Tuesday, November 09, 2010

40 Years of "Airport": "Airport" (1970)

Hey pallies, likes while it is 50 years ago this year that "Ocean 11" hit the big screen, it is also 40 years ago that the epic Dino-classic "Airport" was released. As you pallies will remember, our beloved Dino was paid likes 7 cool mil to star in the film version of Arthur Hailey's mega-popular novel.

From the pages of IFC News, from the pen of Mr. Matt Singer comes a solid remembrance of the mother of the modern disaster flick. Loves the pix of our Dino as Captain Vern and stew Gwen that they have chosen to feature.

Been wonderin' for quite the Dino-while pallies why this was truly the last major flick that our Dino starred in (at least that I can recall). After makin' 7 cool mil by bein' star of this gigantic screen adaptation of Hailey's best seller...our great man have fewer and much less significant roles...just haves to wonder what happened pallies...and likes to any of you dudes have likes any clues to this Dino-mystery?

So enjoys takin' a trip down Dino-memory-lane as IFC honors the 40th anniversary of "Airport." ilovedinomartin sez our thanks to Mr. Singer for creatin' this prose and to IFC News for publishin' it. Also ilovedinomartin thanks our outstandin' Dino-holic pallie Danny G. who likes puts us on this article. To view this information in it's original format, likes just clicks on the tagg of this Dino-post. Dino-remememberin', DMP


40 Years of "Airport": "Airport" (1970)

Brace for impact: part one of our weeklong look back at an important but forgotten disaster movie franchise.

Posted 11/08/2010 1100 AM by Matt Singer 40 Years of "Airport": "Airport" (1970)



Photos: "Airport," Universal, 1970

In 1970, one movie invented the modern disaster film. After grossing more than $100 million at the domestic box office (adjusted for inflation, it made more than any of the "Lord of the Rings"), it spawned three sequels that stretched through the entire decade. But this landmark series is now almost totally forgotten, long eclipsed by the film that so brilliantly spoofed the genre tropes it helped define. In honor of its fortieth anniversary, we're looking back at the "Airport" franchise this week, one film at a time. Today, the movie that started it all, based on the novel by Arthur Hailey.

Airport (1970)
Directed by George Seaton

Nature of Air Emergency: A distraught man detonates a crude suicide bomb on a commercial jet in the hopes that his wife will collect his life insurance. Captain Vern Demerest (Dean Martin) has to land the damaged plan in the middle of a brutal Chicago snowstorm at an airport where the main runway is closed.

George Kennedy Plays: Joe Patroni, Chief Mechanic of Trans Global Airlines.

Most Surprising Subplot: Flight attendant Gwen's (Jacqueline Bisset) unwanted and out-of-wedlock pregnancy, which prompts a weirdly frank discussion about abortion between Bisset and Martin. "I stopped taking the pills because they were making me gain weight," she tells him. "So instead of being plump I'm pregnant." His response: "I'll make sure you don't go to some butcher two flights up over a drug store. I hear Sweden's the best place. Good doctors, good hospitals. Medically safe." Call me naive, but I wasn't prepared for the silly disaster picture about the plane that gets blown up and still lands safely to set aside a few minutes for a sincerely moving conversation about family planning. Go ahead. Call me naive.

If "Airport" Were Made Today: it would be hard to play Helen Hayes' stowaway character as the comic relief. Mrs. Ada Quonsett is a widow who hitches rides on airplanes whenever she feels like it. Everything she does is illegal and immoral, but she's a little old lady and she's having a lot of fun being bad; even after she's caught, she still tries to talk her way into the admiral's club with a "borrowed" membership card. In 1970, people sneaking onto airplanes with forged documents could be kind of charming (talk about being naive). In 2010, people sneaking on airplanes with forged documents, even little old lady types, not so charming.

Character You Kind of Want To Die: This one random passenger who keeps screwing things up for everyone else. When the flight crew get wind of the bomber's plan, they hatch an elaborate scheme to grab his explosives, hidden in a briefcase, away from him. The plan works, until this one random guy sees what's happening and sticks his nose in where it doesn't belong; he stops the flight attendant with the case, and the bomber is able to grab it back. Then a few minutes later, just as Dean Martin is about to convince him not to blow himself up, a man comes out of the bathroom and bumps into the bomber, and the same random douchebag screams out "He's got a bomb!" That starts a scuffle that results in the bomb going off. That one idiot is indirectly responsible for everything that goes wrong on that airplane! Is it weird that I kind of enjoyed watching him struggle for air when the cabin depressurized? Also: how intense does a trip to the bathroom have to be to not hear a guy threatening to blow up an airplane right outside the door?

Line That Makes You Wonder Whether The Whole Film Was An Informercial For The Air Travel Industry: "Remind me to send a thank you note to Mr. Boeing." -- Capt. Harris (Barry Nelson), inspecting the damaged plane after its safe landing.

Parodied in "Airplane!": The opening credits of "Airplane!" are an obvious parody of "Jaws": a model 747 tail fin snakes through lines of clouds while ominous John Williams-esque music plays. You assume the model looks so cheap because the Zuckers couldn't afford anything fancier until you watch some of the flying sequences in "Airport," which actually tries to pass off an incredibly phony toy plane skimming through cotton balls as a real plane in flight.

How Does It Hold Up? Better than I expected. "Airport" may have helped invent the modern disaster movie, but it's a lot less over-the-top than many of the films that would follow (I'm looking at you, movie about Michael Caine fighting millions of angry bees). Most of the movie isn't even about the airplane disaster; it really does focus on this airport and the tough decisions that have to be made by its manager, Mel Bakersfeld (Burt Lancaster). Even amidst all the movie stars and the big action set pieces, the movie has a nice working-class vibe. While Martin's romancing Bisset, Lancaster and Kennedy are doing the unglamorous stuff: dealing with corporate bureaucracy, fielding complaints from angry customers, and digging planes out of snow banks, all on their nights off. For the people in the sky, air travel is exotic and exciting. Even though their flight gets attacked, it's all this grand adventure that works out in the end. For the people on the ground, it's just a job, and a pretty crappy one at that; it destroys at least one marriage before the picture's over. I guess the powers that be at Universal felt that the movie stars and big action set pieces were what put asses in the seats, not the promise of tough management decisions. That would have a major impact on the tone and plot of the sequels.

Strange But True: According to Wikipedia, the plane that Universal leased to double for the damaged Trans Global jet was later sold to a Brazilian airline. On March 21, 1989, it was involved a real-life air disaster resulting in over twenty-five fatalities. Creepy.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

This isn`t reliable information but I heard Dean agreed to do the film for a share of the profits.
Being the big success it was, Dean chose wisely but he had to sue Universal pictures to get his share of the royalties.
Dean followed this with Something Big, a western I love but one the critics didn`t.
Then Dean did Showdown, I heard he was miserable making this film, the train in the movie took days to arrive holding up production.
During the film the horse Dean had used in most of his westerns Tops died.
After this movie was completed I think Dean was growing tired of making movies.
A couple years later Dean did Mr. Ricco giving a great performance but again the critics hated the film and it was shelved.
And we know years later Dino only did Cannonball Run for fun.
I don`t think he could have cared less about the critics anymore

dino martin peters said...

Hey pallie, thanks ever so Dino-much for all that cool Dino-commentary...likes I does think that "Something Big" is the most swingin' western ever made and of course it woulda feature our swingin' Dino! Had not heard the Universal story before...loves learnin' every Dino-detail that I cans...and of course, keeps lovin' our Dino....

Anonymous said...

Hi Dean :)
I would love to see Something Big released on dvd.
It seems to be one of Deans westerns that gets overlooked.
It was so funny and Dean looked so handsome as always.
Another reasonn for me liking the film was Dean had the cutest little dog.
Albert Salmi was a very funny villian.
I have a copy but it`s very faded and of poor quality.
I hope someday they release this.
Hugs n Kisses
from Kylie xxxoooxxx

dino martin peters said...

Hey pallie, I'm with you Ky...likes I remember when "Something Big" was released...the advertizin' but the accent on this bein' a real swingin' western with our most swingin'est Dino.....but likes unfortunately I have never ever seen it....