In 1928, Douglas Bader joins the
Royal Air Force (RAF) as a Flight Cadet. Despite a friendly reprimand from
Air Vice-Marshal Halahan for his disregard for service discipline and flight rules, he successfully completes his training and is posted to
No. 23 Squadron at
RAF Kenley. In 1930, he is chosen to be among the pilots for an aerial exhibition. Later, although his flight commander has explicitly banned low level
aerobatics (as two pilots had been killed trying just that), he is goaded into it by a disparaging remark by a civilian pilot. The wing tip of his bi-plane touches the ground during his flight and he crashes, and is badly injured. Mr Joyce, surgeon at the
Royal Berkshire Hospital, has to amputate the lower part of both legs (one below the knee, the other above the knee) to save Bader's life. During his convalescence, he receives encouragement from Nurse Brace. Upon his discharge from the hospital, he sets out to master prosthetic legs. Out for a drive with two other RAF pals, they stop at a tearoom, and here he meets waitress Thelma Edwards. Once he can walk on his own, he asks her out. Despite his undiminished skills, he is refused flying duties simply because there are no regulations covering his situation. Offered a desk job instead, he leaves the RAF and works unhappily in an office. He and Thelma marry at a registry office on a wet afternoon. As
World War II starts, Bader talks himself back into the RAF. He is soon given command of a squadron comprising mostly dispirited
Canadians who had
fought in France. Improving morale and brazenly circumventing normal channels to obtain badly needed equipment, he makes the squadron operational again. They fight effectively in the
Battle of Britain. Bader is then put in charge of a new, larger formation of five squadrons. Later, he is posted to
RAF Tangmere and promoted to
wing commander. In 1941, Bader has to bail out over France. He is caught, escapes, and is recaptured. He then makes such a nuisance of himself to his jailers, he is repeatedly moved from one POW camp to another, finally ending up in
Colditz Castle. He is liberated after four years of captivity. The war ends (much to Thelma's relief) before Bader can have "one last fling" in the Far East. On 15 September 1945, the fifth anniversary of the greatest day of the Battle of Britain, Bader, now a
group captain, is given the honour of leading eleven other battle survivors and a total of 300 aircraft in a
flypast over London. ==Cast==