| Errors | Missing | Unverified | Supported |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 6 |
Counts based on original analysis categories (not yet classified).
Errors = Critical Errors + Imprecisions
Missing = Critical Omissions + Notable Gaps
The plot of the 1930 film Hell’s Angels is set in motion by a series of personal and historical events that establish the contrasting characters of the two brothers, Roy and Monte Rutledge, and force them into the conflict of World War I.
The specific actions that trigger the story include:
The first major plot-moving action occurs while the brothers are on vacation in Munich before the war. The reckless and womanizing Monte (Ben Lyon) is caught in a compromising position with the wife of a German officer, Colonel Baron von Kranz.
Shortly after the brothers return to Oxford, World War I erupts, which forces the characters to choose sides and changes their life trajectories.
The brothers enlist in the Royal Flying Corps (RFC), but their reasons for doing so are starkly different and define their early character arcs:
The romantic plot is set in motion when Roy introduces Monte to his fiancée, Helen (Jean Harlow).
These actions—the cowardly flight from the duel, the forced departure of their friend Karl, and the deceitful enlistment and romantic betrayal—propel the brothers from their carefree lives at Oxford into the brutal aerial combat that defines the rest of the film.
No oversights detected.
The plot of Hell's Angels (1930) is set in motion by three primary events: a duel in Munich, the outbreak of WWI, and a romantic betrayal. First, while vacationing in Munich, Monte Rutledge is caught with the wife of Baron von Kranz. He flees the resulting duel challenge, forcing his brother Roy to take his place and get shot in the arm. Second, the war separates them from their German friend Karl Armstedt, who is conscripted into the German Navy (Zeppelin service). Finally, after enlisting—Roy for duty, Monte for a kiss from a girl who called him 'chicken'—Roy introduces Monte to his fiancée, Helen. Helen seduces Monte, creating a rift between the brothers that persists into their aerial combat missions.