LIKE BAMBI IN REVERSE
Sounds rather unbelievable. These may seem like the last 2 movies that would be compared to each other. They do however have at least 1 important thing in common. They both featured protagonists the audience would have a conflicting relationship with in real life, In Bambi, it's deer-whome we hunt, in Blue Max, it's WWI Germans- who were our enemies. From that standpoint, any inclination I may have to route for Stachel or any of the other protagonists had to be tempered by the fact that those were our boys they were straffing & blowing out of the sky.
I liked the way someone described this feature as the Lonely Hero In A Cruel World genre turned upside down. I would agree that most of the characters in the squadron were much more likable & easy to identify with compared to the George Peppard character, Brunno Stachel.Perhaps when the protagonists were our enemies in real life that kind of inversion makes the story by compensation more credible. The squad leader's emphasis on chivalrie may have enphasized the way Germans could have been kidding themselves into thinking they could win the war. WWI seems like a strange war,in that it's hard to tell just how "bad" the Germans were & how "good" the Allies were. Hitler was still in the trenches-later to be taken POW where he writes his famous book. Head of the Luftwaffe' Herman Goering was in the Red Baron's Flying Circus Squadron,later to assume the Red Baron's position upon his death. I'll get back to Goering.
Brunno Stachel effectively qualified as a credible protagonist because his arrogant way of doing whatever it took to win put him ahead of his time as far as THe "Fatherland's" vision of it's future was concerned. Germany's acceptence of it's terms of defeat would soon escalate into a "He who breaks the rules makes the rules" way of waging war.
I liked the part where Stachel saved the Red Baron's bacon, & barely survived getting shot down himself, when another ally got on his "6". Von Richtoven, after treating him to champagn Von Rictoven Offered him a spot on his squadron, which he ironically declined. If he joined the FC, & survived long enough for Goering to succeed Von Rictoven, I have a feeling Goering & the fictional Stachell would have gotten along pretty good. Or not. Maybe their common arrogance would have had them at each other's throats. Otherwise, an alternate sequel in a case like that might be a WWII feature where Stachell & Goering are prominant members of the rear eschelon 3rd Riech.