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AdventureDrama

The Flight of the Phoenix

- Theirs was the triumph - yours, the excitement!

A cargo aircraft crashes in a sandstorm in the Sahara with less than a dozen men on board. One of the passengers is an airplane designer who comes up with the idea of ripping off the undamaged wing and using it as the basis for a replacement aircraft they need to build before their food and water run out.

Release Date : 1965-12-15

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : The Associates & Aldrich Company20th Century Fox

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

James Stewart

Character Name : Capt. Frank Towns

Original Name : James Stewart

Gender : Male

Richard Attenborough

Character Name : Lew Moran

Original Name : Richard Attenborough

Gender : Male

Peter Finch

Character Name : Capt. Harris

Original Name : Peter Finch

Gender : Male

Hardy Krüger

Character Name : Heinrich Dorfmann

Original Name : Hardy Krüger

Gender : Male

Ernest Borgnine

Character Name : Trucker Cobb

Original Name : Ernest Borgnine

Gender : Male

Ian Bannen

Character Name : Crow

Original Name : Ian Bannen

Gender : Male

Ronald Fraser

Character Name : Sergeant Watson

Original Name : Ronald Fraser

Gender : Male

Christian Marquand

Character Name : Dr. Renaud

Original Name : Christian Marquand

Gender : Male

Dan Duryea

Character Name : Standish

Original Name : Dan Duryea

Gender : Male

George Kennedy

Character Name : Bellamy

Original Name : George Kennedy

Gender : Male

Gabriele Tinti

Character Name : Gabriel

Original Name : Gabriele Tinti

Gender : Male

Alex Montoya

Character Name : Carlos

Original Name : Alex Montoya

Gender : Male

Peter Bravos

Character Name : Tasso

Original Name : Peter Bravos

Gender : Male

William Aldrich

Character Name : Bill

Original Name : William Aldrich

Gender : Male

Barrie Chase

Character Name : Farida

Original Name : Barrie Chase

Gender : Female

Stanley Ralph Ross

Character Name : Arab Singer (voice) (uncredited)

Original Name : Stanley Ralph Ross

Gender : Male

Reviews

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

Absorbing character piece that's acted accordingly. A transport aeroplane carrying an assortment of men crash lands in the Sahara desert, these men must group together in spite of their varying indifference's and build another plane out of the wreckage. It perhaps, on the surface, doesn't sound much does it? We as viewers are asked to spend over two hours watching these men interact with each other with differing results. The location stays the same, it is just sand, sun, and men awaiting death. Yet the film is one of the best exponents of the character piece because the characters each have their own personal hang ups. Be it carrying scars from the war, or a class difference of upbringing, or that demon addiction to alcohol, these men have to overcome themselves before they can overcome the biggest hurdle in front of them. Boasting what reads as a who's who of great character actors, The Flight Of The Phoenix becomes a riveting watch because we feel the stifled nature of their plight, because we are blessed to have these wonderful actors fully realising the great writing from Lukas Heller. It is absorbing, it is very sharp, and fittingly we get a twist that makes the ending even more rewarding. Highly Recommended. 8/10

D

drystyx

@drystyx

2023-04-18

A true classic. 14 men on a small low budget plane working for an oil company that cares as much about their employees as one might expect. So, the plane goes down in the middle of the desert, and the twelve survivors just wait to die. James Stewart is the pilot who feels responsible, but so does his navigator played by Richard Attenborough. Meanwhile, we wonder about the other characters. We expect Ernest Borgnine, Dan Duryea, and George Kennedy to be the key players, but they relax into the backdrop, except for Borgnine, who soon fades into the backdrop. Instead, it's Ronald Frasier as a career soldier, and Hardy Kruger as an engineer, who become the key players. The engineer claims he can build an aeroplane. Little by little, Townes (Stewart) and Lou (Attenborough) begin to believe the engineer. They see his designs. They get hope. They begin to build the plane. Then, a bit of dark comedy unfolds as they find out more about the engineer. I dare not spoil it. The characters are awesome, even those who seem to be just extras, but they aren't extras. In fact, these extras (Kennedy and Duryea) give life to the film. It's probably because they were big name players that they were chosen to be the most minor players, to give the viewer the sense that minor players are real people. Even "Rat Bags", who appears to be the most brutal of the characters, displays humanity and sorrow when his friend decides to walk out with Peter Finch to seek help. There's a lot of theatrics and drama, and the setting is the exotic desert, but still the setting doesn't change, yet there is never a dull moment. Much like "12 Angry Men", there is always some animation of emotion and theater that keeps even the most attention deficit disorder person infatuated with the story. I know, because I am as "attention deficit" as they come.

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2024-09-05

Jimmy Stewart is "Towns" who flies his dilapidated aircraft around the North African oilfields. When once such trip ends in a crash, they find themselves stuck in the desert short of water, and of ideas as to how to get themselves home. Until that is, the rather superior "Dorfmann" (Hardy Krüger) concocts a plan to perform industrial surgery on the wreckage and maybe get them airborne again. What now ensues is a tautly directed series of escapades as the personalities of crew and passengers clash; the desert takes it's toll on the sanity of some, the Bedouin on the lives of others - but can they get out? Richard Attenborough is superb, as is the usually reliable Peter Finch and his sergeant Ronald Fraser - but it is the psychological duel between "Towns" and "Dorfmann" that stands out. Both actors really draw the audience into their predicament, and their characterisations work well to raise the palpable tension before an ending that ties together the surreal with the enjoyable in an innovative and exciting fashion. This is certainly one of Stewart's better performances, and is certainly well worth a watch.