The desire to avoid thinking about how safety gets fed into the industry meat-grinder perhaps explains why we don’t see too many airliner-based disaster movies these days. It’s interesting that during the heyday of air travel, when it was as well-regulated, safe and comfortable as it’s ever going to be, Hollywood brought out so many hair-raising airplane movies.
Way back in 1954 John Wayne got the ball rolling (or should I say the crippled plane flying?) with his production of The High and the Mighty, about a disgraced co-pilot (Wayne) who has to step up when the airliner he’s on loses an engine mid-way through their Hawaii to California run, and the pilot (Robert Stack) loses his marbles. With an all-star cast of characters and more dramatic backstories than you can count, the film eventually set the stage for a whole host of 70’s disaster epics, especially the Airport series that began with the megahit Airport in 1970 and ended on a flat note with The Concorde: Airport ‘79. The cycle would return to its roots when Airplane! (1980) directly parodied The High and the Mighty to hilarious effect (and as an added homage included Robert Stack in its all-star supporting cast).
Before audience demand for airplane disaster flicks crashed and burned, TV producers decided to get in on the act. For some people, the idea of a machine weighing several hundred tons flying miles above the earth seems unnatural, if not downright uncanny. Here are two TV movies from the ‘70s that add supernatural horror to an already uncanny, unnerving situation.
Now Playing: The Horror at 37,000 Feet (1973)
Pros: Features an "all-star" cast of familiar faces from the '60s and '70s
Cons: The “horror” is a big letdown
Pros: Features an "all-star" cast of familiar faces from the '60s and '70s
Cons: The “horror” is a big letdown
This CBS TV movie starts out like so many disaster pictures of the period, with an assortment of passengers from different walks of life (an architect, an ex-priest, a businessman, an actor, a doctor, etc.) assembling at London’s Heathrow airport to board a special red-eye flight to New York. There are only about 10 passengers sharing the very spacious 747 cabin, as it’s mainly a cargo flight.
As some of the characters' backstories are explored, we learn that most of the cargo hold contains pieces of an old abbey that wealthy architect Alan O’Neill (Roy Thinnes) and his English wife Sheila (Jane Merrow) are transporting to New York to reassemble at their mansion (the abbey was part of Sheila’s ancestral estate). Also on the flight is Mrs. Pinder (Tammy Grimes), an English busybody who opposed the O’Neill’s plans to break up the abbey, and who threatens to sue them in U.S. court in a last ditch effort.
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Flight engineer Hawley doesn't like the selection of frozen entrees. |
The next shoe to drop is in the cargo hold, where things are loudly banging around. A stewardess (Darleen Carr) who is preparing passenger meals in the galley next to the cargo hold is freaked out by strange noises, electrical power surges, and ice forming next to the cargo hatch. When the Captain and the flight engineer (Russell Johnson) go down to investigate, all heck breaks loose.
The problem with The Horror is that it’s not all that horrible, or even very spooky. Given the made-for-TV budget limitations, what we get is some weird music, some disembodied chanting, freezing ice, and something that looks like liquified silly putty that bubbles up from the plane’s lower decks.
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Paul toasts his fellow passengers for joining Satan's Mile High Club. |
The other problem with The Horror is that it shamelessly telegraphs its climax. When we learn that Paul Kovalik (William Shatner) is a defrocked priest who has lost his faith and prefers anesthetizing himself with alcohol to facing his inner demons, we know for certain that he will have to redeem himself by facing the actual demons that have taken over the plane.
Paul Winfield is also on hand as the prim Dr. Enkala, the requisite voice of science and reason. His role is to hem, haw, look concerned, and be pretty much useless as panic takes over.
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"Oh Mighty Old Ones, we humbly offer up this Chatty Cathy to you... A $29.99 value at finer department stores!" |
In an odd scene, the desperate group decides that their only chance is to offer a sacrifice to the Old Ones to get them to back off. At first it looks as if they’re going to go after the helpless little girl, but instead snatch her doll away to dress it up in a scarf and a lock of Mrs. O’Neill’s hair. Then they offer it up to the bubbling green slime to propitiate the evil entities. Yikes!
The writers were obviously trying to elevate the proceedings with a serious message about the weakness of science and reason in the absence of faith, or something like that, but at this particular point their credibility with me bubbled away like so much demonic silly putty. They needed to invest a little less in the cliched message and a little more in a scarier supernatural menace. But that’s just me -- your results may vary.
Where to find it: A decent streaming upload can be found here, or the DVD here.
Now Playing: The Ghost of Flight 401 (1978)
Pros: Generates nail-biting suspense in recreating a real-life airliner crash; Cast is top-notch
Cons: The ghostly scenes are creepy, but too brief; Much of the movie centers around various employees trying to convince the airline executive played by Gary Lockwood that the hauntings are real
Pros: Generates nail-biting suspense in recreating a real-life airliner crash; Cast is top-notch
Cons: The ghostly scenes are creepy, but too brief; Much of the movie centers around various employees trying to convince the airline executive played by Gary Lockwood that the hauntings are real
Ghost aired on NBC in February of 1978. Based on the book by John G. Fuller, it is based on the real life crash of Eastern Airlines flight 401 in the Florida Everglades on December 29, 1972. The pilots and flight engineer were all killed, but 8 out of the 10 attendants and 67 (out of 163) passengers survived.
While the producers changed the name of the airline and many of the characters for the movie, it provides a nail-biting and apparently pretty accurate depiction of the run up to and aftermath of the crash. In this case, something very small -- an indicator light for the nose landing gear -- caused an enormous tragedy. When it fails to light up on their approach into Miami International Airport, the Captain (played by Russell Johnson in his second TV air disaster/horror movie of the decade) dispatches flight engineer Dom Cimoli (Ernest Borgnine) to the “hellhole” underneath the cockpit to try to visually determine if the gear is deployed or not.
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Kim Basinger appears as flight attendant Prissy Frasier |
The movie also accurately depicts the heroic efforts of an airboat operator (Robert "Bud" Marquis in real life) who was out hunting frogs in the vicinity, and who rescued many of the passengers.
Somehow Cimoli survives the initial crash but dies of his injuries later at the hospital. Borgnine as Cimoli adds poignancy to the story, portraying a very likeable, selfless colleague (he trades with another engineer for the fatal flight) and a loving husband. Carol Rossen is also effective as Cimoli’s wife, who has a bad feeling about the upcoming flight, but can’t talk her straight-arrow husband into calling in sick.
Most of the post-crash part of the movie is Gary Lockwood’s, playing Jordan Evanhower, a former pilot, close friend of the Cimolis, and an executive with the airline. Evanhower is a man caught between loyalty to his bosses and his good friends when those friends -- attendants and even experienced pilots -- report that Cimoli is still reporting for duty on various flights.
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The ghost of Dom Cimoli reports for duty with an important message about the virtues of recycling. |
Fans of straight out horror may not find that much to whet their appetites here, as the ghost makes only a few brief (but effective) appearances. Much of the movie is about company politics and Evanhower’s soul-searching. Still, it provides some very suspenseful scenes of a disaster in the making, and the ostensibly true story is intriguing.
A posting in IMDb’s Trivia section maintains that the claims made in John G. Fuller’s source book have all been debunked. Other user posts on the movie’s page assert otherwise. Whatever you believe, The Ghost of Flight 401 is a tight drama with some very good performances and a couple of genuine chills thrown in for good measure.
Where to find it: A watchable streaming upload can be found here.
Tuned in to see your thoughts on that Shatner pic and found an undiscovered Borgnine - call that a win! Thanks for the latter and good to see your thoughts on the former so glad not the only one to sit through it...
ReplyDeleteThe Horror at 37,000 Feet has its fans, but I couldn't get past the over-the-top script and emoting, not to mention the underwhelming Horror itself when it's finally revealed. Ghost of Flight 401 is far more atmospheric and nail-biting, but unfortunately the Youtube copy, while watchable, is soft-looking.
DeleteComing to this late, but wanted to point out that “Airplane!” was based not on “The High and the Mighty,” but on 1957’s “Zero Hour!” (And yes, “Zero Hour!” also contains an exclamation point in its title.) The makers of “Airplane!” acquired the remake rights to “Zero Hour!” and lifted some of the earlier film’s dialogue verbatim.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the correction! Airplane! is indeed a hysterical re-working of Zero Hour!, and seeing those two films back to back makes a great air disaster double feature. I wonder if Stack was recruited for Airplane! at least in part for his memorable appearance in the similarly themed The High and the Mighty?
DeleteYou’re probably right about Stack. Wikipedia states he was hired because of “The High and the Mighty.” Last year I read the oral history of “Airplane!” but I don’t recall whether they hired him specifically because of that earlier role or just because he was part of that older generation of buttoned-up leading men.
ReplyDeleteAnd, of course, there are bits of other airplane tales besides “Zero Hour!” In the mix. Maureen McGovern’s singing nun is spoofing Helen Reddy’s character from “Airport ‘75,” and apparently the “white zone/red zone” exchange is dialogue cribbed from the original “Airport” novel.
I was so busy, “well, actually”-ing that I failed to mention “The Horror at 37,000 Feet.” I don’t think I saw the initial telecast, but it and the other ‘70s made-for-TV horror movies were rebroadcast as part of the “late movies” that ABC and CBS ran after local news back in the days when Johnny Carson was the only late-night talk show in town.
I remembered it being pretty creepy when I was a kid staying up after my parents had gone to bed, but it doesn’t hold up as well as “A Cold Night’s Death” or “Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark.”
I don't have any specific recollection of seeing Horror at 37,000 Feet when it was first broadcast, but, considering I was all in on made-for-TV horror movies at the time, I probably caught a rebroadcast like you. I agree, in spite of a promising cast it doesn't hold up all that well. (By the way, if you haven't run across it already, I reviewed A Cold Night's Death here -- https://www.filmsfrombeyond.com/2023/01/that-70s-sci-fi-tv-movie-2-cold-nights.html )
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