I think the problem is while in Band of Brothers there is a lot of scope for action scenes, what can you show for bombers flying in a formation? How many shots of a gunner shooting at something can you do before it’s repetitive?
The old "Twelve O'Clock High" TV series might be a good illustration. Most (but not all) of the episodes involved combat missions, but the main plot points were usually some member of a crew with a problem. Pilots lacking courage, bombardiers lacking confidence, gunners on the run from the law back home, family issues with other officers, woman trouble, etc. The series had several episodes set in POW camps, others set with main characters on leave, etc. Looking *just* at missions would really end up to be repetitive.
Band of Brothers did have the advantage of having largeish set of core characters who were together and survived the entire war. To stick close to history, Masters of the Air couldn't...the casualty rate was tremendous. The Munster mission highlighted this. The 100th sent out 13 B-17s. Only one came back, piloted by a rookie who asked, "Are they all this rough?" I've seen practically every flying movie ever made. Masters of the Air was, bar none, the best depiction of what it was probably like to fly unescorted daylight bomber missions over Germany. You can quibble about some of the details, but the actual experience of death and destruction and the outright horror really came out in the series.
The final episode had a nice, understated tribute to this. Buck returns from the POW camp and opens his footlocker. He takes out a $5 bill at looks at it. It's a "Short Snorter"; a predecessor to today's challenge coins where all one's buddies sign their names on the bill. Buck looks at it for a moment, and tucks it into his pocket without comment. All the men who'd signed his short snorter were probably dead.
I did like a lot of the subtle fine detail in the series. Blue heated flying suits just visible under leather B-3 jackets, Bucky being issued a later B-10 jacket after returning from the POW camp, the realistic sets and aircraft interiors, the fact that by the end of the movie you saw very few B-17s painted OD. One of my favorites is at the end of the last episode. The war is over, the Group is taxiing out to return to the States. Look carefully...NONE of the aircraft has any machine guns. Not in the turrets, not in the waist, not in the tail, not in the nose. They're not carrying that 85-pounds-per gun on a long flight home. The filmmakers could have easily used footage taken/generated for earlier scenes, but they didn't.
Certainly not at the level of Band of Brothers, but I enjoyed it.
Ron Wanttaja