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Airport 80 Concorde

Original title: The Concorde... Airport '79
  • 1979
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 53m
IMDb RATING
4.5/10
7.3K
YOUR RATING
Alain Delon in Airport 80 Concorde (1979)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer2:53
1 Video
90 Photos
Dark ComedyActionDramaThriller

A supersonic airborne disaster. In order to survive a flight headed for the Moscow Olympics, passengers of the Concorde must endure aerial acrobatics to dodge missiles and survive a device t... Read allA supersonic airborne disaster. In order to survive a flight headed for the Moscow Olympics, passengers of the Concorde must endure aerial acrobatics to dodge missiles and survive a device that decompresses the plane.A supersonic airborne disaster. In order to survive a flight headed for the Moscow Olympics, passengers of the Concorde must endure aerial acrobatics to dodge missiles and survive a device that decompresses the plane.

  • Director
    • David Lowell Rich
  • Writers
    • Arthur Hailey
    • Jennings Lang
    • Eric Roth
  • Stars
    • Alain Delon
    • Susan Blakely
    • Robert Wagner
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.5/10
    7.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Lowell Rich
    • Writers
      • Arthur Hailey
      • Jennings Lang
      • Eric Roth
    • Stars
      • Alain Delon
      • Susan Blakely
      • Robert Wagner
    • 110User reviews
    • 54Critic reviews
    • 39Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:53
    Official Trailer

    Photos90

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    Top cast81

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    Alain Delon
    Alain Delon
    • Capt. Paul Metrand
    Susan Blakely
    Susan Blakely
    • Maggie Whelan
    Robert Wagner
    Robert Wagner
    • Dr. Kevin Harrison
    George Kennedy
    George Kennedy
    • Capt. Joe Patroni
    Sylvia Kristel
    Sylvia Kristel
    • Isabelle
    Eddie Albert
    Eddie Albert
    • Eli Sands
    Bibi Andersson
    Bibi Andersson
    • Francine
    Charo
    Charo
    • Margarita
    John Davidson
    John Davidson
    • Robert Palmer
    Andrea Marcovicci
    Andrea Marcovicci
    • Alicia Rogov
    Martha Raye
    Martha Raye
    • Loretta
    Cicely Tyson
    Cicely Tyson
    • Elaine
    Jimmie 'JJ' Walker
    Jimmie 'JJ' Walker
    • Boisie
    • (as Jimmie Walker)
    David Warner
    David Warner
    • Peter O'Neill
    Mercedes McCambridge
    Mercedes McCambridge
    • Nelli
    Avery Schreiber
    Avery Schreiber
    • Coach Markov
    Sybil Danning
    Sybil Danning
    • Amy
    Monica Lewis
    Monica Lewis
    • Gretchen
    • Director
      • David Lowell Rich
    • Writers
      • Arthur Hailey
      • Jennings Lang
      • Eric Roth
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews110

    4.57.3K
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    Featured reviews

    Poseidon-3

    Almost bad enough to be good.

    In the beginning, there was "Airport", an A-list, ultra-slick adaptation of a best-selling book, nominated for multiple Oscars (including Best Picture!) Then came "Airport 1975" with too much humor (intentional and unintentional) and Karen Black flying a damaged 747. "Airport '77" had a private plane sinking beneath the ocean while rich passengers dropped like flies. In an inane attempt to continue the exploitation of the original film (and cash in on the notoriety of the then-new Concorde, the fastest commercial plane ever), this film came along and ended the series for good. A year later, "Airplane!" would slam the coffin lid and seal it with it's hysterical sending up of the many clichés of the air-disaster genre. Here, Wagner is a high-powered industrialist who's been selling arms to enemies of the U.S. When his reporter mistress Blakely is informed of this, he tries kill her. After she boards the Concorde en route to Moscow, he (ludicrously) decides to pull out every stop in the book to demolish the aircraft, even though it is full of Olympians, TV journalists, music legends, human organs and little old ladies who can't stay out of the bathroom! The entire film is both stagnant and simultaneously uproarious at the same time. The director, writer, editor and the actors can't seem to get ANYTHING right! (See Blakely's ridiculously unconvincing newscast in which she never once looks into the camera and in which clips from events AS THEY ARE HAPPENING IN REAL TIME parade across the screen.) It also contains some of the most abominable blue-screen and model special effects ever to be seen in a major studio film. The cast of the film is huge and full of names, though most of them are given, literally, nothing to do but embarrass themselves. Wagner looks very tired and hardly bothers to vary his facial expressions. Blakely works hard but is defeated by the stupidity of the character and the script. Kennedy (the one actor who was in all four films) is promoted to Captain this time, but is reduced to cracking crude sexual jokes and (in the film's most celebratedly lunatic scene) cracking open the cockpit window and shooting off a flare! Haggard, former screen-god Delon as another pilot tries to beat preposterous dialogue like, "Your hair is my french fries" in his affair with sex kitten stewardess Kristel (whose calf-length uniform has a split up to her thigh!) Other oddities include McCambridge spouting a dreadful Russian accent and flouncing around in curtain-like tops as a gymnastics coach, Walker as a pot-smoking sax player, Lewis as a jazz legend (!) who feels she may be losing it, Schreiber as a Russian coach with a deaf daughter (at least she can't hear Lewis singing!) and Raye as a grandma with a bladder control problem (first dentures and now this?! What? Did June Allyson turn the part down?) Special mention must be given to the side-splitting appearance of Tyson as a mother escorting (!) a frozen heart to her dying son. (Since when do parents go off and collect organs while their kid is expiring somewhere else??) In an apparent attempt to disappear from this rancid film, she hides her face under every imaginable object. Already buried under Victoria Principal's fright wig from "Earthquake", she uses hankies, a clutch purse, blankets, ANYTHING to obscure her face from being seen, eventually turning away from the camera entirely! The endless cast list also contains Albert as the airline owner and Danning as his trophy wife, Davidson as a reporter, Charo as a pushy passenger attempting to stowaway a Chihuahua and Marcovicci who gets another special mention. Unbelievably, she plays a 24 year-old gymnast (!) going for her third gold medal, which is crazy enough except that she was 31 in real life! Just one more nutty aspect of this thoroughly retarded film. Perhaps the most bizarre of all is the fact that the plane goes through several traumas, spinning violently and nearly crashing, yet after a layover in Paris, virtually every single passenger GETS BACK ON! As if things weren't bad enough, the Olympics that were pushed so heavily in this movie wound up being boycotted that year by the U.S., so the whole film was outdated before it was even released anyway! Good for a few laughs, but worthless as drama.
    3Rob_Taylor

    Thrill as the Concorde performs ridiculous aerobatic stunts.....

    Some slack might be cut this movie due to the fact that it was made in 1979. That much said, it really is pretty dire.

    Never mind the laughable back-projection or the awful, awful camera-tracking of supposed "in-flight" objects, it's the stunts that the Concorde pulls off that will have you blinking in disbelief at the absurdity. Barrel-rolls, loop-the-loops and violent "evasive" maneuvers left me wondering why the Air-Forces of the world didn't just fly Concordes as their main fighters.

    So, here are the important lessons I learned from this celluloid cheese-fest:

    1. The Concorde is at least as agile as a Phantom 4 jet-fighter.

    2. You can fire a flare gun at Mach 2 simply by opening the cockpit window and sticking your arm out.

    3. If the flare gun fails to discharge, do not drop it, as it may then go off.

    4. The Concorde can dodge up to two Sidewinder missiles fired at it at once.

    5. A flare will distract a heat-seeking missile every time.

    6. Switching off your jet-engines is a sure-fire way of throwing heat-seeking missiles off track if 5 (above) fails.

    7. When performing a crash-landing in the Concorde, it is apparently impossible to jettison your fuel beforehand.

    8. Concorde pilots are all combat-trained veterans.

    As you might imagine, this film is not very realistic. The effects are primitive by today's standards and that, coupled with the nonsense acrobatics the Concorde performs, makes this a movie deserving of little but scorn.

    Not recommended. Not recommended at all!
    StuOz

    The Miniature Effects, The Lalo Schifrin Score, Robert Wagner...Not Bad

    I remember walking out of an Australian movie theatre in 1980 and saying to my brother..."That was a disaster movie but what was the disaster?". Granted, I was a child at the time.

    This Airport movie is different to the other three, no big sea dive or big collision, Airport '79 just seemed to be all over the place! However, the film has improved with age and two recent viewings have been very much enjoyed. It has a touch of The Towering Inferno (1974) with Robert Wagner still being up to no good, the miniature effects work of the Concorde itself is pleasing to my eyes and the film starts with a very uplifting Lalo Schifrin theme tune.

    Perhaps Schifrin was trying to be the new disaster movie composer as in 1980 he would score Irwin Allen's When Time Ran Out as well.

    There was to be a 5th Airport movie but the poor box office takings for Airport '79 put an end to all that. Too bad as all four Airport films are a special part of the 1970s and still survive repeat viewings to this day.
    1highwaytourist

    So bad, it's good!

    Have you ever watched unintentional comedy? Well, this is it. There are so many absurdities, I couldn't keep track. The best scenes are when Robert Wagner decides to shoot down the plane with missiles and pass it off as a mechanical failure, Charo tries to smuggle a Chichiauah on the plane and, when it's discovered, claims it's her seeing eye dog, John Davidson's hair stays in place when the plane flies upside down, when a missile gets close to the plane, pilot George Kennedy rolls down the pilot's seat window (at the speed of sound) to shoot at it, Jimmy Walker smokes weed in the bathroom stall, and when stewardess Sylvia Crystal says seductively "You pilots are such men!", Kennedy replies, "They don't call it a cock-pit for nothing!" What floors me is that after the first disaster, the plane takes off for another flight and the passengers get back on! If I were a passenger, no way would I board that plane! All this is backed up by special effects that wouldn't pass for an episode of "Bewitched." If you can find this movie in the 99 cent section, I recommend it. I laughed more than I had laughed in weeks. It's great entertainment in the worst way possible.
    master-vader

    Shocked by low rating

    It's stupid fun idk why this got all of the hate. Sure it's flawed in many aspects but I enjoyed it a lot. Maybe the flaws made it feel very fresh for me. I think this a hidden gem and I won't care the mid 00s elitist ratings and spread the love for it.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Sylvia Kristel recounted the making of this film in her autobiography. According to her, Alain Delon felt he was not being taken seriously in Hollywood. On the first day, he demanded to switch trailers with director David Lowell Rich because his trailer wasn't large enough. At first Delon and Kristel did not get along, and he refused to get down on one knee in front of her for one scene. It wasn't until director David Lowell Rich began to treat Sylvia unkindly that Delon became more friendly toward her and they finished the production on good terms.
    • Goofs
      The Concorde was not designed to perform a loop-the-loop, but it could do a barrel-roll. Considering the power available, if the plane were below mach speeds and the loop were large enough, it is possible for such a maneuver to work.
    • Quotes

      Capt. Joe Patroni: I've flown just about every type of aircraft through three wars and forty pounds. Only thing I'm afraid of is heights. Are you afraid of anything, Metrand?

      Capt. Paul Metrand: American pilots.

    • Alternate versions
      José Ferrer appears in the footage added to the film when it was shown on ABC-TV. He does not appear in the theatrical release.
    • Connections
      Edited into Arabesque: Tough Guys Don't Die (1985)

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 19, 1979 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Russian
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • The Concorde... Airport '79
    • Filming locations
      • Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport, Roissy-en-France, Val-d'Oise, France
    • Production company
      • Universal Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $14,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $13,015,688
    • Gross worldwide
      • $13,015,688
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 53 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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