Alex Buitrago
I really enjoyed this film and I'll tell you why.. I walked away from it feeling good. Sometimes war documentaries or movies can be overly graphic or negative, but David Salzberg doesn't do that here. I felt this film did a great job of providing an authentic depiction of what Apache pilots like Daniel Flores went through in Afghanistan. The archival footage made watching the film feel like it's own experience, and isn't that what documentaries are supposed to do? These pilots clearly love our country based off of what they do to protect their brothers and sisters fighting on the ground. Would highly recommend
Kara Grozan
Having only before watched Hollywood war films such as Saving Private Ryan and Hacksaw Ridge, I wasn’t quite sure what to expect from a documentary like Above the Best. However, I was immediately engaged and continually captivated by the film’s authentic and unified tone. Through raw archival footage and candid interviews, the film weaves together a cinematic experience that feels just as exciting as a feature film, without any unnecessary gore or flare.
Kaya Young
On the line of action in Above the Best, some men and women’s true colors were shown as they valued other soldier’s lives above their own. American soldiers have an endless amount of respect and love for their fellow brother or sister soldiers. I found that to be such a redeeming quality. Not only are they representing and protecting their country, they are fighting for each other. Hearing US Army Chinook Pilot Kristi Hickey’s perspective in the beginning of Above the Best was specifically emotive. Waiting for her friends to “come home… but they never came home.” Those relationships and close bonds between US Army personnel make their fight so much more personal. Above the Best is definitely eye-opening piece that changed my perspective on being an American.