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==Plot==
==Plot==
The film takes place during the [[Cold War]], when tensions between the [[United States]] and the [[Soviet Union]] were at their height. At the headquarters of the [[Strategic Air Command]] (SAC), where visiting Congressman Raskob ([[Sorrell Booke]]) is expressing his discomfort with how much of the U.S. defense system is automated without direct human responsibility, an unidentified object is detected approaching North America from Europe. With such incidents a common occurrence, standard procedure is invoked, deploying American fighter planes to meet the potential threat. According to routine, American [[strategic bombers]] are directed to fly to various predetermined "fail-safe" points outside the borders of the Soviet Union, where will remain until receiving either orders to return to base or a special attack code transmitted through an electronic "fail-safe" box in each group commander's plane.
The film takes place during the [[Cold War]], when tensions between the [[United States]] and the [[Soviet Union]] were at their height. At the headquarters of the [[Strategic Air Command]] (SAC), where visiting Congressman Raskob ([[Sorrell Booke]]) is expressing his discomfort with how much of the U.S. defense system is automated without direct human responsibility, an unidentified object is detected approaching North America from Europe. With such incidents a common occurrence, standard procedure is invoked, deploying American fighter planes to meet the potential threat. According to routine, American [[strategic bombers]] are directed to fly to various predetermined "fail-safe" points outside the borders of the Soviet Union, where they are to remain until receiving either orders to return to base or a special attack code transmitted through an electronic "fail-safe" box in each group commander's plane.


As is usual, the original "threat" is proven to be innocuous, and orders are issued to have the American bombers recalled. However, the SAC computer system experiences a technical failure which causes a valid attack code to be electronically transmitted to one of the bomber groups. Colonel Jack Grady ([[Edward Binns]]), commanding the bomber group attempts to contact SAC to confirm the order, but is unable to do so, as the group's radio transmissions are being jammed by the Soviets. Having received a valid attack code, and with no known contrary orders, he proceeds with the group's designated attack mission: to drop [[thermonuclear]] bombs on [[Moscow]].
As is usual, the original "threat" is proven to be innocuous, and orders are issued to have the American bombers recalled. However, the SAC computer system experiences a technical failure which causes a valid attack code to be electronically transmitted to one of the bomber groups. Colonel Jack Grady ([[Edward Binns]]), commanding the bomber group attempts to contact SAC to confirm the order, but is unable to do so, as the group's radio transmissions are being jammed by the Soviets. Having received a valid attack code, and with no known contrary orders, he proceeds with the group's designated attack mission: to drop [[thermonuclear]] bombs on [[Moscow]].

Revision as of 15:05, 11 August 2010

Fail-Safe
original movie poster
Directed bySidney Lumet
Written byWalter Bernstein
Produced bySidney Lumet
Charles H. Maguire
Max E. Youngstein
StarringHenry Fonda
Dan O'Herlihy
Walter Matthau
Dom DeLuise
CinematographyGerald Hirschfeld
Edited byRalph Rosenblum
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
October 7, 1964
Running time
112 min.
LanguageEnglish

Fail-Safe is a 1964 film directed by Sidney Lumet, based on the 1962 novel of the same name by Eugene Burdick and Harvey Wheeler. It tells the story of a fictional Cold War nuclear crisis. The film features an all star cast, including Henry Fonda, Dan O'Herlihy, Walter Matthau, Frank Overton, and early appearances by Fritz Weaver and Larry Hagman.

Plot

The film takes place during the Cold War, when tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union were at their height. At the headquarters of the Strategic Air Command (SAC), where visiting Congressman Raskob (Sorrell Booke) is expressing his discomfort with how much of the U.S. defense system is automated without direct human responsibility, an unidentified object is detected approaching North America from Europe. With such incidents a common occurrence, standard procedure is invoked, deploying American fighter planes to meet the potential threat. According to routine, American strategic bombers are directed to fly to various predetermined "fail-safe" points outside the borders of the Soviet Union, where they are to remain until receiving either orders to return to base or a special attack code transmitted through an electronic "fail-safe" box in each group commander's plane.

As is usual, the original "threat" is proven to be innocuous, and orders are issued to have the American bombers recalled. However, the SAC computer system experiences a technical failure which causes a valid attack code to be electronically transmitted to one of the bomber groups. Colonel Jack Grady (Edward Binns), commanding the bomber group attempts to contact SAC to confirm the order, but is unable to do so, as the group's radio transmissions are being jammed by the Soviets. Having received a valid attack code, and with no known contrary orders, he proceeds with the group's designated attack mission: to drop thermonuclear bombs on Moscow.

Realizing what has occurred, but still unable to communicate with the bombers, American military commanders advise the President of the United States (Henry Fonda) of the situation and urgently invoke measures to avert the attack. After a failed attempt to send American fighter jets to shoot down the bombers, the President contacts the Soviet Chairman to warn him of the growing danger to Moscow and offer American assistance in shooting down the bomber group. The Soviets, both prideful and somewhat suspicious of possible American deception, refuse the help. Having underestimated the bombers' speed, however, they are also unable to shoot them down.

With the likelihood increasing that at least one of the bombers will make it to Moscow, the Soviets admit that their jamming has prevented SAC from contacting the bomber group by radio. An American hypothesis is that in addition to preventing them from countermanding the attack order, this Soviet jamming may also have contributed to triggering the mechanical failure at SAC caused the transmission of the attack code in the first place. Like the American attack order, the Soviet decision to initiate the jamming had been neither made nor authorized by any human being. Instead, it had been done automatically when computer algorithms, employing what the Chairman calls "their own logic", for some reason determined that the standard American alert maneuvers might on this occasion be a real attack.

The Soviets lift the jamming, enabling the President to speak to Grady. But by this time, the bombers are well beyond the final point at which they are permitted to accept new orders. The crews have been specifically cautioned about possible Soviet trickery, such as radio communications impersonating the voices of American military commanders. Remaining true to his training, Grady disregards the President's order to stand down.

With the Chairman evacuating himself from Moscow, the Soviets now accept American aid against the bombers. The President orders all American military personnel to fully cooperate with the Soviets and supply them with any information requested. Mistrust of the Soviets becomes a problem as American officers have difficulty bringing themselves to freely supply the Soviets with valuable military secrets. In the meantime, the President informs the Soviets of his plan to prove conclusively that the attack upon Moscow is an accident, and thus avert a Soviet retaliation that would lead to all-out nuclear war. If Moscow is destroyed, the President will order an equivalent nuclear strike on New York City.

The cooperative effort between the two nations' military personnel yields some success, eliminating most of the bomber group, but Grady's plane alone is able to make it through the Soviet defenses. The Soviets' last hope is to detonate their own airborne nuclear explosions in the vicinity of the American bomber, hoping to knock it out of the sky. But Grady anticipates this tactic and is able to decoy the Soviet rockets far enough away that his plane is then able to withstand the blast. As this happens, SAC makes one last attempt to verbally dissuade him, this time putting Grady's wife on the radio to try to convince him; he remains resolute. Noting that the last Soviet attack subjected him and his crew to lethal doses of radiation, he now decides to drop his bombs on Moscow from a low enough altitude that the bomber will itself be destroyed in the explosion.

As American officials begin planning the post-impact recovery for New York, the President and the Chairman grimly discuss the estimated 10 million deaths from the pending annihilation of each country's largest city. The Chairman asserts that it is a tragic accident, with no one truly to blame, but the President argues that both governments must accept responsibility for having "let our machines get out of hand". They resolve that they must do anything necessary to prevent any such incident from ever recurring.

Moscow is destroyed, and the President immediately gives the order to bomb New York. The order is given to General Warren Abraham "Blackie" Black (Dan O'Herlihy), a personal friend of the President from college, and ironically, one of the military's primary critics of extensive nuclear armament. Black must carry out the order despite knowing that his own wife and children are in New York. Upon releasing the bombs that will obliterate the city, Black injects himself with a suicide pin. The film then ends by showing several normal New York street scenes, depicting a city that is entirely unsuspecting at the moment of destruction.

Cast

Production

The film is shot in black and white with a minimalist, documentary-style format, with claustrophobic close-ups, and long silences between the characters. With a few exceptions, the action takes place largely in bunkers, conference rooms, and a cockpit. Only in the opening two scenes and in the final street scene depictions of New York in the seconds before it is destroyed do people and animals appear active and "alive" in the normal day-to-day world.

The movie is constructed so that the Soviets are never seen. The action is portrayed almost exclusively on the giant maps overlooking the War Room in the Pentagon and SAC Headquarters, and the Soviet Premier's words are translated by an American interpreter (Larry Hagman).

The "Vindicator" bombers (an invention of the novelists) are represented in the film by sometimes awkward stock footage of various real U.S. aircraft (the B-58 Hustler, as well as the F-104 Starfighter, The F-102 Delta Dagger and the F9F Cougar) and usually shown in photographic negative. This footage was used because the US Air Force would not cooperate with the film's producers due to the risqué subplot and a main plot predicated on fictional Air Force failures.

Underscoring the nightmare quality of the drama, the film features several eerie scenes. The General Black character is bothered by a recurring nightmare, the visual representation of which to the viewer is blurred and shaky; the "Fail-Safe" main title switches starkly back and forth several times between black letters on a white background, and white letters on a black background. When the bombers and fighters are shown in flight, the soundtrack is sometimes eliminated entirely. At another point, the stock footage of the planes is rendered as a photographic negative.

Action messages in real life

One of the necessary plot elements in Fail-Safe is the inability of Colonel Grady's group to hear the correct action message because of Soviet jamming of a digital signal. However, by 1964, the U.S. Air Force used single-sideband radio to transmit Emergency Action Messages to air crews; this has the advantage of not being easily jammed. A theoretical means to jam such signals is a key part of the film's plot. The movie's closing credits are followed by a disclaimer stating that the United States Air Force has protective devices and safeguards that are used all the time to keep the events of the story from happening.

Reception

When Fail-Safe opened, it garnered excellent reviews, but its box-office performance was poor. Its failure rested with the similarity between it and Dr. Strangelove, which appeared in theaters first. Despite this, the film later was applauded as a cold war thriller. Over the years, both the novel and the movie were well-received for their depiction of a nuclear crisis. The novel sold through to the 1980s and 90's, and the film was given high marks for retaining the essence of the novel.[1]

Lawsuit

The book so closely resembled the novel Red Alert by Peter George (which was adapted by George and Stanley Kubrick into the mutually assured destruction satire Dr. Strangelove the same year), that George filed a plagiarism lawsuit. The case was settled out of court.

Fail-Safe and Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb were both produced by Columbia Pictures in the period after the Cuban Missile Crisis, when people became much more sensitive to the threat of nuclear war. Strangelove director Stanley Kubrick insisted the studio release his movie first (in January 1964). Strangelove shares many plot similarities with Fail-Safe (and was legally derived from Red Alert - see above), but added black humor and satire to the mix.

Fail-Safe was parodied on SCTV which used a Henry Fonda imitation and the countdown montage in the episode "CCCP 1", which revolves around a Soviet hijacking of the network's satellite.

The famous 1964 ad Daisy by the Lyndon B. Johnson presidential campaign featured a shot similar to the final one from the movie, with a smash zoom into the face of a young girl playing.

2000 adaptation

In 2000, the novel was adapted again as a televised play also titled Fail Safe, starring George Clooney, Richard Dreyfuss, and Noah Wyle and broadcast live in black and white on CBS.

See also

References

Notes
  1. ^ Erickson, Hal. "Fail Safe (1964)." New York Times. Retrieved: October 24, 2009.
Bibliography
  • Dolan Edward F. Jr. Hollywood Goes to War. London: Bison Books, 1985. ISBN 0-86124-229-7.
  • Evans, Alun. Brassey's Guide to War Films. Dulles, Virginia: Potomac Books, 2000. ISBN 1-57488-263-5.
  • Harwick, Jack and Ed Schnepf. "A Viewer's Guide to Aviation Movies". The Making of the Great Aviation Films, General Aviation Series, Volume 2, 1989.