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Title: | Movie Reviews and Discussion |
Notice: | Please do DIR/TITLE before starting a new topic on a movie! |
Moderator: | VAXCPU::michaud o.dec.com::tamara::eppes |
|
Created: | Thu Jan 28 1993 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1249 |
Total number of notes: | 16012 |
139.0. "The Flight of the Phoenix" by DSSDEV::RUST () Tue Apr 13 1993 15:23
One of the best treatments I've seen of airplane-disaster and/or
survival epics, "Flight of the Phoenix" ('66) is based on the book of
the same title (author's name escapes me), and is a very faithful (if a
wee bit less gruesome) treatment of the story.
We come in on Jimmy Stewart piloting a beat-up twin-engine transport
plane across the Sahara, with lots of heavy oil-field equipment and a
dozen or so passengers, ranging from oil-field workers going on leave
to a nervous company accountant (Dan Duryea being meek). Stewart's
co-pilot is played by Richard Attenborough as a stammering dipsomaniac,
affable but not terribly useful; in this case, he's overlooked a few
small but significant details, and before we know it the plane is in
trouble, forced down in the middle of the desert well off course and
far out of reach of water.
The spate of "Airport" movies introduced us to motley collections of
passengers, most of them nice people, some with quirks, one or two
sufficiently obnoxious that the audience would cheer when someone got
fed up and slapped them. "Phoenix," on the other hand, has an equally
motley crew, but the odds are much more in favor of the obnoxious
types; even the most well-intentioned of the gang are not particularly
easy to get along with. Personalities clash, communication flounders,
tempers flare, disaster ensues.
Peter Finch plays a British officer who's studiously trying to do the
right thing, even when the consequences will clearly be disastrous; the
Charge of the Light Brigade was probably his favorite bedtime reading.
His sergeant (played by an actor with a very round face that, together
with his official-desert-uniform short pants, made him look like
Pugsley Addams in the Boy Scouts) has a more pragmatic view of life,
and attempts by hook or by crook to avoid having to accompany his
superior officer on these death-or-glory adventures.
Ernest Borgnine does a fine turn as an oil-field worker who's been in
the sun a little too long; it takes a scene or three to figure out that
he's really around the bend, and the growing realization is very
disturbing - as is the feeling that it would be easier on everybody if
someone just knocked this guy over the head. [This story quickly brings
out one's atavistic instincts; it's possibly cathartic, but not alwyas
pleasant.]
Hardy Kruger is the odd man out, neither working on the oil rigs nor
for the oil company; he was just out to visit his brother, and at
first deals with the crash by staying as far away from the others as
he can. But, after a few days have passed and it becomes clear that no
rescue is in sight, he comes up with an idea: they could construct a
usable airplane from the wreckage of the original, and fly themselves
out of there.
Everyone else agrees that it's a crazy plan, but after all, what else
is there to do? So they set out to do it, using this particular
insanity as a sort of back-fire against the larger insanity they face
if they just lie there watching each other die...
The movie builds suspense very well, the characters are well-drawn, and
their interactions, growing frustrations, self-doubts and mistrust of
each other are all deftly presented. As the days pass and they grow
weaker and more decrepit, it's clear that every move they make costs
them dearly. [Even with all this growing agony, the movie does pull a
few punches over the book - which had the advantage that it could
simply tell the reader how awful things were, without having to back it
up with makeup and special effects. As it was, I think the "blister
continuity team" did a very good job under the circumstances!]
Oh, one word of warning. There's a big secret that gets revealed
towards the end, and while the movie's still enjoyable if you know
about it ahead of time, it's much more fun to be surprised. So be vewy,
vewy quiet. ;-)
If one were to put on a "survival epic" film festival, this one might
fit in very well with "Flight of the Eagle" or "The Red Tent" in the
"best-laid plans" category, or perhaps it could be paired with "Alive!"
for a sort of compare-and-contrast lesson. Anyway, it's worth catching.
(I saw it on AMC - haven't found it in the video stores, fwiw.)
-b
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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139.1 | Available on tape | KOLFAX::WIEGLEB | Who is 'The Loneliest Monk'? | Tue Apr 13 1993 16:24 | 10 |
| I have noticed this in video stores in years past, so I know it has at
least been released to tape.
Does AMC publish a schedule of their movies? Their films are not
listed among the alphabetized "cable films" section in the back of the
TV Guide, and trying to search through the whole damned magazine on a
weekly basis to find where the good stuff is on AMC becomes a bit
gruesome.
- Dave
|
139.2 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Tue Apr 13 1993 16:35 | 16 |
| I don't know whether AMC publishes a listing - it'd come in handy,
though, wouldn't it? (The only consolation is that, once they air
something, they tend to repeat it - though at odd hours, sometimes -
for the next several weeks...)
The TV supplement in the Sunday "Telegraph" includes a "non-premium-
cable-movies" section (in addition to their alphabetized list of
premium-channel movies), and I _think_ the AMC films are listed there;
you still have to scan through it, but it's a lot easier scanning seven
days' worth of movies than seven days' worth of everything.
If the movie in question has a four-star rating, the 'Guide will list
it in their "4-star section" up front, but if it only gets 3.5 stars,
you're out of luck. ;-)
-b
|
139.3 | There is an AMC guide | HUMOR::EPPES | I'm not making this up, you know | Thu Apr 15 1993 19:32 | 6 |
| RE AMC listings: Yes, AMC publishes a guide that you can subscribe to for,
I think, $11.95 a year. I recently decided to get it. If you watch AMC enough,
you'll come across blurbs for their guide. I'll try to check it at home and
post the relevant info.
-- Nina
|
139.4 | a fine movie.... | 60591::VISSER | Evolution? who needs it?! | Fri Apr 16 1993 03:05 | 13 |
| RE: .0
The book's author is Elleston Trevor, one of the pseudynoms of Adam
Hall, who wrote the Quiller books. He is one of my more favourite
authors.
I rented this movie just last week (watching it for the fifth? sixth?
time), and, much as I would be able to write a review like that in .0,
I don't have that descriptive style. All I can say is, I agree!
cheers
..klaas..
|
139.6 | | VIA::LILCBR::COHEN | | Mon Apr 19 1993 10:58 | 4 |
|
I remember seeing this in the movie theater as a youngster. Yes, the
surprise secret is quite a kicker... Especially the reactions of all
concerned. Regardless, a solid movie of this sort.
|
139.7 | Often on British TV | 42443::BUXTONR | | Sat Aug 21 1993 19:29 | 30 |
| From Halliwell's Film Guide...
A cargo passenger plane crashes in the desert, and the survivors try to
avert disaster. Achingly slow character adventure: an all-star cast
works desperately hard but the final flight of the rebuilt plane seems
almost an anticlimax after the surfeit of personal melodramatics.
w Lukas Heller, novel Ellerston Trevor d Robert Aldrich ph Joseph
Biroc m Frank de Vol
James Stewart, Richard Attenborough, Hardy Kruger, Peter Finch, Dan
Duryea, Ernest Borgnine, Ronald Fraser (the seargeant), Christian
Marquand, George Kennedy.
US 1965 149m De Luxe - TCF Associates and Aldrich AAN: Ian Bannen
--oOo--
The credits mention the tragic death of a pilot during the making of
the film...Presumably an accident during shooting the final scenes.
Another interesting feature is the absence of female characters. Apart
from one short dream-sequence of a belly-dancer, no woman appears.
I enjoyed it. Halliwell gives it one star: drawing attention to minor
point of merit.
Bucko...
|
139.8 | It was the dean of stunt pilots | 58633::MCRAM | Marshall Cram DTN 631-7162 | Sun Aug 22 1993 23:04 | 17 |
| <<< Note 139.7 by 42443::BUXTONR >>>
-< Often on British TV >-
<< The credits mention the tragic death of a pilot during the making of
<< the film...Presumably an accident during shooting the final scenes.
This wasn't just any pilot, it was Paul Mantz who was the most famous
and experienced stunt pilot in movie history. He had done the flying
for dozens of epics. Very ironic considering the theme of the movie,
and it ruins this one for me....
Marshall
|
139.9 | 9.5 out of 10... | CDROM::SHIPLEY | I'll be back for breakfast | Tue Jan 04 1994 14:46 | 15 |
|
I saw this film in England in 1967 when I think it was first released
and it ranks with me as one of my favourite films. It came over to
me as a very "realistic" movie, i.e. I could believe that the plane
reconstruction was physically, though maybe not aerodynamically,
possible and the acting was, to me, top rate. I rewatch this movie
about every 5 years and still get enjoyment from it.
Re back a few...
Boston Sunday Globe TV Guide lists AMC films in its
cable movies section.
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