अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA grieving father boards a plane, threatening to detonate a bomb unless the man responsible for his daughter's death is found. The film follows the various passengers and their personal stor... सभी पढ़ेंA grieving father boards a plane, threatening to detonate a bomb unless the man responsible for his daughter's death is found. The film follows the various passengers and their personal storylines as the tense situation unfolds mid-flight.A grieving father boards a plane, threatening to detonate a bomb unless the man responsible for his daughter's death is found. The film follows the various passengers and their personal storylines as the tense situation unfolds mid-flight.
- Emma Morgan
- (as Dame Sybil Thorndike)
- Clara Forrester
- (as Jackie Lane)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
It's a real hard film to track down. Packed to the rafters with British acting talent, it has rarely been licensed to even be shown in the United Kingdom. I myself had to order a DVD copy from Australia, but the wait was very much worth it.
As has been noted by the very few reviews of the film on the internet, it's a British prototype disaster movie, but that in no way means this is cornball stuff, it's a very human and intelligent drama. Endfield's film is looking into how a number of people react differently when faced with the possibility of death, while it casts a scathing eye towards a society that creates someone like Ernest Tilley. How would you react if you faced impending death on board a plane? How would you react if your child was killed and the man responsible got away with it? Searching questions that of course don't bare thinking about, but that's why we have cinema, to let us escape into a dramatic world that paints possibilities for us.
The ream of character sub-plots are excellently performed by the huge cast, but it's Attenborough and Baker who shine brightest. The former has Tilley as hollowed and tragic, a man tipped over the edge, pain seeping from every pore. The latter has Captain Bardow as silky smooth, calm during crisis, it's an elegant portrayal by one of Britain's most under valued actors. Elsewhere, Endfield does a marvellous job of threading so many character strands together, making one successful whole and he deftly paces it and brings it in under 90, exposition free, minutes. The lovely title song is called Jetstream (a working title for the film), not Jet Storm as is listed on IMDb, and it's warbled by Marty Wilde (lyrics by Endfield) who also features in the cast.
An under seen British classic of entertaining substance, one that also has the requisite drama and suspense as it dangles its questions. 8/10
Yet here, Baker is second-billed in what's mostly an equal ensemble of passengers that he's the stalwart pilot of, trying to talk down psychotically hardboiled (first-billed) Richard Attenborough, who planted a bomb somewhere that could go off, sometime, because someone on board had killed his daughter in a hit-and-run accident years earlier...
Amongst the people caught inside the mostly one-set fuselage setting is Patrick Allen and Paul Carpenter as the more assertive alpha-males curbed by sophisticated Elizabeth Sellars and first-time stewardess Virginia Maskell, while feisty Diane Cilento ultimately teams with Baker as the most level-headed on board a flight that, thanks to the creative director, doesn't feel too much like a melodramatic stage-play...
Then again, the dialogue handed-off to separate passengers is intriguing enough for that expository aspect to work nicely alongside the random thrills and semi-suspenseful mainline - of what ultimately works more like a sublime TV-movie than a subdued big-screen spectacular.
A quick plot synopsis makes it sound very much like Airport, or The High and the Mighty, but Jet Storm is a very different type of film. It's not an adventure, or a soaper, or a suspenser. Although it does include a diverse group of passengers and a hidden bomb, it's not actually about whether the plane will be saved, or how. It's about how these people react to danger. And about how all of us SHOULD react to danger.
The cast of familiar British actors does a superb job. Richard Attenborough shines in his portrayal of a weak, confused man, who's slipped over the brink of bitterness, depression and madness. Harry Secombe adds a contrastingly jovial note. And a young Paul Eddington (best known from the much later Yes, Minister series) is interesting as a not-very-admirable husband.
We learn a lot about these various characters, but the real meat of the film is in how each of them reacts when faced with imminent danger and probable death. The film asks us not to worry so much about whether these people will die, but to consider how they choose to live. Do they meet fear and uncertainty with fortitude? Resourcefulness? Humor? Resignation? Or even indifference?
The film shows us that some of these responses are clearly better than others. It demonstrates that the fear of disaster is far worse than the disaster itself. This message makes Jet Storm more relevant today than when it was made. We can see how much wiser things were in the 1950s. A psychopath would have been able to walk up and easily place a bomb on an airliner... but we didn't allow that remote possibility to dominate our lives.
Jet Storm reminds us that risk is a part of life, but when we focus on that risk to the exclusion of everything else, we stop living. So while terrorism (of any sort) is sad, and crazy and reprehensible, giving in to terror is far more shameful.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThis movie was made under the slightly different title, "Jetstream" (some reports printing this as two words). It was altered to "Jet Storm" at the last minute. The song sung over the opening credits, however, is still called "Jetstream". No reason has ever been given for the change.
- गूफ़When Capt. Bardow is pleading with Tilley, he tells him that there are 32 human beings on board the airplane. In fact, there are only 30 people on board the plane, 8 members of the flight team (captain, co-pilot, engineer, navigator, radio man, stewardess, steward, and bartender/purser) and 22 others.
- भाव
Capt. Bardow: Mr Tilley you're a decent man, you must fight this madness with everything you've got.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Talkies: Remembering Stanley Baker: Talking Pictures with Glyn Baker (2019)
टॉप पसंद
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Der Tod hat Verspätung
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- Shepperton Studios, Studios Road, Shepperton, सरी, इंग्लैंड, यूनाइटेड किंगडम(studio: made at Shepperton Studios, England)
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- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
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