Airplane!
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| Airplane! | |
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Airplane! theatrical poster |
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| Directed by | Jim Abrahams David Zucker Jerry Zucker |
| Produced by | Jon Davison Howard W. Koch |
| Written by | Jim Abrahams David Zucker Jerry Zucker |
| Starring | Robert Hays Julie Hagerty Leslie Nielsen Robert Stack Lloyd Bridges Peter Graves Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Lorna Patterson |
| Music by | Elmer Bernstein |
| Cinematography | Joseph F. Biroc |
| Editing by | Patrick Kennedy |
| Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
| Release date(s) | 27 June 1980 |
| Running time | 88 min. |
| Country | |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $3,500,000 (estimated) |
| Followed by | Airplane II: The Sequel |
| All Movie Guide profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
Airplane! is an American comedy film, first released on 27 June 1980, produced, directed, and written by David Zucker, Jim Abrahams, and Jerry Zucker. Airplane! starred Robert Hays, Julie Hagerty, Leslie Nielsen, Robert Stack, Lloyd Bridges, Peter Graves, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Lorna Patterson. For release in Australia and the Philippines, Airplane! was re-titled as Flying High.
Airplane! is a spoof of the disaster movie genre. It is unique among film parodies in that Airplane! (originally designed for a 20-minute sketch) is a virtual remake of the 1957 Canadian airplane disaster movie Zero Hour! The earlier film featured Dana Andrews in the role of Lt. Striker, for instance, and Airplane! includes numerous jokes and gags that derive directly from the 1957 film.[1] The plot device of the food poisoning incident, which figures prominently in the story line of Airplane!, also came from Zero Hour!
Airplane II: The Sequel, first released on December 10, 1982, attempted to tackle the science fiction film genre, though there was still emphasis on the general theme of disaster films. Although most of the cast reunited for the sequel, the writers and directors of Airplane! chose not to be involved.
In the short term, Airplane! received slight recognition. Abrahams, Zucker, and Zucker received the 1981 Writers Guild award for Best Comedy Adapted from Another Medium, Jill Whelan was nominated as Best Young Comedienne by the Young Artist Awards, and the film was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture (Musical/Comedy) and a BAFTA for Best Screenplay.[2]
Over time, however, Airplane! has received significant recognition. It was voted as the 10th-funniest American comedy in AFI's "100 Years... 100 Laughs" list and it ranked number 6 on Bravo's "100 Funniest Movies".
Airplane! also has the distinction of being one of the only PG-rated films to feature a topless woman, albeit a very brief scene while passengers on the plane are in chaos. By today's standards, the movie would've likely gotten an R rating just for the scene, or even removed it altogether. The PG-13 rating, which has very rarely been used during a topless scene, was not in existence when the movie was released.
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When the pilots of a commercial airliner suffer food poisoning after eating their in-flight meals, it falls to Ted Striker (Robert Hays), an ex-fighter pilot, to conquer his fear of flying, fly the airliner to its destination, and land it safely. Adding to the complex psychological challenge for Striker is the fact that his ex-girlfriend Elaine (Julie Hagerty) is a flight attendant on the ill-fated aircraft. Nielsen portrays a doctor on board.
The plot of Airplane! is a well-traveled one. The story of an in-flight medical emergency, caused by food poisoning, with the passengers being rescued by a former military pilot shows up in the 1956 CBC TV movie Flight into Danger, and then in the 1957 Paramount Pictures feature movie Zero Hour! The teleplay and screenplay for these films were penned by Arthur Hailey. Hailey and John Castle then turned the story into a 1958 novel Flight Into Danger: Runway Zero-Eight.
Airplane! is very close to Zero Hour!, although Zucker, Abrahams, and Zucker transform the original drama into a comedy. As they explain in the DVD commentary for Airplane!, they discovered Zero Hour! when they were taping late-night commercials to spoof. They then bought the rights to it. Airplane! lifts its major characters and most of its story line from Zero Hour! even at times recreating the earlier film scene for scene, and line for line. Many of the best known lines of Airplane! are repeated verbatim, for example, "Can you face some unpleasant facts?" and "Looks like I picked the wrong week to quit smoking." The "wrong week" line becomes a running gag— as the emergency escalates, so does the potency of the drug ("Looks like I picked the wrong week to quit smoking/drinking/amphetamines/sniffin' glue.") Even the odd sports cameo remains intact. In Zero Hour!, the cameo is by Elroy "Crazy Legs" Hirsch; in Airplane! it is basketball star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
Airplane! uses elements from the films Airport and Airport 1975, which are also based from novels and screenplays written by Arthur Hailey. The elements lifted from Airport 1975 included the guitar song — in Airport 1975 sung by a nun (Helen Reddy); in Airplane! sung by flight attendant (Lorna Patterson) who borrows the guitar from a nun (Maureen McGovern) — and the sick little girl for whom the guitar song is played — Linda Blair in Airport 1975 and Jill Whelan in Airplane!. The twist to the borrowed material in Airplane! has the well-meaning singer swinging the guitar repeatedly into the little girl's life-critical intravenous drip and unplugging it.
- Robert Hays as Ted Striker
- Julie Hagerty as Elaine Dickinson
- Leslie Nielsen as Dr. Rumack
- Robert Stack as Captain Rex Kramer
- Lloyd Bridges as Steve McCroskey
- Peter Graves as Captain Clarence Oveur
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as Roger Murdock and himself
- Lorna Patterson as Randy
- Stephen Stucker as Johnny Henshaw
- Otto Pilot as himself (an inflatable doll)
- Frank Ashmore as Victor Basta, the plane's navigator
- Jonathan Banks as Gunderson, air traffic controller
- Joyce Bulifant as Mrs. Davis
- Rossie Harris as Joey, the boy shown the cockpit
- James Hong as the Japanese General who commits hara-kiri rather than listen to Ted's story
- Howard Honig as Jack
- Cyril O'Reilly as a soldier in the VA hospital
- Nicholas Pryor as Mr. Hammen, a sick passenger
- Kenneth Tobey as Air Controller Neubauer
- Herb Voland as Air Controller Macias
- Jill Whelan as Lisa Davis, the sick little girl
- Jason Wingreen as Dr. Brody
Several actors were cast specifically to spoof on their established media images: Leslie Nielsen, Robert Stack, and Lloyd Bridges were well-known for their many adventurous, no-nonsense tough-guy characters. Stack's role as the captain who loses his nerve in one of the earliest airline "disaster" films, The High and the Mighty (1954), is directly spoofed in Airplane! as is Lloyd Bridges's 1970-1971 television role as airport manager Jim Conrad in San Francisco International Airport. Also, Peter Graves was previously in the made-for-TV-movie SST: Death Flight, in which an SST was unable to land due to an emergency.
Because Airplane! was a low-budget film, little money was available for hiring extras. As a result, the writers and directors, as well as members of their family, showed up in a number of cameos. David and Jerry Zucker appear as two ground crew members who accidentally direct a plane into a terminal. Jim Abrahams is one of the many religious zealot characters scattered throughout the film. Charlotte Zucker, who is David and Jerry's mother, is the woman attempting to apply makeup in the plane as it violently shifts while their sister, Susan Breslau, is the second ticket agent at the airport. Jim Abraham's mother is the woman initially sitting next to Dr. Rumack.
Several other cameos add to the humor through against-type casting. Ethel Merman shows up briefly as a soldier who is convinced he's Ethel Merman. This was Merman's last film appearance. Barbara Billingsley, best known as June Cleaver from Leave It to Beaver, makes a brief appearance as a woman who announces that she "speaks jive" and would be willing to translate. Maureen McGovern not only appears in a cameo as Sister Angelina (a spoof of the nun in Airport 1975), but also as a play on her involvement as the singer of the Oscar-winning songs for big-budget disaster films, The Poseidon Adventure (1972) ("The Morning After") and The Towering Inferno (1974) ("We May Never Love Like This Again"). Jimmie Walker cameos as the man opening the "hood" of the plane and checking the oil level before takeoff (Walker also had a minor role in the 'serious' air disaster film, The Concorde: Airport '79).
Howard Jarvis, the property tax reformer and author of the then-famous California Proposition 13, plays a role as the rider in the taxi that Striker is driving in the movie's opening scene. Striker pulls to a curb at the airport and leaves the cab to start trailing Elaine, telling Jarvis he'll be right back, and then as an afterthought reaches in and flips on the meter. Jarvis is seen again still sitting in the cab shortly after the plane has taken off, and in the final scene after the end credits: Jarvis appears calm but stressed, the meter having rung up over $100.00, and he states, "Well, I'll give him another twenty minutes; but that's it!".
Several members of the cast in minor roles went on to better known roles. Gregory Itzin, who appears as one of the "religious zealots," later played President Charles Logan in the FOX series 24. David Leisure, who played one of the Hare Krishna, went on to fame as Joe Isuzu before appearing as Charlie Dietz in the sitcom Empty Nest.
Airplane! was the first film written and directed by the trio of Jim Abrahams, David Zucker and Jerry Zucker; previously they had written The Kentucky Fried Movie, which was directed by John Landis. The filming took 34 days, mostly during August 1979.
Robert Stack initially played his role differently than what the directors had in mind. They played for him a tape of impressionist John Byner "doing" Robert Stack. According to the producers, Stack was "doing an impression of John Byner doing an impression of Stack."
Airplane! could be considered a major hit when it was released. Even though the budget of the film was about US $3.5 million, it earned over US $80 million at the box office and another US $40 million in rentals.[citation needed] The directors were initially apprehensive due to mediocre response at one of the pre-screenings, but the film made back its entire budget in its first weekend of release.
Leslie Nielsen saw a major boost to his career, and since Airplane! has specialized in playing clueless deadpan bumblers, most notably in the six-episode TV series Police Squad! and its film follow-ups, the three Naked Gun movies. Lloyd Bridges and Robert Stack saw similar shifts in their public image, though to lesser degrees.
In 2000, the American Film Institute listed Airplane! as #10 on its list of the 100 funniest American films. In the same year, readers of Total Film magazine voted it the second greatest comedy film of all time. It also came second in the British 50 Greatest Comedy Films poll on Channel 4, beaten by Monty Python's The Life of Brian. Some critics have claimed that the movie's most "important" achievement was in bringing to an end the Airport series of movies, which could no longer be taken seriously.[citation needed]
Leslie Nielsen's line, "I am serious...And don't call me Shirley," was 79th on AFI's list of the best 100 movie quotes. The popularity of Otto, the inflatable pilot, is such that he has his own page on the Internet Movie Database, even though he hasn't appeared in any other films.[3]
Airplane! had an interesting reception outside of the U.S. too. Its translated titles carry sly commentary on the nature of the film itself. For example, in Australia it is titled Flying High; in Germany, it became The Unbelievable Flight in a Crazy Airplane (Die unglaubliche Reise in einem verrückten Flugzeug) [4]; in French, Is There a Pilot on the Plane? (Y a-t-il un pilote dans l'avion?) [5]; in Portuguese (for release in Brazil), Fasten your seatbelts,the pilot is gone (Apertem os cintos, o piloto sumiu); in Italian, it's the craziest plane in the world (L'aereo più pazzo del mondo); in Finnish, it's Hei, me lennetään! (Hey, we're flying!); in Spanish, it was Aterriza como puedas (Land as you can) in Spain and ¿Y dónde está el piloto? (And where is the pilot?) in Latin America; in Norway it became Help, we're flying (Hjelp, vi flyr).
Airplane! is one of a handful of movies to earn a 100% "fresh" rating at Rotten Tomatoes.
MaximOnline.com named the airplane crash in Airplane! #4 on its list of "Most Horrific Movie Plane Crashes."
- The opening sequence parodies Jaws. The music (composed by Elmer Bernstein) during the opening is a spoof of John Williams' music from Jaws.
- The argument between the Los Angeles International Airport LAX announcers over the PA is taken from the Arthur Hailey novel Airport, and is voiced by the two actual LAX PA announcers at that time.
- The marshaller accidentally directing the plane to crash into an arrival hall parodies the film Silver Streak, as well as It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World.
- The side plot of the ill-fated George Zipp (one of the soldiers who died in the wartime crash that makes Ted afraid to fly) is "paid off" in a pep talk given to Ted by Rumack; the pep talk is a parody of the famous "Win one for the Gipper" speech from the 1940 film Knute Rockne, All-American. While Rumack is delivering his monologue, a version of the Notre Dame Victory March can be heard as the background music (it is also played over the closing credits).
- Captain Oveur asking Joey "Have you ever been in a Turkish prison?" is a reference to the movie Midnight Express.
- The first wartime flashback parodies both Casablanca and Saturday Night Fever, and a later flashback is similar to the famous kiss scene in From Here to Eternity (although the filmmakers deny having seen the film and say they had either seen some stills without realizing what film it was from or came up with it on their own).[citation needed]
- During the wartime flashback, the jukebox begins playing Stayin' Alive by The Bee Gees, which is sped up by 10% to add to the comedic element of the Saturday Night Fever parody.
- The in-flight movie (of a crashing airliner, no less) is a clip from the horror movie The Bees.
- While in a flashback scene in a hospital, one (male) soldier thinks that he is Ethel Merman and begins to sing "Everything's Coming up Roses" from the musical Gypsy. The singer in the movie actually is Merman and marks her final film appearance before her death.
| Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- Rumack's last line, "I just want to tell you both good luck. We're all counting on you," which is repeated three times in the movie (including after they are safely on the ground), is Nielsen's final line in Scary Movie 3, also a Zucker film.
- The band Gomez has referenced characters from this movie with a song called "Rex Kramer" on their album In Our Gun and a B-side titled "Steve McCroski" which appears on their album Abandoned Shopping Trolley Hotline.
- The TV show Family Guy makes a reference to the film in the episode "Prick Up Your Ears" when it depicts Stewie in shock and being slapped by Brian and Chris. A line forms similar to the film where other various characters in the show are holding bats, guns, and other weapons waiting for their turn to get Stewie out of shock. In the Season 5 episode Airport '07, many scenes from Airplane! are parodied, and prominently feature musical cues from Elmer Bernstein's original score. The hour-long Star Wars episode entitled "Blue Harvest" has a scene in which Peter and Brian (playing Han Solo and Chewbacca) are piloting the Milenium Falcon, and Leslie Nielsen comes into the cockpit and says "I just want to tell you both good luck. We're all counting on you,"
- The film is referenced in the parody videos Conversations with the SSS in the Anime Series MADLAX.
- The introduction banter over the loudspeakers in the beginning of the film has been sampled by the hip-hop group Deltron 3030 on their self-titled album, for a track entitled "Positive Contact."
- Ted Striker's "drinking problem" (pouring drinks down his face) that is shown several times throughout the movie is copied by the pointy haired boss in an episode of Dilbert, where Dilbert and his colleagues are onboard an airplane. The boss, sitting outside the plane on the wing, then comments "I wonder what the movie is".
- In one insert of the comic Candorville, when Lemont Brown notices that his future self used the line "But that is not important right now," he asks the future Lemont: "Surely, I'm not still telling Airplane jokes 50 years from now," his future self replies by screwing up Dr. Rumack's famous line by saying "Don't call me 'fifty', I mean 'Shirley'."
- In the game Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare, the loading video played before the last (and bonus) mission (which involves a hostage situation on an airplane) contains a conversation between two SAS personnel: "We're going deep, and we're going hard." "Surely you can't be serious." "I am serious, and don't call me Shirley."
- The opening of Episode 39 of The Totally Rad Show is a scene from Airplane!
- ^ Abrahams, Jim; David Zucker; Jerry Zucker. (2000). Airplane! DVD audio commentary [DVD]. Paramount Pictures.
- ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0080339/awards
- ^ Otto (III) at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ http://german.imdb.com/title/tt0080339/releaseinfo
- ^ http://german.imdb.com/title/tt0080339/releaseinfo
- Airplane! at the Internet Movie Database
- Airplane! at Rotten Tomatoes
- Airplane! Script at Simply Scripts
- Airplane! Clip Crash Scene
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| David Zucker • Jim Abrahams • Jerry Zucker | |
| Collaborative works | The Kentucky Fried Movie • Airplane! • Top Secret! • Police Squad! • Ruthless People • The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! • Scary Movie 4 • Scary Movie 5 |
| David Zucker films | The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear • Naked Gun 33⅓: The Final Insult • High School High • BASEketball • Scary Movie 3 |
| Jim Abrahams films | Hot Shots! • Hot Shots! Part Deux • Jane Austen's Mafia! |
| Jerry Zucker films | Ghost • Rat Race |
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| 1980 •1981 •1982 •1983 •1984 •1985 •1986 •1987 •1988 •1989 |
Categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since April 2007 | Articles with unsourced statements since July 2007 | Articles with trivia sections from September 2007 | 1980 films | American films | Comedy films | Disaster films | English-language films | Films set on an airplane | Paramount films | Parody films