IMDb RATING
5.8/10
1K
YOUR RATING
A cross-country airliner, whose passengers include a nuclear physicist, a rocket expert, and a mathematical genius, is drawn beyond radar range by an unknown, unbreakable force.A cross-country airliner, whose passengers include a nuclear physicist, a rocket expert, and a mathematical genius, is drawn beyond radar range by an unknown, unbreakable force.A cross-country airliner, whose passengers include a nuclear physicist, a rocket expert, and a mathematical genius, is drawn beyond radar range by an unknown, unbreakable force.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Paul Bradley
- Passenger
- (uncredited)
Ralph Brooks
- Passenger
- (uncredited)
Stephen Ellsworth Crowley
- Crowley - ATC Official
- (uncredited)
Francis De Sales
- George Manson
- (uncredited)
Sam Harris
- Passenger
- (uncredited)
Eden Hartford
- Miss Ford
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
Watchable
Love the old stewardess's ( aka "flight attendant"). Plus cigarette smoking was allowed! A near classic B movie with an eerie soundtrack. Not sure what a Beta bomb is but I'm sure the the Russian's had it first.
As the plane climbs higher and higher ( no engines working but still climbing) ground control has no answers. Even worse, cigarettes won't light due to lack of oxygen. The pilots and passengers are in suspended animation unless your a scientist. Time suspended where the the future and the past meet. Talk about a log jam! Will the beta bomb be created and used? Watch the movie and learn about early 1960' paranoia.
As the plane climbs higher and higher ( no engines working but still climbing) ground control has no answers. Even worse, cigarettes won't light due to lack of oxygen. The pilots and passengers are in suspended animation unless your a scientist. Time suspended where the the future and the past meet. Talk about a log jam! Will the beta bomb be created and used? Watch the movie and learn about early 1960' paranoia.
A longer version of a Twilight Zone episode.
This film will definitely remind you of a slightly longer Twilight Zone episode. It could be described as an interesting B movie, which would accompany a major film back in the old days. Nothing spectacular about this film, with its barely hidden moral message, but it was a pleasant enough viewing for the short time it was on.
A great examination
This independent film released by United Artists is a real sleeper It asks some
thought provoking questions. The lack of name players in the cast makes it all
the more real. That works many times in movies.
Flight That Disappeared starts out like a bargain basement The High And The Mighty. But among the passengers are scientists Craig Hill, Paula Raymond, and Dayton Lummis. Unexplainedly the propeller driven plane starts rising in altitude beyond what a jet rise to and in rocket ship territory and ground radar loses all communication.
When everyone loses consciousness the three scientists go before a celestial tribunal and are examined about a proposed super atomic bomb they are in the theoretical stage of development. It's quite intense.
The thought provocation comes here. Just what is the role of science and scientists in this world? Is making better weaponry its only purpose. What we do today has a bearing on the life our descendants. It's a representation of those descendants that is doing the examining of our three protagonists.
Production values Flight That Disappeared has not. But it has some great performances from the protagonists and the rest of the cast. This one should not be missed.
One question was there another tribunal called for some Soviet scientists?
Flight That Disappeared starts out like a bargain basement The High And The Mighty. But among the passengers are scientists Craig Hill, Paula Raymond, and Dayton Lummis. Unexplainedly the propeller driven plane starts rising in altitude beyond what a jet rise to and in rocket ship territory and ground radar loses all communication.
When everyone loses consciousness the three scientists go before a celestial tribunal and are examined about a proposed super atomic bomb they are in the theoretical stage of development. It's quite intense.
The thought provocation comes here. Just what is the role of science and scientists in this world? Is making better weaponry its only purpose. What we do today has a bearing on the life our descendants. It's a representation of those descendants that is doing the examining of our three protagonists.
Production values Flight That Disappeared has not. But it has some great performances from the protagonists and the rest of the cast. This one should not be missed.
One question was there another tribunal called for some Soviet scientists?
Takes Awhile to Get Interesting
Little-known film about a cross-country flight that is transported to another dimension where time stands still. There are some scientists on board the flight that are responsible for building a new kind of nuclear weapon. They are put on trial in this other dimension by people from the future. It's a talky movie about ideas and Cold War fears that gets a little heavy-handed at times. The "logic" of the prosecutor is riddled with holes. The first half-hour is pretty dull before it slowly starts to pick up. Still, it's nearly an hour into the film before the trial starts. All of the characters are as exciting as cardboard. There are no big actors associated with this, though I did recognize a few faces. It's an interesting idea for a movie or even an episode of the Twilight Zone. I could see Rod Serling doing a lot with it. It's a slog to get through the buildup but the last 20-30 minutes is worth watching.
Oddball Passenger Plane Movie
A passenger plane runs into strange problems.
Sort of feels like an extended episode of The Twilight Zone (1959) or The Outer Limits (1963). And keep in mind this appeared long before the first Airport (1970) movie so back then in 1961 this probably seemed like a landmark flick!
Cast member Gregory Morton (The Examiner) would go on to voice two alien beings in TV's Lost in Space (see episodes Follow The Leader & The Prisoners Of Space).
I enjoyed the movie a lot but not everything about it totally clicks. But well worth a watch.
Sort of feels like an extended episode of The Twilight Zone (1959) or The Outer Limits (1963). And keep in mind this appeared long before the first Airport (1970) movie so back then in 1961 this probably seemed like a landmark flick!
Cast member Gregory Morton (The Examiner) would go on to voice two alien beings in TV's Lost in Space (see episodes Follow The Leader & The Prisoners Of Space).
I enjoyed the movie a lot but not everything about it totally clicks. But well worth a watch.
Did you know
- TriviaThere are a few short stories by J G Ballard from the early 60s that seem to have taken their titles from lines of dialogue in this film, such as the short story collection The 4-Dimensional Nightmare.
- GoofsAbout 10 minutes in, the flight attendant brings 3 cups of coffee for the flight crew. When she hands the 3rd cup to the navigator, she tips it. If the cup had been full of liquid it would have spilled.
- Quotes
Dr. Carl Morris: You're out of your mind.
Walter Cooper: No! Don't say that to me! I've never let anyone say that to me. Not even the doctors in the hospital.
- Crazy creditsOpening credits list the three major actors as "Co-starring."
- Alternate versionsAlso available in a computer colored version.
- ConnectionsEdited from The High and the Mighty (1954)
- How long is Flight That Disappeared?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 11m(71 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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