The disaster movie genre was still flying high when
Airport 1975 landed in theatres in (ironically) 1974. But, alas, the genre was already poised for a crash by the time
Airport '77 appeared. It's interesting that
Airport, the 1970 film based on Arthur Hailey's bestseller, spawned a trio of disaster movies (yes, there was also
The Concorde: Airport '79). Critics nor moviegoers considered
Airport a disaster movie, though it certainly contained the ingredients of what would become the standard formula.
Airport was embraced simply as a big-budget blockbuster. The "disaster movie" was officially born two years later when
The Poseidon Adventure turned into an unexpected smash. Though there were plenty of disaster pics before
Poseidon (e.g.,
The High and the Mighty back in the 1950s), Irwin Allen's waterlogged adventure justly gets credit for making disaster pics popular fare in the 1970s.
All of which brings us to our first feature:
Airport 1975. It has a scene or two in an airport and one of the stars is George Kennedy, the connecting thread in all four
Airport movies. Hey, that's good enough to slap the
Airport name on it!
Charlton Heston stars as Al Murdoch, an executive and former flight instructor for Columbia Airlines, who doesn't have time for meaningful conversation with his girlfriend, stewardess Nancy Pryor. He does have time for some quick hanky panky, but Nancy lets him know that's not going to happen. She wants to talk about the future of their relationship. (At this point, two things came to mind: (1) My wife convinced me that Nancy was going to deliver big news about being pregnant; (2) I was trying to get past the fact that Nancy was played by Karen Black, who played "crazy" exceptionally well in the classic made-for-TV movie
Trilogy of Terror).
I think this movie--more than any other--inspired the hilarious 1980 spoof
Airplane! The cast includes: Linda Blair as a little girl needing an organ transplant; Helen Reddy as a singing nun; Sid Caesar as a talkative bit actor; Myrna Loy as a lush; and Gloria Swanson as...herself. Plus, the flight crew includes TV all-stars Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. (
The FBI), Roy Thinnes (
The Invaders), and Erik Estrada (
CHiPs). Toss in Dana Andrews as a businessman pilot on the verge of a heart attack and you've got a cast for the ages.
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Karen Black in the breezy cockpit. |
The plot is pretty transparent, but skip this paragraph if you don't want to know it. I'll wait a second. OK, here we go: While flying a small plan during a nasty storm, Dana's businessman has a heart attack (surprise!) and his out-of-control plane makes a hole in the nose of the 747. Roy and Eric bite the big one and Efrem suffers injuries that prevent him from piloting. It's up to Nancy the stewardess to take the flight controls with some radio assistance from her crappy boyfriend.
Other than the joy of watching some classic movie stars in their twilight years,
Airport 1975 has little to offer--other than Karen Black. After some great early roles (e.g.,
Five Easy Pieces), Black was beginning to find good parts harder to find. Considering that she spends a good portion of
Airport 1975 in the cockpit on the radio, she delivers a believable performance worthy of a better movie. She made me temporarily forget how creepy she was in
Trilogy of Terror.
Our second feature,
Airport '77, is a definite upgrade. Jack Lemmon, sporting huge sideburns and a mustache, plays the pilot of a new luxury jet designed by James Stewart. It's the kind of plane I'd like to travel aboard, with bedrooms, a library, lounge, and even a built-in Pong game. The only downside is the exceptionally bright 1970s decor (I keep waiting for orange and purple to make a comeback...take a note HGTV). The passengers are all guests of Mr. Stewart, including: his estranged daughter (Pamela Bellwood from
Dynasty) and her son; businessman Chris Lee and his adulteress wife Lee Grant; Olivia de Havilland and Joseph Cotten as art patrons; singer Tom Sullivan; and engineer Darren McGavin. The only problem is that the crew includes some bad guys, led by Robert Foxworth and Monte Markham, who plan to hijack the plane and steal the precious art on board.
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Pilot Lemmon faces plenty
of problems. |
The thieves' plan goes horribly awry during a storm in the Bermuda Triangle and the jet crashes into the ocean. The result is a reasonably interesting mixture of
Airport and
The Poseidon Adventure. Some of it is silly, especially George Kennedy reassuring James Stewart with cliched lines like: "Don't worry, Phil, we'll get that plan up...in one piece." However, there are some exciting scenes such as when Lemmon and Lee try to release a buoy with a distress signal as the ocean water begins to crush the aircraft.
Though
Airport '77 made a tidy profit, it marked the beginning of the end for the disaster movie genre. Despite their big budgets,
The Swarm (1978),
Beyond the Poseidon Adventure (1979), and
When Time Ran Out (1980) all tanked at the boxoffice, effectively ending the disaster movie craze.