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==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.cinemaroll.com/Action/Airport-1970-Five-Stars.656163 Airport (1970)]
* {{imdb title|0065377|Airport}}
* {{imdb title|0065377|Airport}}
* {{Amg movie|1307|Airport}}
* {{Amg movie|1307|Airport}}

Revision as of 05:14, 29 May 2009

Airport
Theatrical Release Poster
Directed byGeorge Seaton
Written byArthur Hailey (novel)
George Seaton
Produced byRoss Hunter
StarringBurt Lancaster
Dean Martin
Jean Seberg
Jacqueline Bisset
George Kennedy
Helen Hayes
Van Heflin
CinematographyErnest Laszlo, ASC
Music byAlfred Newman
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release dates
March 5, 1970 (U.S. release)
Running time
137 min
Country United States
LanguageEnglish

Airport is a 1970 film based on the 1968 Arthur Hailey novel of the same name. This film, which earned over $100,000,000[1] at the box office, focuses on an airport manager trying to keep his airport open during a snowstorm, while a suicidal bomber plots to blow up a Boeing 707 in flight. The film cost $10 million to produce.

Airport paved the way for the 1970s disaster film genre, establishing the widely-followed convention of "microcosmic melodrama combined with catastrophe-oriented adventure".[2]

The movie was written for the screen and directed by George Seaton. Seaton was assisted by Henry Hathaway, and Ernest Laszlo photographed it in 70 mm Todd-AO. It was the last film scored by Alfred Newman before his death.

This story takes place at the fictional Chicago-area Lincoln International Airport.

Cast

Awards

The film won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress (Helen Hayes), and was also nominated for Best Picture, Best Actress in a Supporting Role (Maureen Stapleton), Writing (adapted screenplay), Art Direction (Alexander Golitzen, E. Preston Ames, Jack D. Moore, Mickey S. Michaels), Cinematography, Costume Design (Edith Head), Film Editing, Original Score, and Sound.[3]

Plot

This film was based on the best-selling novel by Arthur Hailey. With considerable attention to the details of day-to-day airport and airline operations, the plot of the movie concerns the response to both a paralyzing snowstorm and to an attempt to blow up an airliner. Demolition expert D.O. Guerrero (Van Heflin), down on his luck and with a history of mental illness, purchases a life insurance policy with the intent to commit suicide by blowing up a Rome-bound Boeing 707 Intercontinental jet from a snowbound Chicago airport. He plans to do this while he is on board using a self-made bomb hidden inside an attache case, while in flight over the Atlantic Ocean. Guerrero does this in the hope that his wife, Inez (Maureen Stapleton) will benefit from the insurance money. The explosion causes explosive decompression but only Guerrero is sucked out of the plane. The plane returns to Chicago where it makes a successful emergency landing – all while the airport is in the midst of a snowstorm with one runway closed from a stuck-in-the-snow airliner.

In the movie, Dean Martin who plays checkride pilot Vernon Demarest, calls into Cleveland Center on his way to Chicago. Cleveland, Ohio Cleveland Center is a reference to the ARTCC or Air Route Traffic Control Center in Oberlin, Ohio. This center is the busiest control centers because of air traffic.

The film is characterized by ensemble acting in which many different personal stories intertwine, and through emphasis on the decisions which must be made minute-by-minute by the airport staff.

Production

The majority of the filming was done at Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport. A display in the modern-day terminal, along with stills from the field and from the film itself illustrated the story as such: "Minnesota's legendary winters attracted Hollywood here in 1969, when portions of the film Airport were shot in the terminal and on the field. The weather remained stubbornly clear, however, forcing the director to use plastic 'snow' to create the appropriate effect."

Only one Boeing 707 was used in the filming: N324F[4], a 707-349C, was leased from Flying Tiger Line by Universal Studios and sported an El Al cheatline over its bare metal finish, with the fictional Trans Global Airlines (TGA) titles and tail. In March 21, 1989 that aircraft, flying for Transbrasil with registration PT-TCS, crashed while making a high speed approach at runway 09R of São Paulo's Guarulhos International Airport after departure from Manaus Eduardo Gomes International Airport.[5]

Lancaster and Martin reportedly made a large sum from this project, as they both had a percentage share of the box-office receipts.[citation needed]

Reception

Box office

Airport was released into theatres on March 5, 1970. Overall, it made $100,489,151.

Score

This movie is the final film project of composer Alfred Newman. Newman's health was failing at the time and so he was unable to conduct the sessions for the commercially-released recording of his music (this duty was handled by Stanley Wilson); Newman did conduct the sessions for the music heard in the film.

Sequels

The success of Airport spawned three sequels, the first two of which were box office hits.

The one actor appearing in all four "Airport" films was George Kennedy in recurring role of Joe Patroni. Patroni's character evolves over the series, however, and he goes from a chief mechanic in Airport to a Vice President of Operations in Airport 1975, a consultant in Airport '77, and an experienced pilot in The Concorde...Airport '79.

References

  1. ^ See The Numbers site [1]
  2. ^ Harpole, Charles. History of the American Cinema. University of California Press. pp. 251–252. ISBN 9780520232655.
  3. ^ "NY Times: Airport". NY Times. Retrieved 2008-12-28.
  4. ^ "FAA Registry (N324F)". Federal Aviation Administration.
  5. ^ Details of 707 crash in São Paulo [2]