Turbulence 2: Fear of Flying
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Turbulence 2: Fear of Flying | |
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Directed by | David MacKay |
Written by | Rob Kerchner |
Screenplay by | Brendan Broderick Kevin Bernhardt |
Produced by | Mike Elliott Darin Spillman |
Starring | Craig Sheffer Jennifer Beals Tom Berenger Jeffrey Nordling |
Music by | Don Davis |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Trimark Home Video |
Release date |
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Running time | 101 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Turbulence 2: Fear of Flying is a 1999 American direct-to-video disaster thriller film directed by David MacKay and starring Craig Sheffer, Jennifer Beals and Tom Berenger. It is a sequel to the 1997 film Turbulence.
Plot
[edit]This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. (September 2020) |
A group of people celebrate overcoming their fear of flying by taking a flight together. They board a TransContinental Airlines Boeing 747-200, TransCon Flight 110, circling around Seattle–Tacoma International Airport. While the aircraft is cruising, a Czech terrorist hijacks the flight. He says that there is a chemical weapon filled with toxins in the cargo bay and shows the detonator. The Czech hijacker goes to the cockpit and explains the plot to the captain and demands that he land at Seattle or a nearby airport. The captain says he can't land at Seattle due to bad weather and asks the hijacker to wait until the weather improves or use the bomb now. After getting into a scuffle, a British passenger Elliot—claiming to be an MI6 agent—and an FBI officer tie the Czech terrorist down. An aerospace engineer, Martin Messerman, notices that Elliot had placed the detonator in his pocket. When asked to hand it over, he kills the Czech man and the FBI agent. Elliot says to the captain that he's in charge now. After knocking the captain unconscious, he takes control of the plane and the passengers hostage. Martin attempts to warn about the hijack from an airphone but Elliot turns them all off, along with incapacitating Elliot's assistant.
Martin, with the help of another passenger Jessica, goes down to the cargo bay and notifies a fellow Seattle air traffic controller Robert Sikes of the hijack via a VOR system which Elliot doesn't notice initially. He is notified that the aircraft will be shot down if it flies over a populated area and must drop the toxin over water within seven minutes. He is told that the toxin is in cargo box A45114 but only hears "A45..." before Elliot switches off the VOR. Martin deploys the spoilers to slow the 747 to make it descend to 10,000 ft (3,000 m) to open the cargo door without causing decompression and to get a signal for his cellphone. After reaching his intended altitude and acquiring a signal, he retracts the spoilers and opens the cargo door. He finds the toxin in cargo box A45114. Elliot comes down and tries to shoot at the duo, expending all of his ammunition in the process. The ground controllers order the aircraft shot down by a missile from the USS Bremerton. Elliot activates the detonator to blow up the toxin but Martin and Jessica manage to drop the toxin out the plane before it detonates over water. They notify Seattle that the toxin has been dropped and the missile from the Bremerton is redirected and aborted.
Elliot takes one of the passengers, Wilcox, into the cockpit to accompany him and finds Martin and Jessica hiding in the crew compartment. He is about to shoot Martin but Martin says that he is an aerospace engineer and can land the plane. Martin grabs the control but is ordered by Elliot not to try anything or else he will kill Jessica. Martin broadcasts Elliot's demands: no police, no armed personnel, await further instructions. Martin is forced to make a flyby over Sea-Tac Airport, but objects due to fuel levels. Elliot throws Wilcox out of the plane and ties Jessica to one of the seats using the handcuffs that were used to tie up the Czech terrorist. He lands in the airport control tower and is gravely injured, leaving this as a warning if Elliot's demands are ignored. Martin manages to land the plane with two engines. SWAT teams surround the aircraft. Elliot, accompanied by Martin, staggers down the airstair and retorts that he is "already halfway home". Martin uses his cellphone to record his conversation to the air traffic controllers and federal agents in the control tower, who hear this via speaker. Martin's son Trevor is seen in terminal with one of Elliot's henchmen wielding a gun. As Martin and Elliot enter an ambulance, Trevor runs out on the tarmac which Elliot's henchman pursuing and being killed by SWAT units. A fight ensues when Elliot shoots and injures a paramedic but is killed with his wrist-equipped spike when Martin breaks it and stabs Elliot with it, killing him instantly. Martin reunites with Trevor and Jessica. He meets Robert Sikes in person and the three go home while the passengers disembark.
Cast
[edit]- Craig Sheffer as Martin Messerman
- Jennifer Beals as Jessica
- Tom Berenger as Robert Sikes
- Jeffrey Nordling as Elliot
- Jay Brazeau as Harold
- Andrew Kavadas as Russ Bell
- Peter Wilds as Stanley Niles
- Avery Raskin as Bradford Wilcox
- Peter Kelamis as Mazzo
- Tim Henry as Dickson
- Howard Siegel as Blake
- Dillon Moen as Trevor
- Douglas Newell as Kessler
- Andrew McIlroy as Brewster
- Scott Owen as Lenny
- Tom Shorthouse as Ralph
- Jill Teed as Kit
- Jody Thompson as Stacey
- Katrina Matthews as Michelle
- Tamara Phillips as Hobbs
- Chilton Crane as Hazel
- Claire Riley as Peggy
- Donna Peerless as Mildred
- D. Neil Mark as Naval Officer
- Dean McKenzie as SWAT Team Leader
- Hiro Kanagawa as Controller
- Paul Jarrett as Vaclav
- Zinaid Memisevic as Jan
- Mike Dopud as Petr
- Vitaly Kravchenko as Josef
- Adrian Formosa as Henchman
- Daryl Shuttleworth as Captain Reynolds
- Simon Longmore as Co-Pilot
- Robin Avery as Navigator
Reception
[edit]On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, Turbulence 2: Fear of Flying holds an approval rating of 14% based on seven reviews, with an average rating of 2.7/10.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ "Turbulence 2: Fear of Flying". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved September 3, 2020.
External links
[edit]- 1999 films
- 1999 crime thriller films
- 1990s disaster films
- 1999 direct-to-video films
- American aviation films
- American crime thriller films
- American disaster films
- Direct-to-video action films
- Direct-to-video sequel films
- Films scored by Don Davis (composer)
- Films about aviation accidents or incidents
- Films about aircraft hijackings
- Films set in Washington (state)
- Films set on airplanes
- Trimark Pictures films
- Films about terrorism
- 1990s English-language films
- 1990s American films
- English-language crime thriller films