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      • Airplane!, American comedy film released in 1980 that parodies the disaster film genre with a story about a former pilot who must land a commercial plane after the passengers and pilots fall ill.
      www.britannica.com/topic/Airplane-1980-film
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Airplane!Airplane! - Wikipedia

    Airplane! (alternatively titled Flying High!) [5] is a 1980 American disaster comedy film written and directed by Jim Abrahams and brothers David and Jerry Zucker in their directorial debut, [6] and produced by Jon Davison.

  3. Airplane!: Directed by Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, Jerry Zucker. With Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Lloyd Bridges, Peter Graves, Julie Hagerty. After the crew becomes sick with food poisoning, a neurotic ex-fighter pilot must safely land a commercial airplane full of passengers.

    • (264K)
    • Comedy
    • Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, Jerry Zucker
    • 1980-07-02
  4. Jul 2, 2020 · It’s impossible to say definitively that any comedy is funny, but Airplane!’s canonization in both cult and institutional precincts (the AFI chose it as the 10th greatest comedy ever made,...

    • Adam Nayman
    • 32 sec
    • Overview
    • Production notes and credits
    • Cast

    Airplane!, American comedy film released in 1980 that parodies the disaster film genre with a story about a former pilot who must land a commercial plane after the passengers and pilots fall ill. Written and directed by Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, and Jerry Zucker, the film combines content from Zero Hour! (1957), along with slapstick, surreal comedy, and other types of humour to satirize the disaster film genre, which was popular in the 1970s. Airplane! is considered one of the greatest comedies in cinematic history.

    The film centres on Ted Striker, a former military pilot who follows flight attendant Elaine Dickinson to the airport after she ends their relationship. After unsuccessfully convincing her to take him back, Ted buys a ticket for the flight she is working on, and he boards the plane to Chicago alongside pilots Clarence Oveur and Roger Murdock, a young girl in need of a heart transplant, a nun, and other characters who provide comic relief. As the flight begins and passengers order dinner—a choice of either steak or fish—Ted and Elaine’s past is revealed in a series of flashbacks, which includes their first encounter: a meeting captured in a dance scene reminiscent of Saturday Night Fever (1977). Also referenced in the flashbacks are Ted’s failed military mission and the resulting paralyzing regret from which he still suffers and which has interfered with the life plans he and Elaine had made.

    The flight descends into chaos as the navigator, both pilots, and various passengers fall sick with a mysterious illness. Dr. Rumack, a doctor recruited to help his fellow passengers, determines the fish to be the cause of the sickness and says the plane must be landed at once to save everyone who had consumed the dish. While Elaine and an inflatable autopilot named Otto make contact with Chicago ground control to continue their flight, Dr. Rumack and the other flight attendant enlist Ted to land the plane. Initially overwhelmed, Ted leaves the cockpit after one of the four engines fails, but he soon returns after a pep talk from Dr. Rumack reveals that a pilot who had been a part of Ted’s failed mission had approved of his choices during their assignment. With a new burst of confidence, Ted guides the plane down in an erratic, but ultimately successful, landing, and he and Elaine reunite on the runway.

    Much of the film draws from other source material. Significant portions of the plot, characters, and dialogue are taken directly from the movie Zero Hour! (1957), and other elements were based on Airport 1975 (1974) and similar disaster films. The typical disaster film plot is satirized using a high saturation of humour, and the borrowed material is supplemented with a variety of comedic techniques including verbal humour and wordplay, such as in the movie’s iconic play on the words surely and Shirley; physical comedy, such as Ted’s “drinking problem” in reference to his inability to put liquids in his mouth; and a considerable number of pop culture references, including nods to Jaws (1975), Ethel Merman, and a tongue-in-cheek cameo by legendary basketball player Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Absurd elements comprise a substantial portion of the humour, much of which pushed the envelope for what was considered socially acceptable to joke about at the time.

    •Studio: Paramount Pictures

    •Directors: Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, Jerry Zucker

    •Writers: Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, Jerry Zucker

    •Music: Elmer Bernstein

    •Robert Hays (Ted Striker)

    •Julie Hagerty (Elaine Dickinson)

    •Leslie Nielsen (Dr. Rumack)

    •Peter Graves (Capt. Clarence Oveur)

    •Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (Roger Murdock as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar)

    •Lloyd Bridges (Steve McCroskey)

  5. Airplane!” is a comedy in the great tradition of high school skits, the Sid Caesar TV show, Mad magazine, and the dog-eared screenplays people’s nephews write in lieu of earning their college diplomas. It is sophomoric, obvious, predictable, corny, and quite often very funny.

  6. One of the two best film spoofs ever made (the other being Spaceballs), Airplane! is a masterpiece in comedy, with slapstick, dark humour and all other kinds of comedy mixed together,...

    • (70)
    • Comedy
    • PG
  7. Apr 17, 2015 · Airplane! celebrates its 35th anniversary this year, and if you happen to be in Nashville this weekend, you’ll have a chance to catch the film flying high on the big screen once again: The Wild...

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