Devotion: the true story behind a film about the navy’s first Black aviator (2024)

Jesse Brown was the original top gun – a navy fighter pilot whose heroism in the Korean war earned him the Distinguished Flying Cross, the loftiest award the US military pins on high fliers. That he was also the first Black pilot to pass navy flight training puts him in rarified air.

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Brown, 24, never made it home. While supporting UN ground forces engaged in the Battle of the Chosin Reservoir in December 1950, Brown suffered artillery damage to his F4U Corsair aircraft and crash-landed in a remote mountain valley. When his wingman, Tom Hudner, saw Brown struggling to come unpinned from his co*ckpit afterward, he defied orders and intentionally crash-landed his plane nearby to help Brown. But in the end Hudner, after calming a fire on Brown’s plane and hacking away at his co*ckpit with an ax for 45 minutes in the subzero weather, couldn’t free Brown from his aircraft, was ordered into a rescue helicopter before night fell (and visibility with it). Brown lost consciousness shortly thereafter; two days later, a squadron returned to pepper the crash site with napalm to keep Brown’s body and aircraft from falling into enemy hands. Hudner was left physically and emotionally bruised.

For his valor Hudner received the Medal of Honor, the US military’s most exalted decoration, from President Truman on the White House lawn in April 1951 – with Brown’s widow, Daisy, just behind them. “Had I been on the ground, I think I would’ve had enough faith in my shipmates for somebody to do something,” Hudner said before his death in 2017. “I felt, yes, there was a chance that I wouldn’t. But to save Jesse’s life was worth it.”

The story of that doomed deployment and the unlikely friendship it sparked is at the center of Devotion – a new theatrical release starring Jonathan Majors and Glen Powell. The film is based on a 2015 biography by Adam Makos, who eventually became close friends with Hudner. “He really had intentions of going back that night even, or the next day,” Makos says. “He wasn’t ready to face the reality that Jesse was really gone.”

Even though it’s full of grand action sequences and wrestles with heavy ideas like duty and race at a time in American history when the parameters for both couldn’t have been more distinct, Devotion wasn’t necessarily a lock to make it to the big screen. For as much as Hollywood loves a meaty combat flick, it treats the Korean war like a middle child relative to the second world war and Vietnam. Which is to say it’s often referenced, but largely ignored. “The last great Korean war movie, by my count, was Pork Chop Hill starring Gregory Peck – and that was in 1959,” Makos notes.

It’s called The Forgotten War even though it was the first UN war and so many American icons took part – from baseball hit king Ted Williams to Neil Armstrong to Marilyn Monroe. “The Korean war just faded, I think, because back then America didn’t want another war,” Makos says. “It was a cold, mysterious and faraway place. We were tired. It was time to move on.” When John Wayne tried to produce a movie about the Battle of Outpost Vegas, a late-stage counter-attack in which nearly every participating marine was captured or killed, the US Marine Corps – skeptical of the defeatist slant, with the working title: Giveaway Hill – nixed the project, fearing it might give a PR win to the communists. It took Powell expressing an interest in playing Hudner and producing the film as well for Devotion to really take flight. He too became close with Hudner; he and Rachel Smith, Brown’s granddaughter, were present for the navy pilot’s burial at Arlington National Cemetery.

The first frames of Devotion unfold less like Sands of Iwo Jima than Top Gun as navy warbirds take flight over the Atlantic, the present-day South Carolina-Georgia coast standing in for 1950s Rhode Island. Where Top Gun makes aircraft carrier landings look routine, Devotion tarries in the too-real tension when it’s not underscoring the balletic majesty of formation flight.

Devotion: the true story behind a film about the navy’s first Black aviator (1)

Even Majors (as Brown) wrestling with the blindspots on his Corsair fighter plane called to mind the recent air show in Dallas where six people died after a P-63 Kingcobra prop fighter collided with a B-17 bomber in midair. “The P-63 pilot might’ve lost that B-17 in his view for half a minute, and that was enough,” says Makos, who was friendly with some of the Texas Raiders who operated the B-17 and had been in discussions with them about using the plane for another film adaptation. “When I see planes flying in tight formation in the movie, I just take it for granted. Even flying through the open air without an enemy in sight requires incredible trust to let another man be on your wing 10 feet away with the ability to, in one wrong move, cut your plane in half and drop you out of the sky. That’s why the trust between these pilots is such a powerful statement.”

Makos, 41, has always been a military buff. Growing up in eastern Pennsylvania, he was captive audience for two grandfathers who served – one in the marines, the other in the army air forces on a B-17 in the Pacific that touched down in Japan after the bomb dropped. He started publishing articles on military history at 15. Just before his high school French club planned a trip to Paris, Makos bailed at the last minute to go to Disney World with his family instead. That plane to Paris, TWA flight 800, wound up crashing off Long Island in the third deadliest aviation accident in US history.

Survivor’s guilt has made him an even more sympathetic ear. “Having that near-miss with death at the end of my freshman year of high school really revealed to me the depth of the sacrifice that military members are willing to make,” he says. “Jesse Brown never had to go to the Korean war. He was already the first Black navy carrier pilot. He could’ve been the first Black airline pilot. But instead, he went. My own experience showed just how precious life is and how heavy that choice must’ve been for Jesse.”

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Even as Hudner neared the end of his own life, he still thought he could bring Brown back home. In 2013, when Hudner was 88, Makos organized a trip to North Korea – Hudner’s only time back since the war. They spent 10 days with the North Korean military and even plotted a mission to return to the Chosin Reservoir to search for Brown’s remains. “We didn’t know if we would find the wreckage of an airplane,” says Makos. “We didn’t know if we’d find a gravesite. We didn’t know if we’d find villagers living nearby. But somebody had to go there and just start asking those questions.”

But then just as they were about to set off, the search mission was scuttled by monsoon rains that hung up the North Korean military’s advance team. But it wasn’t all for naught. “Thank you for coming so far after so long to keep a promise to a friend,” Kim Jong-un said in a proclamation to Hudner. “I pledge that the military of the Korean People’s army will pick up the search from here and try to find your friend.”

After Devotion, the Korean war can no longer be called forgotten. If anything, the past is prologue. “It’s actually the most relevant war to our modern times,” Makos says. “You’ve got North Korea saber-rattling all the time with the South. You’ve got Russia trying to rebuild their cold war empire. You’ve got China threatening Taiwan on a weekly basis. We’re living the Korean war all over again. We’re in the preamble to it.”

  • Devotion is out in US cinemas now and in the UK in 2023 with an Australia release date to be confirmed

Devotion: the true story behind a film about the navy’s first Black aviator (2024)

FAQs

Devotion: the true story behind a film about the navy’s first Black aviator? ›

Devotion is based on the true story of the U.S. Navy's first Black pilot, Jesse Brown, and his wingman, Tom Hudner. The film closely follows their experiences during the Korean War, including Jesse's tragic death and Tom's efforts to save him.

How much of the Devotion movie is true? ›

As stated before, Devotion hews fairly close to the real-life events, with two exceptions. While Brown's funeral was the first time Daisy and Hudner met, a scene in the film features them having a meeting when Hudner drives Brown home.

What happened to the black pilot in the movie Devotion? ›

"He died in the wreckage of his airplane with courage and unfathomable dignity. He willingly gave his life to tear down barriers to freedom of others." For his actions in Korea leading up to his death, Brown was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Purple Heart Medal, and the Air Medal.

Was the flying in Devotion real? ›

The airborne, in-co*ckpit Bearcat scenes with Powell, who plays Hudner, and Jonathan Majors, who plays Jesse Brown, were actually shot with them seated in the rear co*ckpit of Lewis Air Legends' T Mk. 20 Hawker Sea Fury with Steve Hinton in the front seat doing the real flying.

What happened to the first black naval aviator? ›

Jesse L. Brown, the black Navy pilot shot down over Korea. The first black man to earn the Navy's 'wings of gold,' Jesse manned his F-4U Corsair on the carrier USS Leyte, flew off on a mission to help free a trapped Marine division, and was killed. A posthumous Distinguished Flying Cross was awarded.

Were there any black pilots in the Korean War? ›

James and Ragland were regarded as the few good Black pilots. The commanding General of the Far East Forces, Lieutenant General Earle E. Partridge, focused on mistakes made by two Black aviators that were serving as airborne controllers. They had accidentally directed air strikes on friendly targets.

Who was the first black pilot in the navy? ›

The almost daily reconnaissance and close air support missions in the Chosin area were becoming routine for the US Navy and Task Force 77. VF 32 was a unique squadron because one of its section leaders was Ensign Jesse L. Brown, USNR of Hattiesburg, MS, the first African American naval aviator.

Did Jesse Brown really meet Liz Taylor? ›

Tom And Jesse Met Elizabeth Taylor In France

In real life, Jesse and Tom did meet Taylor, who was in Cannes for the eponymous Film Festival. Brown reportedly met her while she was dining at the Carlton Hotel. Hudner also met her four days later while she was visiting the Leyte.

Has Jesse Brown's remains been found? ›

It seems that his wingman made it a personal goal of his to get Brown's body back but was never able to do so and has since died. According to the movie, Brown's family is still trying. Brown's plane and his dead body (trapped in the open co*ckpit) were bombed by the US to keep them from falling into enemy hands.

Is Tom from Devotion still alive? ›

On November 13, 2017, Hudner passed away in his home and was interred at Arlington National Cemetery, survived by his wife Georgea and son Thomas Hudner III. His legacy – and that of his friend and comrade Jesse Brown – is immortalized in the 2022 film, Devotion. John J. Pinder, Jr.

How many real Corsairs were used in Devotion? ›

At least five flying Vought/Goodyear Corsairs were used in the aerial sequences of “Devotion”. Several of the privately owned vintage warbirds were repainted in the authentic markings of the 1950s' fighter squadron VF-32, the “Fighting Swordsmen”, onboard the aircraft carrier USS Leyte (CV-32).

Did a Corsair ever shoot down a MiG? ›

One of the Navy and Marine Corps' finest fighters, Corsairs shot down 2,140 Japanese aircraft during World War II and in the Korean War a Marine pilot became the first to down a MiG-15 jet while flying a propeller-driven aircraft.

What were Jesse Brown's last words? ›

Brown's final words: “Tell Daisy how much I love her.” After working for 45 minutes, the pair were unable to free Brown and with Chinese troops drawing close, Hudner and the rescue helicopter pilot were forced to retreat leaving Brown behind.

Is Jesse Leroy Brown still alive? ›

Brown. Jesse L. Brown (born October 13, 1926, Hattiesburg, Mississippi, U.S.—died December 4, 1950, North Korea) was a U.S. Navy ensign who fought racism in the military to become the first African American to complete naval flight training and serve as an aviator.

Who was the best Naval Aviator? ›

David McCampbell wasn't just the top naval ace of World War II — he's considered the service's all-time leader in aerial combat. His spirit and leadership are what made his air group one of the war's most decorated, and they earned him the Medal of Honor.

What Naval Aviator has the most kills? ›

McCampbell is the United States Navy's all-time leading flying ace (called Ace of the Aces in the Navy) and top F6F Hellcat ace with 34 aerial victories.

Did Corsair pilots have parachutes? ›

Corsair pilots wore seat pack parachutes. Their torsos were wrapped in harnesses, but the parachute canopy was packed into the seat cushion.

How much of Devotion is CGI? ›

There are some CGI effects in "Devotion," but they're used to flesh out backgrounds and create additional planes in a squadron. The planes near the front of the frame are almost always real. The production used the footage they captured and kept the images we see onscreen as close to reality as possible.

Did Jesse Brown shoot down a MIG? ›

Whilst a Mig 15 was shot down by a Corsair in Korea, it wasn't until later in the war and not by Jesse Brown and Tom Hudner.

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