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IMDbPro

Airport '77

  • 1977
  • PG
  • 1h 54m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
13K
YOUR RATING
Airport '77 (1977)
A fancy airplane is in trouble in this trailer
Play trailer2:38
1 Video
95 Photos
DisasterActionDramaThriller

Art thieves hijack a 747, hit fog and crash into the ocean, trapping them and the passengers under one hundred feet of water.Art thieves hijack a 747, hit fog and crash into the ocean, trapping them and the passengers under one hundred feet of water.Art thieves hijack a 747, hit fog and crash into the ocean, trapping them and the passengers under one hundred feet of water.

  • Director
    • Jerry Jameson
  • Writers
    • Arthur Hailey
    • Michael Scheff
    • David Spector
  • Stars
    • Jack Lemmon
    • Lee Grant
    • Joseph Cotten
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    13K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jerry Jameson
    • Writers
      • Arthur Hailey
      • Michael Scheff
      • David Spector
    • Stars
      • Jack Lemmon
      • Lee Grant
      • Joseph Cotten
    • 117User reviews
    • 51Critic reviews
    • 36Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Airport '77
    Trailer 2:38
    Airport '77

    Photos95

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    Top cast59

    Edit
    Jack Lemmon
    Jack Lemmon
    • Don Gallagher
    Lee Grant
    Lee Grant
    • Karen Wallace
    Joseph Cotten
    Joseph Cotten
    • Nicholas St. Downs III
    Olivia de Havilland
    Olivia de Havilland
    • Emily Livingston
    Brenda Vaccaro
    Brenda Vaccaro
    • Eve Clayton
    Darren McGavin
    Darren McGavin
    • Stan Buchek
    Christopher Lee
    Christopher Lee
    • Martin Wallace
    Robert Foxworth
    Robert Foxworth
    • Chambers
    Robert Hooks
    Robert Hooks
    • Eddie
    Monte Markham
    Monte Markham
    • Banker
    Kathleen Quinlan
    Kathleen Quinlan
    • Julie
    Gil Gerard
    Gil Gerard
    • Frank Powers
    James Booth
    James Booth
    • Ralph Crawford
    Monica Lewis
    Monica Lewis
    • Anne
    Maidie Norman
    Maidie Norman
    • Dorothy
    Pamela Bellwood
    Pamela Bellwood
    • Lisa
    Arlene Golonka
    Arlene Golonka
    • Mrs. Jane Stern
    Tom Sullivan
    Tom Sullivan
    • Steve
    • Director
      • Jerry Jameson
    • Writers
      • Arthur Hailey
      • Michael Scheff
      • David Spector
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews117

    5.813.4K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    Poseidon-3

    Classiest cast of the "Airport" sequels and most serious.

    Landing after the TV sitcom-level cast/plot of "Airport 1975", but arriving before the ludicrous "The Concorde-Airport '79" is this slick disaster film entry. Featuring Oscar-winning and nominated stars like Lemmon, Grant, de Havilland, Quinlan, Kennedy and Stewart, it also offers one of the best caliber casts of the '70's disaster cycle. There is no deep thinking involved in watching the film, but it does offer some watery thrills and some fun thrashing around as the plane first skips along the surface of the water and then slips under. Suspense builds as the pressure continues to wreak havoc on the plane's outer skin and, unusually for an "Airport" film, pretty many lives are claimed! The death toll in this film is higher than the other three combined. It's great to see so many once and future stars flopping around in the underwater tomb, but the main attraction is Lee Grant. Clocking in with only about a dozen or so total minutes of screen time, she is utterly hilarious and unforgettable as a shrewish, boozy, sarcastic lush. No one is safe from her rude, brash comments and she is a joy to behold for bad-move connoisseurs. Her husband in the film is Christpher Lee. Fortunately, they didn't marry offscreen or she would have become Lee Lee, but that's another story.......
    6nanton-35268

    "... the rescue abilities of the Navy is real." -not for you buddy

    So a plane crashes into the sea and we are about to witness the sheer rescue capabilities of the navy or spoken in a disaster movie term: human rescue capabilities.

    The movie is based on a famous book by Royal Air Force pilot Arthur Hailey. I don't know about the book but the movie is based around polar opposites. Human vs nature is the true core of this film. The characters are/have always polar opposites. Rich and poor, altruism and egoism, young and old. The movie becomes enriched through the play of these different polarities. Iconic actors give the movie the class that it needs.

    There is one more thing the movie creates. The romantic thought of safety through a certain kind of authority. It is the same romantic thought some have with German cars or the police as your friend and helper. Of course these thoughts are far from reality because there are thousands of people dying in the ocean around the globe. I speak of refugees that not get rescued by maritime service branches around the world. Even though I definitely doubt that if someone not as rich would be rescued like that. Nevertheless the movie, as smart as it is, shows the possibilities we had then (imagine what we could do today) and I think humans can do unimaginable things if we stick together and I like the thought I get from this movie: someday we might.

    They don't make movies like that anymore. If military branches are shown today, they always fight. In todays disaster movies people need to help themselves or getting rescued by super heroes.
    richard.fuller1

    Still A Fave

    Of all the disaster flicks, this seems to be the one I enjoy most, perhaps it was the first one I would see.

    But looking back at the hot pants in Poseidon Adventure & Dunaway's dress and the tuxedoes in Towering Inferno, Airport '77 is quite an elegantly dressed cast, aren't they?

    The movie would get famed Hollywood fashion expert Edith Head to dress the cast and it shows. Anyone else would have made Brenda Vaccarro look obese trying to put her in that pullover sweater.

    Airplane! would make fun of Edith Head being credited for '77 like that, by crediting their own costumer, but 27 years later, the wardrobe makes the cast of '77 appear tremendously dashing, giving the tragedy that greater a feel as well.

    Jack Lemmon was an incredible standout as the hero of the piece, in comparison to Paul Newman's sexism in Towering Inferno (he never speaks to Jennifer Jones as a human during their entire ordeal with the children) or Heston's stiffness or McQueen's inexpressiveness.

    Two years after her Oscar nomination, Vaccarro was hardly the disaster flicks idea of a leading lady as well, so she is quite a one-of-a-kind casting also.

    When I was little, I was most fascinated with Arlene Golonka, who I knew from the Andy Griffith show.

    Later, identifying the rest of the cast just made it more and more fun. Dracula, Buck Rogers, Kolchak the Nightstalker (Darren McGavin & Jack Lemmon were a powerhouse duo).

    Then the names and stars figured into it. DeHavilland, Cotten, Grant. No one looked more out of place than Olivia DeHavilland in an underwater airplane.

    Robert Hooks as the crippled bartender and Tom Sullivan (who is actually blind) as the pianist added even more flavor.

    There is M. Emmet Walsh, "The Name, But What Which One Is Him?" actor. He is the doctor, and I do enjoy his one scene when he explains who he really is.

    Monica Lewis, disaster movie staple. She would appear in Earthquake and Concorde: Airport '79. Check out her expression as she and Olivia DeHavilland enter the lifeboat. It reads "Miss DeHavilland, I'm one of your biggest fans. I really enjoyed you in Gone With The Wind." Lucy Ricardo lives.

    Should it have been a commercial airline, instead of a private plane? Not necessarily.

    I enjoy watching it now and observing a few of the female extras at the beginning of the crash don't seem to be present anymore by the end. It seems that they weren't available for filming then.

    I would argue, as a movie, that this one is more fun to watch than the first one. Lancaster and Seberg in the first Airport movie are comical to me trying to be so serious.

    And the second Airport movie, Airport '75, is funnier than Airplane.

    There is a very strong and different feel from Airport '77 than the other Airport flicks or the other disaster films in general.
    6ma-cortes

    Another box office success in disaster genre with a great cast full of familiar faces

    Plastic acting and stock characters detailing a hectic flight in 747 Boeing . It is an insincere , slick attempt to find box-office magic again , and , really , it achieved a hit smash . This is the third of four movies in the "Airport" series adapted from the Arthur Hailey novel . It's exciting and amusing but full clichés and stereotypes , including the unavoidable accident , with passable acting by all-star-cast . Twist to this in-flight catastrophe is that the bad time in the air happen underwater . The movie is another jetliner epic with hero Jack Lemmon as valiant pilot . Billionaire -James Stewart- fills his converted passenger commercial airline of the American Airlines 747 with priceless paintings and sets off to Palm Beach for a museum opening being piloted by Jack Lemmon , Robert Foxworth and joined by an invited band of hijackers , and being subsequently crashed into the sea . Describing the reactions of the crew and passengers as they cope with the impeding doom . At the end takes places a daring rescue attempt . The film is detailing hectic flighty piloted by Jack Lemmon and the relationship among passengers . If you've seen the original ¨Airport¨ by George Seaton based on the Arthur Hailey's novel 'the daddy of them all' , you have seen them all .

    This old-fashioned catastrophe picture contains thriller , suspense , drama , moderate tension and being quite entertaining though with some flaws and gaps . All clichéd and stock roles with regurgitation of all usual stereotypical situations from disaster films , including a fairly moronic screenplay . Filmed at the height of the disaster genre from the 7os , this entry in the spectacular series profits of an enjoyable acting by Jack Lemmon , bringing life to character , in fact , to prepare for his role, Jack attended both diving school and flight training school , as he wanted to know what all the knobs and dials were for . Look quickly to Robert Hooks , Monte Markham , Kathleen Quinlan , Darren McGavin ,Gil Gerard , M. Emmet Walsh , Pamela Bellwood ,Michael Pataki , James Booth and Chris Lemmon , Jack's son as Radioman . And , of course , it appears the classic character Patroni played by usual George Kennedy continuing his role appeared in all four "Airport" pictures . The motion picture was professionally directed by Jerry Jameson , habitual TV director and occasionally for movie theater . Jerry went onto direct a similar sunken-vehicle high-concept picture around three years later with Raise the Titanic (1980) ; instead of raising a sunken 747 airplane from underwater it was the ship the Titanic . However , Airport '77 (1977) was box-office hit whereas Raise the Titanic (1980) was a box-office flop . It's an inoffensive diversion but is sometimes tediously unspooled . The film will appeal to Jack Lemmon fans and disaster genre enthusiasts .

    This sagas belongs the following films : the first was ¨Airport¨ (1970) , unanimously deemed the best , it paved the way for many lesser flicks including its many sequels , being directed by George Seaton with Burt Lancaster , Jean Seberg , Dean Martin , Van Heflin ; ¨Airport 75¨ (1974) by Jack Smight with Charlton Heston , Karen Black and Gloria Swanson , ¨Airport 77¨ (1977) considered one of the best of the series , leading to the last of the tired ones , ¨Airport 79¨ , (1979) by David Lowell Rich with Alain Delon , Robert Wagner , Silvia Kristel . Furthermore , ¨ Skyjacked (1972) ¨ by John Guillermin with Charlton Heston , James Brolin and this film was parodied heavily in Airplane! (1980) by Jim Abrahams and David Zucker .
    8schanin1

    Loved this movie

    I loved this film growing up.

    I have even become a flight attendant because of this film and the movie Survive ( the Rene Cardeno Jr version).

    I could pick this movie to bits. However I will not as it is there for pure entertainment and entertain it does.

    I have always wondered if there was a longer version though. As a child i remember it being shown over two nights the same with earthquake. If anyone can help with this and verify if there is a longer version let us know. If you want some disaster fun this is it. A plane crashes into the sea and survivor's must fight for their lives. Some may make it and some may not. Oliva DE Havilland does look out of place in this movie I think this is because she was a great star and a disaster movie just did not seem to be a role she would do. the same with Gloria Swanson who also ended up in a disaster movie. But we all must eat.

    Lee Grant steals the show this could be debatable but I believe she does as a booze drinking socialite.

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    Related interests

    Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton in Twister (1996)
    Disaster
    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Christopher Lee accepted his role chiefly because it allowed him to work with Jack Lemmon.
    • Goofs
      The sleeping gas canister shows "CR-7". CR is actually a tear gas, not a sleeping gas agent.
    • Quotes

      Karen Wallace: Excuse me, I don't mean to intrude, but could you move your ass, dear?

    • Crazy credits
      Before the end credits, this text appears. "The incident portrayed in the film is fictional; the rescue capabilities utilized by the Navy are real".
    • Alternate versions
      Network TV version features one hour of additional footage not included in either the theatrical release or home video release. Footage only seen in the network version includes:
      • Alternate opening credit sequence involving Banker and Wilson breaking into a laboratory.
      • A flight attendant cabin mock-up where the crew practice an evacuation using an escape slide. Shortly after, Anne introduces the crew to Joe Patroni.
      • Dialogue between Patroni and Anne.
      • A scene where Joe Patroni introduces Anne to Don Gallagher, who's working on a flight simulator of the plane he will fly.
      • Flashbacks of several characters. including Martin and Karen Wallace, Steve and Julie, Jane and Bonnie Stern, and Lisa with Ralph Crawford.
      • Extended dialogue throughout the film.
      • Gallagher and Eve discovering the plane's navigator is dead.
      • Scene involving Joe Patroni and his son, Joe. Jr. Patroni has been informed of the disappearance of the 747 and has to cancel plans to attend Joe Jr's graduation ceremony.
      • Brief additional footage of Martin Wallace's body floating outside the plane.
      • Emily attempts to console Karen, after the drowning of Martin.
      • As Gallagher and the scuba team make their underwater preparations to raise the plane, they discover Banker's body.
      • Amount of time for the plane to rise to the surface is longer than the theatrical version.
      • After the plan has risen, Gerald Lucas attempts to get out of the plane first, only to be stopped and pushed back by Buchek.
      • Dialogue between Philip Stevens and Eddie aboard the USS Cayuga. Stevens hands Eddie a piece of paper, which reveals Eddie's wife has given birth to twins. Stevens hands Eddie a cigar to celebrate the occasion.
      • Dialogue between Stevens and Buchek aboard the USS Cayuga.
    • Connections
      Edited into Airwolf: Flight #093 Is Missing (1984)
    • Soundtracks
      Beauty Is In The Eye Of The Beholder
      Composed and sung by Tom Sullivan

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 25, 1977 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Hungarian
    • Also known as
      • Aeropuerto 77
    • Filming locations
      • Vizcaya Museum & Gardens - 3251 S Miami Avenue, Miami, Florida, USA(Philip Stevens' mansion)
    • Production company
      • Universal Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $6,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 54m(114 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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