee on Social Affairs, Science and Technology discredited the documentary, saying it was an unfair and inaccurate portrayal of Bishop. The NFB's Commissioner, François N. Macerola, was called before the committee, but refused to accede to their demands that he withdraw the film from circulation.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=1985 )
Canadian veterans' groups were outraged by the insinuation, and Cowan received many irate letters, "He got inundated by thousands of furious letters, rumblings in the Senate subcommittee on Veterans' Affairs, and demands that the government cut off funding to the NFB."
H. Clifford Chadderton, Chief Executive Officer of The War Amps, created the film ''The Billy Bishop Controversy'' to counter the bias he and other veterans perceived in the NFB film. Released in 1986, it attempts to demonstrate that Cowan and the NFB did not properly research the historical records, and reached faulty conclusions about Bishop. ''The Kid Who Couldn't Miss'' also led Chicago native, and Bishop fan, Albert Lowe to create a website (www.billybishop.net) devoted to the fighter pilot. Lowe complained about the characterization of Bishop in the film, and commented that "That year Mr. Paul Cowan, with $514,007.00 of Canadian Taxpayer's money, did one of the foulest deeds possible without committing some form of violence."
''A Hero to Me: The Billy Bishop Story - WW1 Canadian flying Ace '', a documentary depicting the story of "Billy" Bishop from the perspective of his granddaughter, Diana, was also produced for Global Television and TVO in 2003.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「The Kid Who Couldn't Miss」の詳細全文を読む



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