It was an interesting story, but as I listened to his narration of the events, uncomfortable facts were apparent. His plane got shot down, 5 of the crew died in the crash and 4 were captured by the Germans. He ran away and hid. Then he spent 6 months underground, trying to escape. OK so far, right? He described his technique for getting help; find a catholic priest and ask to find someone to help him. Remember that anybody in occupied Europe was executed by the Germans if caught helping downed allied fliers. He told about stealing 159 bicycles to get himself around. He thought it was funny, apparently from his smirk and chuckle. What about those people who depended on their bikes for transportation in war-time occupied countries? Well, not a concern to him. He got involved with the French underground and ran a group of fighters who he led in aggressive attacks on Germans. They finally asked him to stop killing German soldiers and leave, because the Nazis executed French civilians in reprisals as a result. He thought that was rather amusing, too. BTW, his daughter who gushed about "My Dad" all through the film, was born when Sundlun got one of his employees pregnant. He was in one of his 5 marriages at the time, and only accepted her as his daughter when she sued him at age 17 to make him pay for her college. A perfect man? No, but who is. A hero? I don't see it.