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In 1940, aviation experts believed they knew the future of fighter aircraft. Lighter. Faster. More maneuverable. Alexander Kartveli disagreed. A Georgian-born engineer who fled revolution and built a new life in America, Kartveli proposed something radical: build the biggest, most powerful fighter possible — and design it to bring pilots home, no matter the damage. Army officials called it too big. Too heavy. Unworkable. He built it anyway. This documentary tells the untold engineering story behind the P-47 Thunderbolt — the “flying bathtub” that critics mocked, but that went on to become one of the most survivable and heavily armed American fighters of World War II. From the massive Pratt & Whitney R-2800 engine to the turbocharger system, armor plating, redundant controls, and eight .50 caliber machine guns, every design choice added weight — and saved lives. We explore: • The internal debates inside Republic Aviation • Army Air Corps skepticism toward the design • The production miracle at Farmingdale • Combat data that proved the philosophy right • Why modern American fighter doctrine still reflects Kartveli’s vision At peak production, one P-47 rolled off the assembly line every 38 minutes. By war’s end, more than 15,000 had been built. It wasn’t elegant. It wasn’t light. But it brought pilots home. This is the story of the engineer who chose survivability over style — and changed air combat forever.