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Airport (film)

 
Airport (film)

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Airport (film)



 
 
Airport is a 1970
1970 in film

The year 1970 in film involved some significant events....
 film based on the 1968 Arthur Hailey
Arthur Hailey

Arthur Hailey was a United Kingdom/Canada novelist....
 novel of the same name. This film, which earned over $100,000,000 at the box office, focuses on an airport
Airport

An airport is a location where aircraft such as Fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters, and Non-rigid airship take off and land. Aircraft may also be stored or maintained at an airport....
 manager trying to keep his airport open during a snowstorm, while a suicidal bomber plots to blow up a Boeing 707
Boeing 707

The Boeing 707 is a four-engine commercial passenger jet airliner developed by Boeing Commercial Airplanes in the early 1950s. Its name is most commonly spoken as "Seven Oh Seven"....
 in flight. The film cost $10 million to produce.

Airport paved the way for the disaster film
Disaster film

A disaster film is a movie genre that has an impending or ongoing disaster as its subject. These films typically feature large casts of well-known actors and multiple plotlines, focusing on the characters' attempts to avert, escape or cope with the disaster and its aftermath....
 genre and established some of the conventions of that genre.

The movie was written for the screen and directed by George Seaton
George Seaton

George Seaton was an American playwright, film director and Film producer.Born George Stenius in South Bend, Indiana, Seaton began his career as radio actor 'George Stenius' in Detroit, Michigan....
.






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Encyclopedia


Airport is a 1970
1970 in film

The year 1970 in film involved some significant events....
 film based on the 1968 Arthur Hailey
Arthur Hailey

Arthur Hailey was a United Kingdom/Canada novelist....
 novel of the same name. This film, which earned over $100,000,000 at the box office, focuses on an airport
Airport

An airport is a location where aircraft such as Fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters, and Non-rigid airship take off and land. Aircraft may also be stored or maintained at an airport....
 manager trying to keep his airport open during a snowstorm, while a suicidal bomber plots to blow up a Boeing 707
Boeing 707

The Boeing 707 is a four-engine commercial passenger jet airliner developed by Boeing Commercial Airplanes in the early 1950s. Its name is most commonly spoken as "Seven Oh Seven"....
 in flight. The film cost $10 million to produce.

Airport paved the way for the disaster film
Disaster film

A disaster film is a movie genre that has an impending or ongoing disaster as its subject. These films typically feature large casts of well-known actors and multiple plotlines, focusing on the characters' attempts to avert, escape or cope with the disaster and its aftermath....
 genre and established some of the conventions of that genre.

The movie was written for the screen and directed by George Seaton
George Seaton

George Seaton was an American playwright, film director and Film producer.Born George Stenius in South Bend, Indiana, Seaton began his career as radio actor 'George Stenius' in Detroit, Michigan....
. Seaton was assisted by Henry Hathaway
Henry Hathaway

Henry Hathaway was an United States film director and producer. He is best known as a director of Western , especially starring John Wayne....
, and Ernest Laszlo
Ernest Laszlo

Ernest Laszlo, A.S.C. was an Academy Award-winning Hungarian-American cinematographer for over 60 Movie, and was known for his frequent collaborations with Film director Robert Aldrich and Stanley Kramer....
 photographed it in 70 mm Todd-AO
Todd-AO

Todd-AO is an extremely high definition widescreen film format developed in the mid 1950s. It was co-developed by Mike Todd, a Broadway theatre producer, with American Optical Company in Buffalo, New York....
. It was the last film scored by Alfred Newman
Alfred Newman

Alfred Newman was a major United States composer of music for films.He received 45 Academy Awards nominations, making him the second most nominated composer-arranger in the history of the Academy Awards, behind John Williams ....
 before his death.

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

Cast

  • Burt Lancaster
    Burt Lancaster

    Burton Stephen "Burt" Lancaster was an United States film actor and star, noted for his athletic physique, distinct smile and, later, his willingness to play roles that went against his initial "tough guy" image....
     as Mel Bakersfeld, airport manager
  • Dean Martin
    Dean Martin

    Dean Martin was an United States singer, film actor and comedian of Italians descent. He was one of the best known musical artists of the 1950s and 1960s....
     as Captain Vernon Demerest, checkride
    FAA Practical Test

    A practical test, or checkride is the most common name for part of a Federal Aviation Administration examination which one must undergo in the United States to receive an aircraft pilot's certification, or an endorsement for additional flight privileges....
     pilot on Trans Global Flight Two
  • Jean Seberg
    Jean Seberg

    Jean Dorothy Seberg was an American actress. She starred in 34 films in Hollywood and in France. Seberg became even more of an icon after her roles in numerous French films and the tragedy of her turbulent life and eventual suicide....
     as Tanya Livingston, public relations agent for Trans Global Airlines
  • Jacqueline Bisset
    Jacqueline Bisset

    Jacqueline Bisset is an English actress....
     as Gwen Meighen, chief stewardess
    Flight attendant

    Flight attendants or cabin crew are members of an aircrew employed by airlines to ensure the safety and comfort of the passengers aboard passenger airline as well as on select business jet aircraft....
     on Flight Two
  • George Kennedy as Joe Patroni, chief mechanic for TWA, on loan to Trans Global
  • Helen Hayes
    Helen Hayes

    Helen Hayes was an United States actress, whose career spanned almost 70 years. She eventually garnered the nickname "First Lady of the American Theater", and was one of the nine people List of persons who have won Academy, Emmy, Grammy, and Tony Awards....
     as Mrs. Ada Quonsett, stowaway
  • Van Heflin
    Van Heflin

    Emmett Evan "Van" Heflin, Jr. was an Academy Award-winning United States film and theater actor. By his own acknowledgment not a classically handsome actor, he played mostly character parts over the course of his film career, but during the 1940s had a string of roles as a leading man....
     as D. O. Guerrero, former contractor, in bankruptcy
  • Maureen Stapleton
    Maureen Stapleton

    Lois Maureen Stapleton was an United States Academy Awards-, Emmy Award- and two-time Tony Award-winning actor in film, theatre and television....
     as Mrs. Inez Guerrero
  • Barry Nelson
    Barry Nelson

    Barry Nelson was an United States actor, noted as the first actor to portray Ian Fleming's secret agent James Bond....
     as pilot Anson Harris, Captain on Flight Two
  • Dana Wynter
    Dana Wynter

    'Dana Wynter' is a Germany-born United States actress, who was raised in England and southern Africa. She appeared in film and television for more than four decades beginning in the 1950s, most notably in the original Invasion of the Body Snatchers....
     as Cindy Bakersfeld, wife of Mel Bakersfeld
  • Lloyd Nolan
    Lloyd Nolan

    Lloyd Benedict Nolan was an American film and television actor....
     as Standish, the head of Customs at Lincoln Int'l Airport
  • Barbara Hale
    Barbara Hale

    Barbara Hale is an Emmy Award-winning United States actress known for her role as Della Street, the loyal secretary of Perry Mason....
     as Sarah Demerest (sister of Mel Bakersfeld, wife of Vernon Demerest)
  • Gary Collins
    Gary Collins (actor)

    Gary Ennis Collins is an United States film and television actor....
     as Cy Jordan, the second officer/flight engineer of Flight Two
  • Ena Hartman as Ruth, tourist class stewardess
  • Patty Poulsen as Joan, tourist class stewardess
  • Marion Ross
    Marion Ross

    Marion Ross is a Golden Globe-nominated United States actress, best known for her role as Marion Cunningham on the TV series Happy Days from 1974 to 1984....
     as Passenger "Can we get a blanket?" (uncredited)


Awards

The film won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress

Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role is one of the Academy Award presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize an actor who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry....
 (Helen Hayes
Helen Hayes

Helen Hayes was an United States actress, whose career spanned almost 70 years. She eventually garnered the nickname "First Lady of the American Theater", and was one of the nine people List of persons who have won Academy, Emmy, Grammy, and Tony Awards....
), and was also nominated for Best Picture
Academy Award for Best Picture

The Academy Award for Best Motion Picture is one of the Academy Award presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to artists working in the film industry....
, Best Actress in a Supporting Role
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress

Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role is one of the Academy Award presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize an actor who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry....
 (Maureen Stapleton
Maureen Stapleton

Lois Maureen Stapleton was an United States Academy Awards-, Emmy Award- and two-time Tony Award-winning actor in film, theatre and television....
), Writing (adapted screenplay)
Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay

The Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay is one of the Academy Awards, the most prominent film awards in the United States. It is awarded each year to the screenwriter of a Adapted_screenplay from another source ....
, Art Direction
Academy Award for Best Art Direction

The Academy Awards are the oldest awards ceremony for achievements in film. The Academy Award for Best Art Direction recognizes achievement in art director#Film on a film....
 (Alexander Golitzen
Alexander Golitzen

Alexander Golitzen, oversaw art director on more than 300 movies.Prince Alexander Golitzen was born in Moscow, but fled the country with his family during the Russian Revolution of 1917....
, E. Preston Ames
E. Preston Ames

E. Preston Ames first made inroads into Hollywood when he was a drawing working on The Wizard of Oz in 1939. Within five years he had become a fully fledged art director....
, Jack D. Moore
Jack D. Moore

Jack D. Moore was an American set decorator. He won an Academy Award and was nominated six times in the category Academy Award for Best Art Direction....
, Mickey S. Michaels
Mickey S. Michaels

Mickey S. Michaels was an American set decorator. He was nominated for two Academy Awards in the category Academy Award for Best Art Direction....
), Cinematography
Academy Award for Best Cinematography

The Academy Award for Best Cinematography is an Academy Award awarded each year to a cinematographer for work in one particular motion picture....
, Costume Design
Academy Award for Costume Design

This Academy Awards was first given for films made in 1948 when separate awards were given for black-and-white and color movies....
 (Edith Head
Edith Head

Edith Head was an United Statesn costume designer who had a long career in Hollywood that garnered eight Academy Awards?more than any other woman in history....
), Film Editing
Academy Award for Film Editing

The Academy Award for Film Editing was first given for films issued in 1934. The name of this award is occasionally changed; in 2008, it was listed as the Academy Award for Achievement in Film Editing....
, Original Score
Academy Award for Original Music Score

The Academy Award for Original Music Score is presented to the best substantial body of music in the form of Film score written specifically for the film by the submitting composer....
, and Sound
Academy Award for Sound

The Academy Award for Sound Mixing is an Academy Awards that recognizes the finest or most euphonic Audio mixing or recording, and is generally awarded to the production sound mixers and re-recording mixers of the winning film....
.

Plot

This film was based on the best-selling novel by Arthur Hailey
Arthur Hailey

Arthur Hailey was a United Kingdom/Canada novelist....
. 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
Van Heflin

Emmett Evan "Van" Heflin, Jr. was an Academy Award-winning United States film and theater actor. By his own acknowledgment not a classically handsome actor, he played mostly character parts over the course of his film career, but during the 1940s had a string of roles as a leading man....
), 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
Maureen Stapleton

Lois Maureen Stapleton was an United States Academy Awards-, Emmy Award- and two-time Tony Award-winning actor in film, theatre and television....
) 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
Dean Martin

Dean Martin was an United States singer, film actor and comedian of Italians descent. He was one of the best known musical artists of the 1950s and 1960s....
 who plays checkride pilot Vernon Demarest, calls into Cleveland Center on his way to Chicago. Cleveland, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio

Cleveland is a city in the U.S. state of Ohio and the county seat of Cuyahoga County, Ohio, the most populous county in the state. The municipality is located in northeastern Ohio on the southern shore of Lake Erie, approximately 60 miles west of the Pennsylvania border....
 Cleveland Center is a reference to the ARTCC or Air Route Traffic Control Center in Oberlin, Ohio
Oberlin, Ohio

Oberlin is a city in Lorain County, Ohio, Ohio, United States, to the south and west of Cleveland, Ohio. Oberlin is perhaps best known for being the home of Oberlin College, a liberal arts college and music College or university school of music with approximately 3,000 students....
. This center is the busiest control centers because of air traffic.

The film is characterized by ensemble acting
Ensemble cast

An ensemble cast is a cast in which the principal performers are assigned roughly equal amounts of importance in a dramatic production. This kind of casting became more popular in television series because it allows for flexibility for writers to focus on different characters in different episodes....
 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
Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport

Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport is the largest and busiest airport in the five-state upper Midwestern region of Minnesota, Iowa, South Dakota, North Dakota, and Wisconsin....
. 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
Boeing 707

The Boeing 707 is a four-engine commercial passenger jet airliner developed by Boeing Commercial Airplanes in the early 1950s. Its name is most commonly spoken as "Seven Oh Seven"....
 was used in the filming: , a 707-349C, was leased from Flying Tiger Line
Flying Tiger Line

Flying Tiger Line, also known as Flying Tigers, was the first scheduled cargo airline in the United States and a major military charter operator during the Cold War era for both cargo and personnel ....
 by Universal Studios
Universal Studios

Universal Studios , a subsidiary of NBC Universal, is one of the six Worldwide major American film studios. Its production studios are located at 100 Universal City Plaza Drive in Universal City, California....
 and sported an El Al
El Al

El Al is the national airline of Israel. It operates regular international passenger and cargo flights between its Airline hub at Ben Gurion International Airport and destinations in Africa, Asia, Europe, and North America, as well as domestic connections to Eilat....
 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
Transbrasil

TransBrasil was an international Brazilian airline which ceased operations in December 2001. Transbrasil was privately owned, by Omar Fontana and his relatives....
 with registration PT-TCS, crashed while making a high speed approach at runway 09R of São Paulo's Guarulhos International Airport
Guarulhos International Airport

S?o Paulo/Guarulhos ? Governor Andr? Franco Montoro International Airport , also known as Cumbica International Airport, is a major Brazilian airport, the country's busiest by passenger traffic, located in the neighborhood of Cumbica, in the city of Guarulhos in metropolitan São Paulo ....
 after departure from Manaus
Manaus

Manaus is a city in Brazil, the capital of Amazonas state. It is situated at the confluence of the Rio Negro and River Solim?es rivers. It is the most populous city of Amazonas, according to the statistics of Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics and is a popular tourism destination....
 Eduardo Gomes International Airport
Eduardo Gomes International Airport

Eduardo Gomes International Airport , is located in Manaus, Amazonas , Brazil. It is administered by Infraero. The airport is named after Brazilian politician and military figure Eduardo Gomes and has two terminal buildings....
.

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

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
Alfred Newman

Alfred Newman was a major United States composer of music for films.He received 45 Academy Awards nominations, making him the second most nominated composer-arranger in the history of the Academy Awards, behind John Williams ....
. 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.
  • Airport 1975
    Airport 1975

    Airport 1975 is a 1974 in film disaster film and the first sequel to the successful 1970 in film hit Airport . The movie is one among many of a class of Disaster films that became a movie-going craze during the 1970s....
  • Airport '77
    Airport '77

    Airport '77 is a 1977 in film disaster film and second sequel in the Airport franchise.The film starred a number of veteran actors, including Jack Lemmon, James Stewart , Joseph Cotten, Christopher Lee and Olivia de Havilland....
  • The Concorde...Airport '79


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.

External links

  • - Airport @ Box Office Mojo