Now up for grabs in Region A, it’s the Robert Aldrich movie that wins over all that see it. The epitome of Men In Peril adventures, the tale of 14 random oil men marooned in the Sahara is brutal yet optimistic about human cooperation — please, the world needs more of that right now. James Stewart is at his best, stretching his hard-bitten loner persona and tapping into his flying experience. Also with an English-language-best performance from Hardy Krüger. The male group dynamics are absorbing and the suspense powerful — especially when seen cold. No spoilers here!
The Flight of the Phoenix
Blu-ray
The Criterion Collection 1116
1965 / Color / 1:85 widescreen / 142 min. / available through The Criterion Collection / Street Date March 22, 2022 / 39.95
Starring: James Stewart, Richard Attenborough, Peter Finch, Hardy Krüger, Ernest Borgnine, Ian Bannen, Ronald Fraser, Christian Marquand, Dan Duryea, George Kennedy, Gabriele Tinti, Alex Montoya, Peter Bravos, William Aldrich, Barrie Chase.
Cinematography: Joseph Biroc...
The Flight of the Phoenix
Blu-ray
The Criterion Collection 1116
1965 / Color / 1:85 widescreen / 142 min. / available through The Criterion Collection / Street Date March 22, 2022 / 39.95
Starring: James Stewart, Richard Attenborough, Peter Finch, Hardy Krüger, Ernest Borgnine, Ian Bannen, Ronald Fraser, Christian Marquand, Dan Duryea, George Kennedy, Gabriele Tinti, Alex Montoya, Peter Bravos, William Aldrich, Barrie Chase.
Cinematography: Joseph Biroc...
- 3/19/2022
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
Forgotten amid Robert Aldrich’s more critic-friendly movies is this superb suspense picture, an against-all-odds thriller that pits an old-school pilot against a push-button young engineer with his own kind of male arrogance. Can a dozen oil workers and random passengers ‘invent’ their way out of an almost certain death trap? It’s a late-career triumph for James Stewart, at the head of a sterling ensemble cast. I review a UK disc in the hope of encouraging a new restoration.
The Flight of the Phoenix
Region B Blu-ray
(will not play in domestic U.S. players)
Masters of Cinema / Eureka Entertainment
1965 / Color / 1:85 widescreen / 142 min. / Street Date September 12, 2016 / £12.95
Starring: James Stewart, Richard Attenborough, Peter Finch, Hardy Krüger, Ernest Borgnine, Ian Bannen, Ronald Fraser, Christian Marquand, Dan Duryea, George Kennedy, Gabriele Tinti, Alex Montoya, Peter Bravos, William Aldrich, Barrie Chase.
Cinematography: Joseph Biroc
Stunt Pilot: Paul Mantz
Art Direction: William Glasgow...
The Flight of the Phoenix
Region B Blu-ray
(will not play in domestic U.S. players)
Masters of Cinema / Eureka Entertainment
1965 / Color / 1:85 widescreen / 142 min. / Street Date September 12, 2016 / £12.95
Starring: James Stewart, Richard Attenborough, Peter Finch, Hardy Krüger, Ernest Borgnine, Ian Bannen, Ronald Fraser, Christian Marquand, Dan Duryea, George Kennedy, Gabriele Tinti, Alex Montoya, Peter Bravos, William Aldrich, Barrie Chase.
Cinematography: Joseph Biroc
Stunt Pilot: Paul Mantz
Art Direction: William Glasgow...
- 9/22/2017
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
The last time we saw Dennis Quaid, he was trudging his way through an apocalyptic blizzard in Fox's "The Day After Tomorrow".
No wuss he, Quaid is now taking on brutal sandstorms and blistering heat in "Flight of the Phoenix", a remake of the gripping 1965 survival yarn about a group of men whose plane, piloted by Jimmy Stewart, crashes into the Sahara Desert.
Quaid would have been right at home among the rugged cast in the Robert Aldrich original, which included Peter Finch, George Kennedy and Ernest Borgnine, and his performance as a no-nonsense cargo plane captain lends the refurbished version a nicely weathered patina.
But while it certainly looks swell thanks to director John Moore's striking visuals, the wings of this rebuilt "Phoenix" (initiated by Aldrich's son, William) have been clipped by generic scripting and a short supply of dramatic tension that goes slack soon after takeoff and never really recovers.
Still, a certain B-movie allure remains that could translate into some solid holiday business, particularly among males in the market for a little awards season counterprogramming.
Combining the right amount of decency and grit, Quaid does well by the Stewart role -- that of Frank Towns, a cargo plane pilot who, this time around, is sent to Mongolia to evacuate the members of an aborted oil exploration operation.
Shortly after takeoff, the full plane flies into a crippling sandstorm that destroys one of its engines and sends Towns and company hurtling into the Gobi desert.
Most of the passengers survive the wreckage, including co-pilot AJ (singer-actor Tyrese Gibson), the company hatchet man, Ian (Hugh Laurie), the tough guy with the Snake Plissken eye-patch (Kirk Jones), the nice-guy Hispanic cook (Jacob Vargas) and the oil rig's chief roustabout and lone female (Miranda Otto).
Also along for the ride is the nerdy outsider (a virtually unrecognizable Giovanni Ribisi) who insists he knows how to rebuild the plane. But with a dwindling food and water supply and an encroaching band of murderous desert smugglers, time is quickly running out.
Irish director Moore, best known for his innovative commercials before cutting his feature teeth on "Behind Enemy Lines", makes the most of the unpredictable elements, but style alone can't compensate for the inert pacing and a perfunctory script credited to Scott Frank and Edward Burns that settles for the sketchiest of character traits and standard-issue dialogue.
Actually filmed in Namibia (the original, though set in the Sahara, was in fact shot in Arizona, giving the title a much less exotic meaning), the production is ably assisted by aerial photographer David B. Nowell's sweepingly surreal shots of dramatic, wind-sculpted dunes that look as smooth and inviting as butterscotch pudding.
Flight of the Phoenix
20th Century Fox
Twentieth Century Fox presents an Aldrich Group production/Davis Entertainment Co. production
Credits:
Director: John Moore
Producers: John Davis, William Aldrich, Wyck Godfrey, T. Alex Blum
Screenwriters: Scott Frank, Edward Burns
Based on a screenplay by Lukas Heller and the novel by Elleston Trevor
Executive producer: Ric Kidney
Director of photography: Brendan Galvin
Production designer: Patrick Lumb
Editor: Don Zimmerman
Costume designer: George L. Little
Music: Marco Beltrami
Cast:
Frank Towns: Dennis Quaid
Elliott: Giovanni Ribisi
AJ: Tyrese Gibson
Kelly: Miranda Otto
Ian: Hugh Laurie
Rodney: Tony Curran
Jeremy: Kirk Jones
Sammi: Jacob Vargas
MPAA rating PG-13
Running time -- 113 minutes...
No wuss he, Quaid is now taking on brutal sandstorms and blistering heat in "Flight of the Phoenix", a remake of the gripping 1965 survival yarn about a group of men whose plane, piloted by Jimmy Stewart, crashes into the Sahara Desert.
Quaid would have been right at home among the rugged cast in the Robert Aldrich original, which included Peter Finch, George Kennedy and Ernest Borgnine, and his performance as a no-nonsense cargo plane captain lends the refurbished version a nicely weathered patina.
But while it certainly looks swell thanks to director John Moore's striking visuals, the wings of this rebuilt "Phoenix" (initiated by Aldrich's son, William) have been clipped by generic scripting and a short supply of dramatic tension that goes slack soon after takeoff and never really recovers.
Still, a certain B-movie allure remains that could translate into some solid holiday business, particularly among males in the market for a little awards season counterprogramming.
Combining the right amount of decency and grit, Quaid does well by the Stewart role -- that of Frank Towns, a cargo plane pilot who, this time around, is sent to Mongolia to evacuate the members of an aborted oil exploration operation.
Shortly after takeoff, the full plane flies into a crippling sandstorm that destroys one of its engines and sends Towns and company hurtling into the Gobi desert.
Most of the passengers survive the wreckage, including co-pilot AJ (singer-actor Tyrese Gibson), the company hatchet man, Ian (Hugh Laurie), the tough guy with the Snake Plissken eye-patch (Kirk Jones), the nice-guy Hispanic cook (Jacob Vargas) and the oil rig's chief roustabout and lone female (Miranda Otto).
Also along for the ride is the nerdy outsider (a virtually unrecognizable Giovanni Ribisi) who insists he knows how to rebuild the plane. But with a dwindling food and water supply and an encroaching band of murderous desert smugglers, time is quickly running out.
Irish director Moore, best known for his innovative commercials before cutting his feature teeth on "Behind Enemy Lines", makes the most of the unpredictable elements, but style alone can't compensate for the inert pacing and a perfunctory script credited to Scott Frank and Edward Burns that settles for the sketchiest of character traits and standard-issue dialogue.
Actually filmed in Namibia (the original, though set in the Sahara, was in fact shot in Arizona, giving the title a much less exotic meaning), the production is ably assisted by aerial photographer David B. Nowell's sweepingly surreal shots of dramatic, wind-sculpted dunes that look as smooth and inviting as butterscotch pudding.
Flight of the Phoenix
20th Century Fox
Twentieth Century Fox presents an Aldrich Group production/Davis Entertainment Co. production
Credits:
Director: John Moore
Producers: John Davis, William Aldrich, Wyck Godfrey, T. Alex Blum
Screenwriters: Scott Frank, Edward Burns
Based on a screenplay by Lukas Heller and the novel by Elleston Trevor
Executive producer: Ric Kidney
Director of photography: Brendan Galvin
Production designer: Patrick Lumb
Editor: Don Zimmerman
Costume designer: George L. Little
Music: Marco Beltrami
Cast:
Frank Towns: Dennis Quaid
Elliott: Giovanni Ribisi
AJ: Tyrese Gibson
Kelly: Miranda Otto
Ian: Hugh Laurie
Rodney: Tony Curran
Jeremy: Kirk Jones
Sammi: Jacob Vargas
MPAA rating PG-13
Running time -- 113 minutes...
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