I cannot recall the first time I watched Airport. But I know that it was a very, very long time ago, and that I absolutely loved every moment of it, from the incongruously brilliant casting of Dean Martin as an airline pilot, the heavy banged beauty of Jaqueline Bisset, to the stowaway with a heart of gold, Helen Hayes.

I think it’s difficult for us to realise how important Airport was not only in igniting the massive popularity of disaster films in the 70s, but also how it defined many of the parameters of successive disaster films, like The Towering Inferno and The Poseidon Adventure. What Airport made abundantly clear was that audiences wanted human stories, conflicts between characters that they could relate to, and imagine themselves in, whilst the disaster unfolded.

It also set the premise that the actual disaster did not have to take place until the film was well underway, and the characters were very much established so the audience could feel their losses more deeply.

Airport follows events which surround the workings of a fictional Chicago based airport. Mel Bakersfield (Burt Lancaster) struggles to fund the expansion of the airport, whilst dealing with a deeply troubled marriage, and his love for his coworker, Tanya Livingston (Jean Seberg). Other stories lead up to DO Guerrero (Van Heflin), a man who has failed in almost every endeavour in he has pursued, and has now decided to blow up an airplane so that he can claim airplane death insurance. Will those involved, both on the ground, and in the air, be able to save the airline passengers and Guerrero?

Airport has been maligned and parodied many times since its release over five decades ago. Not surprising, as the film was a cultural phenomenon, grossing 128 million dollars at the box office, and being nominated for nine Oscars, winning one for Best Supporting Actress for Helen Hayes (yas Queen).

Although Burt Lancaster himself called it “a piece of junk”, and Pauline Kael in her usual cutting fashion characterised it as “…bland entertainment of the old school…”, Variety found its best qualities to be redeeming enough to describe it as, “…a handsome, often dramatically involving $10 million epitaph to a bygone brand of filmmaking.” And I think that’s the charm of this film, it bridged the gap between classic Hollywood with its many cast members who had become stars a decade or two before; and a new breed of film that as Christopher Null wrote, “…is still going strong…”.

This is my first contribution to my and Dubsism’s the Second Disaster Blogathon.

A couple of years ago I got nostalgic for the Airport movies and binge-watched them from a set I got from the library. For me, Airport ’75, with flight attendant Karen Black flying the 747 while they try to drop Chuck Heston into the cockpit is still the gold standard, but you can’t not like the original that started it all.
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I have the dvd boxset of all of the movies, as well 🙂 Yes I think that one has the most intensity and is really a 70s disaster film at its peak (wink wink), but the original will always be my favourite.
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Loved reading your take on this Gabriela, reviewed this film franchise and was missing it already.. so hoping to read your thoughts on the others.
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Thanks Gill ❤ So glad you enjoyed my take on it. Yes hopefully in the future I’ll get around to reviewing the others 🙂
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I so envy you, you really have some treats in store.. would recommend them all, but my fave is Airport 77.. you can probably guess why just reading this plot. Will definitely have to revisit this series…
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Jack Lemmon is so good in that! And Olivia de Havilland! Love it!
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I reviewed it for Lemmon’s blogathon a while back.. what a cast!
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I like all the Airport movies – I can’t help myself! This one I’ve only seen once, and it was some time ago. Thanks to your fab review, I’ll be watching it again soon. Like you said, it bridges the gap between classic Hollywood and a newer Hollywood. I absolutely love Helen Hayes in this film.
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This is one of those movies that’s pure fun. It’s also a well-crafted movie. Love the split-screen thing, and Alfred Nemwna’s score is fantastic. The cast is good, too (I thought Maureen Stapleton gave the best performance in the movie).
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Yes. That’s why you watch it, for the entertainment factor and the glossy production values. Oh absolute. She and Helen Hayes are superb in it.
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