especially in the early days, was to reflect on my great love of 1970s disaster movies. I profiled practically every one of them over the course of several months (though that was at a time when my profiles were shockingly brief compared to the droning, endless blatherings I now seem unable to prevent myself from creating! Where did it all go wrong?! Ha!)
Though I don't dwell on those disaster flicks as much as I once did, I still love them dearly and every cast member of a big screen disaster epic released from 1970 – 1980 is part of an exclusive club in my mind, a revered club I must tell you. The genre petered out when, in 1980, the parody Airplane! was released and pulled the plug on it. All of the conventions of the disaster movie formula were skewered hilariously and there was no way to continue to take the “straight” ones seriously anymore (even if some of the later entries, like The Swarm and Beyond the Poseidon Adventure,
are unintentionally funny in their own right!) One of the fascinating things about Airplane! is that, despite all the sight gags and crazy situations, the basic plot line is straight out of a previous film and – amazingly – very much of the dialogue from the prior film was left intact, made funny only because of the delivery of the lines and the fact that time had not been especially kind to the overbaked nature of the dialogue.
The chief inspiration for Airplane! was the 1957 B-movie Zero Hour!, a film that was already in itself a rehash of earlier work, but one that seemingly couldn't or wouldn't die until the later spoof rendered it almost ludicrous. The amazing thing is that, even though Zero Hour! is dated and hokey now, it is still quite an entertaining and nail-biting movie. Thanks to the better known Airplane!, Zero Hour! manages to generate tension as well as giggles as it proceeds along its familiar path, making for quite a fun viewing experience.The seed for the story was planted when businessman Arthur Hailey
This was done again for U.S. audiences on an episode of The Alcoa Hour, this time with MacDonald Carey as the flyer, Patricia Barry as the jet's stewardess and, surprisingly enough, young Geoffrey Horne as the on-the-ground contact. Hailey would later adapt the story into a novel, his first, called Runway Zero-Eight, kicking off a highly successful career as a writer, with most of his books examining either an industry or a particular field of employment. 1965 brought Hotel while 1968 brought the mammoth blockbuster Airport. His intensive research for each book meant that there was significant space in between each one, but there was also a staggering attention to detail and sense of reality to them.In 1957, Paramount Pictures produced a feature film based on Flight into Danger seeing it as a good
way to capitalize on the success of Warner Brothers' 1954 hit The High and the Mighty. (As an aside, let me tell you that I waited eons to see the fabled airplane in distress film The High and the Mighty, which had been hidden from view for decades, and when I finally got to see it, thought it was positively dull.) Dana Andrews and Linda Darnell were hired to star in what would eventually be called Zero Hour! and Sterling Hayden joined them.
Meanwhile, stewardess Peggy King is seeing to all of the passengers, including one Jerry Paris, a comedian (at least as the script dictates anyway!) with whom she is sharing a push-and-pull romance that has its own share of concerns. Up in the cockpit, there is the lantern-jawed captain (played by pro football star Elroy “Crazylegs” Hirsch) and his copilot, the soft spoken, rather hunky Steve London. Hirsch's cleft chin could make even Kirk Douglas sit up and take notice.
Andrews makes his presence known to Darnell and the two share some of their frustrated feelings. She simply cannot trust that he has gotten himself straightened out at last, heartbreaking as it is for her and for their son (played by Raymond Ferrell.) Ferrell, an airplane enthusiast thanks to his father, is taken up to the cockpit.
The scene that ensues was later turned into a hysterically salacious and pedophilic spoof in Airplane! and it's easy to see where the inspiration came from. London, the co-pilot, has bedroom eyes, bedroom lips and a bedroom voice as he looks the little chap over. Hirsch, a far more enthusiastic and gregarious type, gives him a toy model of the airplane and can't seem to stop pawing the young boy, albeit in a purely wholesome way. (I will digress here and concede that while there is nothing funny about child molestation, I have to say that the fact that someone was able to pick up on the unintentional sexual vibe here and give it the perverse spin they did later in Airplane! was nothing short of comic genius. Few things are as audacious as Airplane!'s Peter Graves asking his young visitor such queries as “Have you ever seen a grown man naked?”
or “Do you like gladiator movies?” Maybe it's because as a tyke I wanted to see grown men naked and did indeed love gladiator movies!)It's nearly dinner time and King asks the pilots and passengers if they would prefer halibut or lamb chop as their main course. This turns out to be quite a fateful decision as it later unfolds that anyone who partook of the halibut is faced with a violently painful case of food poisoning!
Paris, sadly, had the lamb chop, so he is able to remain alert and in the mix, something that causes a viewer no small amount of annoyance. You see, he has, as part of his act, a tacky, chintzy hand puppet called Patrick, an Irish scamp with a clown face and long hair. The utter dearth of creativity in presenting this aspect of his character is mind-boggling. There is NOTHING funny or entertaining or even the least bit impressive about this sad, sad, puppet. If you thought that the cockpit scenes were icky, wait until Paris stops by little Ferrell's seat and introduces him to his right hand, complete with round, open mouth and tongue! The implications here are just as off-key as the ones with the pilots, but for some reason Airplane! made no attempt to exploit them.
King makes some faint attempts to comfort the sick patients before locating a doctor on board (played by Geoffrey Toone.) Fortunately, he seems to have a bottomless supply of Ipecac in pill form, which he distributes to everyone afflicted. Since this is 1957, we only see sweat and light moaning, no retching or obvious use of air sickness bags, though one old codger does have a line something like, “First, you give me my dinner, then you want it back!” As he's apparently pickled himself with a bottle of booze anyway, it's surprising that he's affected by the poisoning at all.
In time, pilot Hirsch, who's been given drugs to this point in order to remain conscious and alert, cannot take any more and swiftly passes out. (Again, the parody hews closely to the original in the plot and staging, as shown here.) Now the plane is on autopilot with no one left to continue flying it, much less LAND it! Toone, in a piece of classic dialogue looks at King and says, “Our survival hinges on one thing - finding someone who not only can fly this plane, but who didn't have fish for dinner.” King canvasses the passengers until she finds Andrews, the former WWII flyer, who, gratefully, had a lamb chop. He is highly reluctant to take over, petrified, in fact, but there's really little choice if he wants to see his son, who needs hospital-level treatment, live.
(on the left in the picture at right), a ruggedly-nice looking man with thick, wavy hair. He tries to help with the situation, but realizes he needs help himself. In a fit of emergency, he locates one of his senior pilots (who is out dancing with his wife, for some reason in uniform!) and calls him in. This is Sterling Hayden (shown above and to the right), who makes his first real entrance more than halfway through the film. He darts to the airport to take over the ground-to-air coaching only, surprise, it turns out that he was one of the men who served under Andrews during WWII and the two have no great love for one another!
Hayden is forceful and no-nonsense, issuing orders and barking
As time is close to running out, Andrews careens the plane into Vancouver's airspace where he finds that the entire airport is shrouded in, you guessed it, pea soup fog! He has to rely on his instruments and practically do a play-by-play repeat of the mission he flubbed all those years ago. Hayden wants him to wait and circle a while in order to let the fog clear, but with Ferrell and others on the brink of death, he feels he has no choice but to go for it. Hayden barks at and berates Andrews, who is desperately trying to bring the plane down in one piece. A truly scary and vivid landing doesn't shortchange The film's final line couldn't be more apt, “Ted, that was probably the lousiest landing in the history of this airport. But there are some of us here, particularly me, who would like to buy you a drink and shake your hand. We're coming over.” Andrews and Darnell (who is misty with respect and love again) look at each other with relief and love.
I must confess that despite all the goofiness and the camp, I found the whole ending rather affecting the other night when revisiting it. I don't know if it was just warm and comforting to see how affectionately loyal the parody had been towards its target or if I was nostalgic for the simpler times depicted in the film (when peoples' self-respect meant more to them than it sometimes seems to now) or if I was projecting the rather tragic real lives of some of the actors onto the scenario. In any case, I came away from Zero Hour! feeling somewhat touched and thoroughly entertained.
Producer-director-co-writer Hall Bartlett (shown here at left on the far right) was a man interested in social causes (with this movie taking a rather shallow look at post-traumatic stress disorder) and his movies focused on such issues as the plight of Native Americans, postwar healing, prison reform, military racial integration and mental health reform. Only thirty-four when this movie was shot, he continued to write right up until his death during surgery in 1993 at age seventy, marrying Rhonda Fleming along the way from 1966 to 1972. A second wife lasted less than a year in 1978.
Andrews had been acting in films since 1940 and, thanks to hits like 1943's The Ox-Box Incident, 1944's Laura, 1945's State Fair and particularly 1946's The Best Years of Our Lives, among others, became a solid leading man. By the time of Zero Hour!, though he was still a top-billed actor, his star had dimmed from the A-list pictures he had previously enjoyed. Career woes and other issues led to a very serious drinking problem and a couple of highway smash-ups. Still, he managed to serve as president of the Screen Actors Guild from 1963 - 1965, speaking out against the increasing demand for actresses to perform nude scenes. In the early-'70s, he was able to quell his alcoholism and even appear in public service announcements regarding the disease.
With Zero Hour!, The Crowded Sky and Airport 1975, his place in the echelon of cinematic air disaster stars is secure. In 1967, he played another family man haunted by the past and caught having to reluctantly navigate a vehicle with his panic-stricken wife (Jeanne Crain) beside him. That movie was the camp extravaganza Hot Rods to Hell! Andrews died in 1992 at the age of eighty-three from pneumonia and heart failure.This was not the first time Andrews and Darnell worked together.
They also costarred (along with Alice Faye) in 1945's Fallen Angel. A dozen years and no small amount of career and personal trouble separates the two films, but it's nice that they could be cast together again this way.Darnell was first seen in films in 1939 when she was only sixteen years-old (but not promoted as such, her age fudged by her studio, 20th Century Fox.)
Almost from the start, she was costarring with mega-star Tyrone Power in Day-Time Wife, Brigham Young (shown below) and Blood and Sand and they did make a beautiful screen pairing. Known for her softly-rounded, dewy good looks, she played The Virgin Mary (unbilled) in 1943's The Song of Bernadette. Studio chief Darryl Zanuck had a lot of faith in her promise and when his major feature Forever Amber wasn't coming together as he had hoped, he yanked the lead actress out of it and put Darnell in, in spite of the considerable cost. Reportedly, Darnell would not give in to his sexual overtures, causing him to lose some of his interest in her. She also developed a drinking problem and had to fight hard to keep from gaining too much weight.
There were still hits (including 1949's A Letter to Three Wives), but in 1952, she had her contract adjusted to allow her to make outside pictures, one being Saturday Island – aka Island of Desire - with young and hunky Tab Hunter, who had always adored her as a youth. Soon, though, her contract was cancelled and things were never the same again. By the time of Zero Hour!, her career on the big screen was nearly over (she would, in fact, make only one more movie – Black Spurs in 1965 – and never lived to see that one released.)Having turned to television and the stage in order to keep acting, she was in Chicago
preparing for a role in the theatre and staying with a friend when tragedy struck. She and several others stayed up late to watch one of her earliest movies, Star Dust, on the late show and, not long after the others went to bed, a fire broke out (allegedly started by a cigarette when she drifted to sleep with it still lit.) Everyone else made it out alive, alerted by the smoke, but Darnell remained trapped and when she was rescued, 80 to 90% of her body was burned. (Ironically, she had a lifelong fear of fire and strenuously avoided being around open flames.) She died at the hospital at only age forty-one. It was a grisly end for an actress who had provided many lovely moments for the cinema.Hayden was a most unusual type of actor in that he seemed most of the time to deplore the idea of performing and did so only to help fund his greater interest of sailing.
As a runaway from age fifteen on, he had his master's license by age twenty-one. The strapping 6' 5” blonde was led into the movie business at age twenty-five in 1941. He married the star of his first film Virginia, Miss Madeleine Carroll, but they were through by 1946. Movies like The Star in 1952 were his favorites because boats and water were involved. In 1947, he'd married second wife Betty Ann and they had four children. Divorced in 1953, he remarried her in 1954 only to divorce again in 1955! Then, unbelievably, he married her again in 1956 and the divorced a third time in 1958!! When he married again in 1960, one might have issued a blank divorce decree with the license, but, in fact, he and Catherine remained wed until his death and had two more children together.He was supposed to have costarred in Jaws (1975), but due to tax evasion issues at the time couldn't return to the U.S. and so
Hirsch was a renowned football player who played for the (short-lived) Chicago Rockets from 1946 to 1948 and the Los Angeles Rams from 1949 to 1957, the year this movie was released. His strange running pattern had given him the nickname Crazylegs back when he played in college (and was described by a Chicago columnist as looking like “a deranged duck” whose legs “were gyrating in six different directions.”) Zero Hour! was not his big screen debut, however. His life story, Crazylegs,
had been brought to the screen in 1953, directed by Hall Bartlett. In fact, Hirsch owed his entire output of feature film roles to Bartlett, who cast him in the lead of 1955's Unchained, a prison drama that costarred Barbara Hale and Chester Morris. This, his third film, was also his last, though he made a couple of TV appearances through the mid-'60s.He became the director of athletics at the University of Wisconsin in 1969, remaining there, very successfully, until 1987. He'd attended the university briefly and played for them, too,
until service for the U.S. Navy (this was during wartime) required him to depart. His legs stopped running for good in 2004 when he died of natural causes at the age of eighty. He was survived by his wife of fifty-eight years and their two children. It's possible that his notoriety as a sports figure portraying a pilot is what led the makers of Airplane! to put Kareem Abdul-Jabaar in the copilot's seatParis was another favorite of director Bartlett, having been hired for Unchained in 1955 and used a third time after this for 1963's The Caretakers. He began with bit parts in movies from 1949 on before working as a regular or semi-regular on several TV shows, though his biggest claim to fame as an actor was in playing the star's best friend Jerry Helper
on The Dick Van Dyke Show from 1961 to 1966. He began directing for TV in the mid-'60s and by the early-'70s, he gave up acting, for all intents and purposes, to concentrate on his newfound skill. He directed very many shows (including The Dick Van Dyke Show and even three of the later The Mary Tyler Moore Show), but his most prolific output was in helming 238 installments of Happy Days from 1974 to 1984. He died in 1986 at only sixty years of age from a brain tumor.
rising to fame on variety programs such as The George Gobel Show. She really didn't do very much acting, most often playing a singer or just herself, though she gave a credible performance here. She did costar with Tab Hunter and Dick Button in the Hallmark Hall of Fame ice and musical special Hans Brinker and the Silver Skates in 1958. After marrying for the second time (to the man who owned the After 6 evening wear company) and having two children, she receded from show business somewhat, though she continued to sing and act onstage. Now eighty-two, she still occasionally entertains fans at small functions such as at retirement villages, etc...Quinlivan was thirty-three in 1957 yet just getting started in the business. This was his film debut, though
Eden (whose real name was Patricia Tiernan, which was the moniker she typically used) had begun to act in movies in 1952 with a supporting role in Apache War Smoke. In 1956, she played Thomas Gomez' wife in the John Wayne howler The Conqueror. Her only film after Zero Hour! was Walk on the Wild Side, in which she was a prostitute. These three films (Conqueror, Zero and Walk) constitute something of a camp trifecta, though her own contributions to them are minimal. In 1967, she married comedic actor Wally Cox and became his widow in 1973. Still with us now at age eighty-one, she has had a long-term relationship with an author and is long out of show business.London, making his debut here, was only granted supporting TV roles
“Oooh! I'm going to get to see that cute little hunk from the Beach Party movies!” maybe as an air traffic controller or a passenger. But, no... Ashley's only appearance is as a hip-shaking teen idol singer on television, shown briefly - and tinily! - while Hayden's clueless, pneumatic babysitter is chatting on the phone! What a shame. I always enjoy getting a good look at him. He's shown here (in the middle) with a few of his sand and sun pals including Jody McCrea, Frankie Avalon and Miss Annette Funicello.
The woman, by the way, was in Airport 1975 as a heavily drinking passenger who is one of the few people unmoved by Helen Reddy's impromptu ditty on the guitar, so having her paired with a man from Zero Hour! would be an unbelievable triad of connection between all three films.I spoke at the top of this post about how Zero Hour! had evolved through several incarnations. Believe it or not, this was not the last one before Airplane!
To watch Zero Hour! is to multiply one's enjoyment of Airplane! trifold. To watch Airplane! is to add heavy doses of fun to Zero Hour! The two films are now locked together in a unique way. Airplane!'s approach to comedy was, at the time, so fresh and audacious, made extra special by the casting of ostensibly “straight,” stalwart actors like Peter Graves, Robert Stack, Lloyd Bridges and Leslie Nielsen, giving deadpan delivery of their hysterical lines.

6 comments:
I agree that Zero Hour! is an engrossing film even without the Airplane! tie in. I had seen it before the spoof came out when it use to be shown on the Million Dollar Movie late at night owing to my devotion to Linda Darnell, my favorite classic actress, and my determined effort to see all her films still sadly unrealized although I'm getting close. So unlike many in the original audience for Airplane! I picked up on the parody while watching it the first time and then tried in vain for years to rewatch Zero Hour! but had to wait years until its release on DVD.
My favorite actor in the spoof is Lloyd Bridges and his dead on take on that block of wood Hayden's performance is perfection.
As far as Linda Darnell's death, I have heard a few different versions but the most reliable would seem to be from an interview I read with her former secretary, that's who she was visiting and whose house caught on fire. Apparently the woman and her daughter were clinging to the side of the house but Linda had very weak ankles and wrists and decided to try to escape through the front door but became trapped. She had been burned slightly while filming the execution scene in Anna and the King of Siam which lead to her fear and she had stated in interviews that she refused to die in that way in any future films. A tragic irony.
Joel, I knew of your affection for Miss Darnell, which is one reason why I went just a touch more in-depth with her background and career than I sometimes do in these post-movie-recap bios. (I also tried to find some good and/or rare pictures of her.) I read the account you're talking about, but didn't relay it in the already long post and appreciate you sharing it here for others to see. The fire fear thing reminded me of Natalie Wood's dark water fear and equally ironic death. Very sad. Oh, also, I think Robert Stack is given the bulk of the Sterling Hayden character and attributes, but many of them were divvied out to Lloyd Bridges, too, to spread the wealth (especially since Quinlivan had nothing to really mock in his run-of-the-mill portrayal.) Thanks a lot for reading and commenting!
Never heard of this movie till now, MUST see it! And this may just be the hottest cast ever assembled in one film: Dana Andrews, Sterling Hayden, Geoffrey Toone (another new one to me)...
Poor,sweet,beautiful Linda Darnell, I've never heard anyone who had a bad thing to say about her (Tab Hunter's memories of her in his book were very touching).
Love Airplane (1 and 2) and this is one of your funniest posts. I grinned like an idiot at this:
"Carole Eden(showing a fair amount of tit for 1957!)"
Poseidon, thanks for the effort. Loved the pics, the last one of her is one I don't recall seeing so that was very cool.
Ha! Rob, I couldn't convey it in photos, but in so many '50s films, the bustlines are very covered and structured and when Ms. Eden rolls over to answer the phone, there's this sort of eye-opening breast-flop that by today's standards is nothing, but for the time was pretty vivid, I'm sure! (Somehow, despite so few scenes and lines, she got decent billing on the ads, too!)
Joel, I love that headshot of Darnell. It's all gauzy and glamorous, just right for a lady of a certain age (even though she really wasn't "old!") I always try, to no avail, to have my lobby headshots handled the same way, but no... sharp focus!!!!!
What a great post! I remember Zero Hour, but just barely. I do remember seeing Airplane! at a sneak preview. Nobody knew what to expect, and needless to say we were completely floored! I haven't laughed that much in a movie theater before or since.
Post a Comment