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The Amazing Howard Hughes

  • TV Movie
  • 1977
  • 3h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
699
YOUR RATING
The Amazing Howard Hughes (1977)
BiographyDrama

Howard Hughes is a driven man who amassed wealth and recognition as a Hollywood mover and shaker, aviation giant and man of mystery.Howard Hughes is a driven man who amassed wealth and recognition as a Hollywood mover and shaker, aviation giant and man of mystery.Howard Hughes is a driven man who amassed wealth and recognition as a Hollywood mover and shaker, aviation giant and man of mystery.

  • Director
    • William A. Graham
  • Writers
    • Noah Dietrich
    • John Gay
    • Bob Thomas
  • Stars
    • Tommy Lee Jones
    • Ed Flanders
    • James Hampton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    699
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William A. Graham
    • Writers
      • Noah Dietrich
      • John Gay
      • Bob Thomas
    • Stars
      • Tommy Lee Jones
      • Ed Flanders
      • James Hampton
    • 12User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos20

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    Top cast72

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    Tommy Lee Jones
    Tommy Lee Jones
    • Howard Hughes
    Ed Flanders
    Ed Flanders
    • Noah Dietrich
    James Hampton
    James Hampton
    • Wilbur Peterson
    Tovah Feldshuh
    Tovah Feldshuh
    • Katharine Hepburn
    Lee Purcell
    Lee Purcell
    • Billie Dove
    Jim Antonio
    Jim Antonio
    • George
    Sorrell Booke
    Sorrell Booke
    • Fiorello LaGuardia
    Marty Brill
    Marty Brill
    • Lewis Milestone
    Marla Carlis
    • Jane Russell
    Lee de Broux
    Lee de Broux
    • Jimmy
    • (as Lee Jones-de Broux)
    Roy Engel
    Roy Engel
    • Production Manager
    Arthur Franz
    Arthur Franz
    • Barnes
    Denise Galik
    Denise Galik
    • Shirley Whitehead
    • (as Denise Gal)
    Howard Hesseman
    Howard Hesseman
    • Jenks
    Tannis G. Montgomery
    Tannis G. Montgomery
    • Mrs. Hughes
    • (as Tannis Montgomery)
    Walter O. Miles
    • Gen. Hap Arnold
    Garry Walberg
    Garry Walberg
    • Henry J. Kaiser
    Carol Bagdasarian
    • Jean Peters
    • Director
      • William A. Graham
    • Writers
      • Noah Dietrich
      • John Gay
      • Bob Thomas
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    6.6699
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    Featured reviews

    blueboot

    Driven by vision

    that just about sums up this compelling portrayal of Howard Hughes. William Graham's direction presents a ruthless, cold and single-minded world of Hughes the entrepreneur. However, for all Hughes' shortcomings when relating to others, Graham allows Tommy Lee Jones to reveal the multi-billionaire had a heart of gold. Whereas people surrounding Hughes saw the coldness he projected, often to their own personal cost, Hughes would repay kindness in ways they never dreamt of.

    Such was the enigmatic nature of Hughes and his story has been told countless times by book or film the exact truth is never likely to be known as to the reasoning behind his complex and often contradictory actions. In his lifetime Hughes made fortunes in many ways, although the fact that his massive wealth was initially inherited is not glossed over. Nor are some of the more bizarre practises Hughes utilised - such as hiring people to sit by a telephone that would never ring; or the highly imaginative pointed sacking of a film director by sending the unfortunate man on a location hunt only to remove the entire film set, cast, crew, props, the lot, during the director's absence!!

    This work is well acted by Jones and the supporting cast. If you are looking to find out for the first time about one of the world's richest ever men then this is a good place to start as any. Effectively, this turns into a celluloid biography. You'll be fascinated by Hughes' pragmatic working methods but after seeing this its doubtful you'll come away liking the man. Graham's careful direction shows its not hard to see why once someone has accrued such vast wealth (to the point where money almost has no meaning) it becomes harder and harder to trust the people around you. On that basis its possible to see where Hughes' personal life fell apart, how he failed in love, and even to feel a tad of sympathy for him!
    9marky_atl

    MUCH better than (bleeech!) The Aviator!

    There's just no comparison between this excellent made-for-TV movie and the awful soap opera Aviator. And talk about casting... HRH was a long, tall (over 6') Texan with a southern drawl. So who does Scorsese pick? A short, blond, blue-eyed kid - di Caprio. On the other hand, Tommy Lee Jones was right on. Looked like Hughes, sounded like Hughes, etc, etc. Oh, and Ed Flanders was MUCH more believable in the role of Noah Dietrich than John Reilly.

    Both NetFlix and Blockbuster.com have it. If you prefer a chic flick with lots of romance and stories that focus about the women in his life, then Aviator wins. But if you really want to know about HRH, the Las Vegas acquisitions, the Glomar Explorer, etc, then The Amazing Howard Hughes is a far better choice.
    4jpcgillam

    A Solid but Underdeveloped Biography

    Tommy Lee Jones stars as Howard Hughes in a biopic spanning the life of the eccentric business magnate, from young hotshot mogul to notorious recluse. Hughes was such a fascinating character, possessed by a drive and idiosyncratic nature that brought him to the top but eventually took over in later years, and this contrast has provided the inspiration for many different retellings over the years.

    This version was originally made as a 2 part miniseries, and unfortunately tries to get too much in over the course of the runtime, ultimately just skimming the surface of the eventful, stranger than fiction life story. I think I must have watched the theatrical edit, which explains the slightly disjointed way it's told, jumping through the key points as if it's just ticking them off.

    Hughes goes from making a movie to becoming studio head to flying around the world, but the film never really elaborates on any of these remarkable achievements, anxious to move onto the next milestone and as a result getting quite monotonous after a while. I think even with the cut parts reinstated it still would have felt truncated, the format ultimately proving overambitious for a story of this size. The Aviator only covered the first half of Hughes' life, which made it feel much more developed and character driven.

    This film is much more event driven, hitting all of the milestones but giving enough insight into any of the motivations, which remain at a distance throughout. I think a lot of this is down to the writing, which doesn't do enough to draw out the dramatic stakes. A good example is the portrayal of Hughes' near fatal plane crash and subsequent legal battle with the TWA; in The Aviator this provides the majority of the second half, building tension as to whether the rapidly deteriorating Hughes is willing to testify, but in this version he just goes immediately and without conflict, which can't help but feel like a missed opportunity.

    Though Jones definitely looks the part, and it gave him a major career breakthrough, he never feels like he inhabits the character, which results in a flat performance that never gets to the heart of why Hughes behaved as he did. It might just be the limitations of the script, but Jones feels quite bland here, lacking the nervy, focused energy of Leonardo DiCaprio's take or the ragged, world weariness Jason Robards brought in Melvin and Howard.

    He's better while showing Hughes' increasingly harmful quirks, though, and these are the strongest moments, getting across the compulsive nature of this behaviour, and if the film had leaned into this more it would have felt more developed and involved that it was. The film was based on a book written by right hand man Noah Dietrich, which might explain the detachment factor, as it always feels like it's being presented from a distance. Dietrich is played by a superb Ed Flanders, who's great as the down to earth voice of reason who increasingly becomes sidelined as the years go by as his employer's mental state begins to break down.

    I though this dynamic was the best part of the whole film, given depth in a way none of the other relationships are, although it being Dietrich's account there's a definite undercurrent of bitterness to the way it's presented. Maybe the film was just made too soon after Hughes had died to really give a fully rounded portrayal of his story, lacking the hindsight later versions were able to have.

    The Amazing Howard Hughes never quite takes off, going on a whistlestop journey that touches all the bases without enough substance behind it.
    8richardchatten

    "Everybody has a price"

    Tommy Lee Jones put himself squarely on the map as a far more convincing Howard Hughes than Leonardo diCaprio in Martin Scorsese's hopelessly romantic and shamelessly inaccurate 'The Aviator' (with Tovah Feldshuh nothing like the caricature Cate Blanchett made of Katherine Hepburn), while America's number one weirdo's final descent into madness in which the world's richest man ended his days as a bearded, kleenex-wielding shuffling skeleton ironically suffering from malnutrition is also far better depicted.

    Hughes' most lasting contribution to film history was not actually the lousy movies he directed but as the back seat driver who wrecked RKO, a crime rarely even hinted at in the many films his antics inspired, but along with his reactionary politics should make his name live in infamy with all serious film buffs everywhere.
    8russellalancampbell

    Excellent Biopic

    This film has been and will continue to be compared to "The Aviator" - a film that frankly bored me. "The Amazing Howard Hughes" looked and felt real because it focused upon Hughes as a real life flesh and blood man and used few if any cinematic tricks. Tommy Lee Jones made a very credible Howard Hughes from his physique down to his accent.

    I am interested by the actual business dealings of Hughes and those around him rather than his marriages and affairs. Afterall, there have been many playboy millionaires in America's history but only one Howard Hughes. It wasn't the romances that made Hughes particularly interesting and this film didn't focus on them in the way "The Aviator" did. For me, this was a positive.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Tommy Lee Jones bagged the lead role playing Howard Hughes for US $25,000 when Warren Beatty turned down a US $1 million offer. Beatty later produced and starred in his own Howard Hughes biopic picture which was L'Exception à la règle (2016).
    • Goofs
      What is supposed to be the Hughes XF-11 aircraft is actually a WWII P-38 fighter (however, this is understandable since the real XF-11 would have been unavailable for the movie).
    • Quotes

      Howard Hughes: I'll tell you the truth, Cruickshank, most people just bore me and I don't want to get involved with them.

    • Crazy credits
      After the closing credits there is a short News Of The Day newsreel about the Spruce Goose including footage of the real Howard Hughes
    • Alternate versions
      This production, according to 'The Biopic Story' website, '' . . . was originally a mini-series, screening over two nights with a running time of three hours and fifteen minutes. The version more readily available nowadays has a running time of less than two hours . . . with over 75 mins cut''.
    • Connections
      Features Le crépuscule des aigles (1966)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 13, 1977 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Park Circus Official Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Howard: The Amazing Mr. Hughes
    • Filming locations
      • USA
    • Production companies
      • Roger Gimbel Productions
      • EMI Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      3 hours 35 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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