80 out of 89 people found the following comment useful :- Arguably one of the funniest films ever made, 6 junio 2004
Author:
MovieAddict2008 de UK
"Airplane!" is, was and always shall be the master of spoof movies. It
is single-handedly responsible for literally inventing a sub-genre of
comedy. It is the ultimate Silly Movie. A satire of the disaster movies
of the 1970s, particularly the "Airport" series, nothing makes sense
and it doesn't need to. There's no real plot. Just laughs - and plenty
of 'em.
It was helmed by the ZAZ trio (Zucker, Abrahams and Zucker), whose
dedication to making the audience laugh is surprisingly adamant. Recent
spoofs may have left a bad aftertaste in your mouth, but it seems to be
a universal agreement: "Airplane" is the funniest film of its genre
ever made. (Closely followed by "The Naked Gun" - also penned by the
ZAZ trio - perhaps.)
The plot: Ted Striker (Robert Hays) is a war veteran-turned-cab-driver
who decides to chase after his girlfriend, an airline stewardess named
Elaine (Julie Hagerty), who has dumped him in order to pursue a new
life. Right before her plane takes off, Ted climbs aboard, hitching a
ride in order to woo her back into a relationship again.
When the aircraft is in midflight, both pilots become very ill after
eating their meals. Eventually many passengers begin to show symptoms
of a rare disease, apparently transmitted by the food. Onboard, Dr.
Rumack (Leslie Nielsen) takes care of the sick passengers as Ted - an
ex-fighter pilot from the war - decides to try and land the plane. If
he messes up they will all die, and in a particularly funny scene, the
pressure becomes so unbearable that he begins to literally sweat
gallons in the cockpit.
That is essentially all the film is about, but most of its duration is
spent cracking jokes. Spoof films are entirely different from other
movies because normally we would criticize a film if it considered its
plot to be the least important element. Not so here. This is a truly
brainless piece of celluloid - a movie that doesn't try to be anything
that it isn't. From the opening credits - that cleverly spoof "JAWS" -
to the closing we realize that this is an altogether unique film going
experience.
The movie's biggest laughs come through unexpected flashbacks, such as
when Ted remembers where he first met Elaine in a crummy bar ("...it
was worse than Detroit..."), and begins to disco-dance a la John
Travolta from "Saturday Night Fever" (complete with Bee Gees soundtrack
blaring in the background and the famous Travolta pose). Then, later,
we are taken back to when Ted was hospitalized after the war, and finds
out that he was responsible for the death of six men. "Seven,
actually," he is informed, which adds to the pain of the moment for
him.
Though this movie is very funny, many jokes misfire. If you're not pop
culture savvy and you don't remember Mrs. Cleaver from TV's "Leave it
to Beaver", the humor is going to go over your head. But unlike many
comedies, "Airplane!" offers something unique for each person. I know
that as a film lover, I picked up on many movie in-jokes that some
people might not recognize. And then there were the gags that I first
missed but picked up after a second viewing, or when someone explained
them to me, or both. And I'm sure there are many yet that I'm not aware
of. It seems that every time I watch it, there's something else to
laugh at that I missed previously.
"Airplane!" not only was a huge success in 1980 (the year of its
release), spinning off a horde of imitators and one sequel - it was
also responsible for crowning Leslie Nielsen "The King of Spoof." Prior
to "Airplane!" Nielsen had been a veteran of more serious productions,
stemming back to playing cowboys on "The Mickey Mouse Club" and other
embarrassing attempts at acting. However, Nielsen later claimed that he
had always wanted to do a comedy, even when he first started acting
seriously with projects such as the classic "Forbidden Planet" (one of
the best science-fiction films ever made). He later reunited with the
ZAZ trio for "The Naked Gun" trilogy, appeared in similar spoof films
over the years such as "Wrongfully Accused" and "Scary Movie 3," and
had his iconic comedy shtick ripped off by many screen veterans - most
noticeably by George Gaynes in the unbearable "Police Academy" (1984).
When it comes down to a single evaluation, "Airplane" is simply the
best spoof film ever made. It's like a MAD Magazine parody come to
life. There are the occasional misfires, but unlike many other spoof
film imitators, this one contains far more hits. The deadpan acting is
genius and everything else fits into place, resulting in what may
arguably be one of the absolute funniest films ever conceived and put
on the big screen. And if you decide to watch the movie, don't blink -
you might miss a gag or two. The "Police Academies" will come and go
but "Airplane!" will never be forgotten.
72 out of 82 people found the following comment useful :- We have clearance, Clarence...., 15 agosto 1999
Author:
George Litman de Marietta, OH USA
It is my understanding that there are still a few people in the world that
haven't seen "Airplane!" yet.
Those people probably are still waiting for electricity, indoor plumbing and
all the other great advances in humanity, too.
To see "Airplane!" is to take part in the great move to subvert all
self-importance in movies, which this film does with great relish (and
plenty of corn).
You get a chance to see such "serious" actors as Peter Graves, Lloyd
Bridges, Robert Stack and Leslie Nielsen subvert themselves and their own
personnae into near oblivion thanks to the writing/directing team of Zucker,
Abrahams and Zucker. Not to mention visual and verbal send-ups of darn near
every movie that ever took place in the air, and a few that didn't, but
should have.
Kudos to Leslie Nielsen, who with this movie gave himself the greatest
reinvention of any actor this century. At one time, he was the very model
of stoic sensibility.
I swear. Seriously.
A looooong time ago.
Ten stars. A laugh riot.
And I STILL think this would make a great in-flight movie.
66 out of 73 people found the following comment useful :- Still hilarious and fresh decades later, 28 noviembre 2001
Author:
bob the moo de Birmingham, UK
War pilot Ted Striker boards a flight for the first time since the war in
order to stop his relationship with stewardess Elaine breaking up.
Unfortunately the fish meal on the flight is bad and causes the crew to go
sick leaving the plane on automatic pilot. With Striker the only man on
board who can land the plane can he overcome his fears of failure stemming
from the war?
This without a doubt one of the best comedies of cinema, it is far and away
the best spoof ever made - and it was made when this type of humour was
still fresh. From the opening moments right down to the closing credits
this is hilarious. The plot is a straight spoof of 1970's Airport disaster
movies, and is only an excuse for a range of jokes. However the plot is
bang on - it's detailed enough that it could be a serious disaster movie and
allows the film to poke fun directly at the disasters movies
themselves.
The cast are perfect. For Robert Hays and Julie Hagerty this represents the
best things they've ever done. Both play the straight men for the majority
and are relied upon to take it all seriously and drive the plot while jokes
occur all round them, that said they deliver many themselves but always
straight faced. Nielsen and Bridges are also spot on as stereotypical
doctor and traffic control guy who "chose the wrong day to give up
drinking"! They are both so straight faced that they make the whole thing
seem even more silly. Robert Stack is excellent as the man brought in to
talk the plane down, playing the butch masculine figure ignoring all the
madness around him. Also on the ground, Stephen Stucker is great as the
camp controller who delivers many brilliant one liners as he walks through
scenes. Peter Graves and Kareen Abdul Jabbar are great as two of the pilots
that almost are in a different movie the things they say!
The film is a spot on spoof of disaster movies, making fun of the many
clichés of the genre - the nuns on board, the sick child, the "only man who
can land the plane", the poisoned food etc. But it does more than just poke
fun at these - it is hilarious in it's own right. All the cast deliver
their lines brilliantly and the script! The script is excellent - I'm not
going to start listing lines but they come so thick and fast that you
usually miss something because you're laughing at the last
joke.
This is the mould for all spoofs - this is the one to beat. While many
spoofs are hit and miss this is almost a total hit. Decades on and many
viewings later this is still as fresh and as funny as it ever was. A
brilliant, brilliant comedy!
58 out of 66 people found the following comment useful :- The original spoof classic!, 7 mayo 2003
Author:
Michael DeZubiria (miked32@hotmail.com) de Luoyang, China
Unfortunately, Airplane! has been, for me, one of those comedies that I have
seen so many times in the video store that its appeal has gradually worn
down to almost nothing, resulting in a total absence of interest in renting
it. I eventually watched it one day because I worked at the video store and
could rent movies for free, and was continuing on my desperate attempt to
watch every movie in the store (a goal which continues to this day, although
by now I've come to realize that it's never going to happen). During my
quest, by the way, I also saw the old 1970 film Airport, probably ten years
after having seen parts of Airplane!, and realized that this is one of the
many movies that inspired Airplane!
In general, I'm a little cautious about movies that have exclamation points
in the titles, but Airplane! is without a doubt one of the funniest movies
ever made. Consider, for example, those little montages that studios
sometimes put together and put at the beginning of movies when they come out
on videotape, honoring the great movies that the studio has made in the
past. They show lots of memorable clips from their old movies (and I always
write all of these titles down, determined to watch them all, and then
promptly lose the list that I made) to remind you how great they are. I had
a good time watching Airplane! and picking out how many scenes are in the
movie that can and do go into those memorable montages.
Airplane! is made up of a series of hilarious scenes that string together a
thin shoestring plot, which ironically speaks in the movie's defense. In
general, movies with weak stories that are driven along by comedic stunts
and pranks and whatnot tend to be pretty weak, but Airplane! is not driven
by stunts to cover a weak story as much as the quality of the stunts and the
slapstick comedy is so good that they overshadow everything else. It's
interesting to watch someone like Robert Stack so many years ago and see
that he looked and talked exactly like he did in Unsolved Mysteries so many
years later, a show the seriousness of which boggles the mind, given that
it's hosted by someone who did so well in a movie like this
one.
My favorite thing about this movie is, obviously, the huge amount of sound
bytes that comes from it, just the cleverness of the way it was written and
put together. You have the main character's `drinking problem,' the airport
announcers (`Listen, Betty, don't start up with your white zone sh*t
again '), the stress of the people investigating the situation on the plane
(`Looks like I picked the wrong week to quit smoking/drinking/amphetamines.'),
the plays on words (`There's a problem at the control tower!' `What is it?'
`It's the big tower where the air traffic controllers talk to the planes.'),
that one airport employee who was suspiciously bubbly and excited throughout
the entire movie (while providing some of its best comedy), and then of
course were the situational gags, such as Robert Stack pulling off his
sunglasses to reveal another pair underneath (arguably the most famous scene
in the entire film).
This is a movie where a list like this could go on and on, and I'm sure if
you go to the memorable quotes page on the IMDb you'll find a gigantic list
of hilarious quotes from the movie there. It is no secret that this is
something of a childish and immature comedy, but it is smartly written and
has so many great scenes and bits of dialogue that it's one of those rare
movies that makes you want to take notes so you won't forget a lot of the
lines. It is one of the earlier versions of Leslie Nielsen's spoofs, a genre
in itself which went on to tremendous success with lots of great (and some
not so great) spoofs to follow.
44 out of 48 people found the following comment useful :- the greatest comedy of all time, 30 marzo 2005
Author:
the-jerk de Newark, DE
Airplane is simply the funniest movie of all time. It handles the broad
range of parody, satire, and plain silliness expertly, and has some of
the greatest one-liners and sight gags ever put in a movie. Sure some
of the jokes are dated, but great comedies (especially parodies) exist
in the moment, and you have to expect that. The fact is, enough jokes
hit the bullseye that it really is one of those rare movies where you
are laughing constantly. I am, at least. This movie launched Leslie
Nielsen's career as a comedy actor, although he still hasn't made
anything this good (Naked Gun comes closest, but it's still light years
away from this). Do any movies come close to hitting the zenith that
this one does? "Young Frankenstein" comes close, but even the best Mel
Brooks film doesn't top this. There has simply never been a funnier
movie than "Airplane!" and for that, it deserves to be considered one
of the greatest MOVIES of all time (I know for many people that's a
stretch, but I stand by it; I've been watching it my whole life and
there's still nothing I flat-out enjoy watching more).
26 out of 26 people found the following comment useful :- "You have clearance, Clarence." "Roger, Roger. What's our vector, Victor?", 18 enero 2004
Author:
Scott LeBrun de Winnipeg, Canada
When the flight crew of a commercial airliner fall victim to food
poisoning, the only one on the plane who can save everybody from
disaster is former war pilot Ted Stryker (Robert Hays), who's a
neurotic mess, in this spoof of the 1970's "Airport" series from
Universal, but which actually takes its biggest inspiration from the
1957 thriller "Zero Hour".
"Airplane!" is a classic, influential comedy, among the best of its
kind. It may be not the first of its kind - when I wrote my original
comment, I somehow forgot about earlier Mel Brooks classics like "Young
Frankenstein" and "Blazing Saddles". The film-makers (Jim Abrahams,
David Zucker, and Jerry Zucker) throw joke after joke at the audience -
both verbal and visual, and even when the joke is stupid, it's still
worthy of a laugh.
There is an impressively high quotient of successful and memorable gags
(I've always loved the "Saturday Night Fever" parody), as well as many
hilarious quotes. The great cast includes some veteran "straight man"
actors (Lloyd Bridges, Robert Stack, Peter Graves, Leslie Nielsen) who
do marvelous self-parodies, as well as some gag cameos and a number of
now-familiar character actors (Nicholas Pryor, Jonathan Banks, James
Hong, and others). The three film-makers themselves have bit parts, and
the Zucker brothers even throw their mother into the mix (she's the one
having a hard time putting on her makeup).
Even after many years of watching this movie, it still holds up
remarkably well, and for me, that plays a big part in its appeal. Some
of the jokes may be dated now, but they are all still funny.
Followed by a decent yet inferior sequel two years later.
8/10
29 out of 33 people found the following comment useful :- A hilarious gem!, 13 marzo 2003
Author:
mattymatt4ever de Jersey City, NJ
This is voted as one of the funniest comedies of all time, and it deserves
that honor! The film is filled with hilarious gags! Sure, in every one of
these campy farces, there's usually a few gags that are way too silly. In
this case, it was the "drinking problem" gag and that annoying gay man who
works on Lloyd Bridges' staff. But when I can actually count on my hand how
many gags didn't work, that's a good sign. The majority of the film sent me
into a frenzy of laughter! One of my favorites is when the blow-up
auto-pilot runs out of air and Julie Hagerty blows it back up again. You'll
have to see the movie to find out why it was so hilarious! I also got a
great kick out of the running gag in which every passenger who listens to
Robert Hays ends up killing themselves. This is definitely the Zuckers and
Abrahams in top form! Unfortunately, I haven't seen a great spoof in years.
The "Scary Movie" films were pretty good, but incredibly lewd and crude.
And obviously the Zuckers and Abrahams have much better eyes for satire than
the Wayans brothers. I caught "Scary Movie" on cable and watched it a
second time, and I didn't laugh nearly as many times as I did the first
time. I can watch "Airplane" 200 times and still laugh like there's no
tomorrow! The film was made back when comedies didn't go strictly for sex
and toilet gags to make an audience laugh. This was back when writers used
to employ this quality called "wit." "Kentucky Fried Movie" had some racy
gags, but even those were witty for the most part. There is a certain
rhythm in every gag that helps make the film work. For example, Lloyd
Bridges starts out by saying "I think I picked the wrong day to quit
smoking." Then he says he picked the wrong day to quit drinking. And when
he finally says "I picked the wrong day to quit amphetamines," I was
laughing my head off! So basically, you watch a film like this and feel the
urge to mail a copy of the video to the Wayans Brothers and whatever
crackheads wrote "Not Another Teen Movie," along with a note saying "THIS is
how to make a spoof!"
There are so many other gags worth mentioning, including the "Saturday Night
Fever" sendup, which is definitely one of the best comic moments caught on
film! That scene also contains my favorite line: "I told the guy next to
me to pinch me to make sure I wasn't dreaming." After that voice-over, we
see the guy next to Robert Hays repulsed and walking away from him. Another
great example of perfect comic timing and delivery!
If you want to get some authentic belly laughs--I'm not talking chuckles,
but actual LAUGHS!--you must check out "Airplane." Trust me, movies don't
get much more original or funny than this!
My score: 9 (out of 10)
27 out of 31 people found the following comment useful :- "I am serious... and don't call me Shirley.", 13 febrero 2005
Author:
Ryan (rkuhn_psu@yahoo.com) de King of Prussia, PA
In a tense moment where Ted Striker (Robert Hays) needs to land an
airplane where the pilots (Peter Graves and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) have
fallen sick, and several passengers need to get off the airplane for
various reasons, all Striker can think to himself (with an echo in his
mind, of course) is "I've got to concentrate... concentrate...
concentrate... I've got to concentrate... concentrate... concentrate...
Hello?... hello... hello... Echo... echo... echo... Pinch hitting for
Pedro Borbon... Manny Mota... Mota... Mota..." That pretty much sums up
the seriousness of Airplane!, the lampoon of the 1970s Airport movies,
and pretty much every other disaster movie pumped out by Hollywood. The
same guys who pieced together the Naked Gun movies write and direct
this silly movie. Most of the jokes need to be seen to be properly
experienced, the first rate actors are what brings the laughs. Robert
Stack plays it straight, over-the-top straight, as a problem solver for
the airline who happens to wear 2 pairs of sunglasses at all times.
Stack's comedic timing and deadpan delivery bring out some of the
biggest laughs of the film. Lloyd Bridges is the over-worked,
over-stressed traffic controller who has picked the wrong week to stop
drinking, smoking, and sniffing glue. And Leslie Neilson plays a doctor
who has an acute sense for the obvious, surely one who could save the
passengers and airline crew if they land safely, just don't call him
Shirley. A few cheap laughs, a few misses, but over all, a pretty funny
movie. If you like The Naked Gun, you'll like Airplane!
22 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :- "It's an Entirely Different Kind of Flying.", 3 agosto 2005
Author:
nycritic
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Only the writing/directing team of Jerry and David Zucker and Jim
Abrahams could conceive of spoofing a film like ZERO HOUR! while
sticking pretty close to its source and garner a smash hit. It's a
shame they didn't do more spoofs, or that their output has been rather
infrequent, resulting in each of this team making their own movies with
varying degrees of success, since there is so much material out there
to rip apart from.
Here, it's the fear of flying. That any flight could encounter problems
either from the weather or from machinery is nothing new -- it happens,
plain and simple. That a shot of the flight depicted here as it flies
dangerously close to the Chicago skyline probably won't give anyone a
9/11 jolt nowadays, but the undertone is there. There is a fear of
planes, and this movie takes that specific fear and turns it inside out
with hysterical results from the opening shot to the closing credits.
Using the premise of ZERO HOUR and the AIRPORT franchise, AIRPLANE
brings Ted Stryker, a man who has a neurotic fear of failure and is a
war veteran, gets on a plane to get back with his estranged girlfriend
Elaine, a stewardess on the flight. That he tells his "tragic" tale to
not one, but three people (all who commit suicide) is one of the many
laugh-out-loud sequences, but some danger actually ensues when the
meals are served and those who have eaten fish fall ill, and this
includes the pilots. With no one left to fly this plane, Ted is called
into duty and guided by Captain Kramer (whom he hates) he has to fly
the plane to safety.
This is, essentially, the bare-bones of the plot. The real stars of the
movie are the incessant, mile a minute visual, referential, and verbal
jokes that assault the viewer faster than he or she can register.
References to classic movies, soap operas, commercials from the 70s
("Jim never drinks a second cup of coffee at home..."), pedophilia,
basketball, voice recordings that guide people through airports,
outrageous takes on characters from the very movies they are spoofing;
in short, nothing is spared here, and it makes for a relentlessly funny
movie.
That the actors play it straight makes AIRPLANE even funnier. It's as
if they weren't sure as to what exactly were they doing and were trying
these waters out on a lark; luckily for them that it paid because not
only it made David Zucker's, Jerry Zucker's, and Jim Abrahams' career,
it also brought back Leslie Nielsen into the limelight as a deadpan
funny man who could deliver ridiculous lines as if it were the real
thing. Its success was so evident that it spawned an inferior remake, a
slew of similar-toned movies, many of them directed by the
Zucker-Zucker-Abrahams team, together or separately. This, however,
remains as the spoof movie to watch, the one all spoof movie should
measure itself to, and one of the funniest comedies of all time.
21 out of 23 people found the following comment useful :- An Undoubted Classic, 15 enero 2005
Author:
mjw2305 de England
Still one of funniest spoof movies ever made, Airplane is one of the
first and one of the best around.
Hot Shots, Loaded Weapon even Naked Gun have tried to follow in its
footsteps, but they have failed to hit the mark. That's not to say that
they are bad movies, just that its difficult to follow a movie of this
calibre.
Spoof movies definitely have there place in everyone's collection, but
this is probably the best you'll ever see in the genre, if you have
never seen it and you fancy a laugh, I can't recommend a better film,
even though it has dated; it's still hilarious 9/10
Own the rights?

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80 out of 89 people found the following comment useful :-

Arguably one of the funniest films ever made, 6 junio 2004
Author: MovieAddict2008 de UK
"Airplane!" is, was and always shall be the master of spoof movies. It is single-handedly responsible for literally inventing a sub-genre of comedy. It is the ultimate Silly Movie. A satire of the disaster movies of the 1970s, particularly the "Airport" series, nothing makes sense and it doesn't need to. There's no real plot. Just laughs - and plenty of 'em.
It was helmed by the ZAZ trio (Zucker, Abrahams and Zucker), whose dedication to making the audience laugh is surprisingly adamant. Recent spoofs may have left a bad aftertaste in your mouth, but it seems to be a universal agreement: "Airplane" is the funniest film of its genre ever made. (Closely followed by "The Naked Gun" - also penned by the ZAZ trio - perhaps.)
The plot: Ted Striker (Robert Hays) is a war veteran-turned-cab-driver who decides to chase after his girlfriend, an airline stewardess named Elaine (Julie Hagerty), who has dumped him in order to pursue a new life. Right before her plane takes off, Ted climbs aboard, hitching a ride in order to woo her back into a relationship again.
When the aircraft is in midflight, both pilots become very ill after eating their meals. Eventually many passengers begin to show symptoms of a rare disease, apparently transmitted by the food. Onboard, Dr. Rumack (Leslie Nielsen) takes care of the sick passengers as Ted - an ex-fighter pilot from the war - decides to try and land the plane. If he messes up they will all die, and in a particularly funny scene, the pressure becomes so unbearable that he begins to literally sweat gallons in the cockpit.
That is essentially all the film is about, but most of its duration is spent cracking jokes. Spoof films are entirely different from other movies because normally we would criticize a film if it considered its plot to be the least important element. Not so here. This is a truly brainless piece of celluloid - a movie that doesn't try to be anything that it isn't. From the opening credits - that cleverly spoof "JAWS" - to the closing we realize that this is an altogether unique film going experience.
The movie's biggest laughs come through unexpected flashbacks, such as when Ted remembers where he first met Elaine in a crummy bar ("...it was worse than Detroit..."), and begins to disco-dance a la John Travolta from "Saturday Night Fever" (complete with Bee Gees soundtrack blaring in the background and the famous Travolta pose). Then, later, we are taken back to when Ted was hospitalized after the war, and finds out that he was responsible for the death of six men. "Seven, actually," he is informed, which adds to the pain of the moment for him.
Though this movie is very funny, many jokes misfire. If you're not pop culture savvy and you don't remember Mrs. Cleaver from TV's "Leave it to Beaver", the humor is going to go over your head. But unlike many comedies, "Airplane!" offers something unique for each person. I know that as a film lover, I picked up on many movie in-jokes that some people might not recognize. And then there were the gags that I first missed but picked up after a second viewing, or when someone explained them to me, or both. And I'm sure there are many yet that I'm not aware of. It seems that every time I watch it, there's something else to laugh at that I missed previously.
"Airplane!" not only was a huge success in 1980 (the year of its release), spinning off a horde of imitators and one sequel - it was also responsible for crowning Leslie Nielsen "The King of Spoof." Prior to "Airplane!" Nielsen had been a veteran of more serious productions, stemming back to playing cowboys on "The Mickey Mouse Club" and other embarrassing attempts at acting. However, Nielsen later claimed that he had always wanted to do a comedy, even when he first started acting seriously with projects such as the classic "Forbidden Planet" (one of the best science-fiction films ever made). He later reunited with the ZAZ trio for "The Naked Gun" trilogy, appeared in similar spoof films over the years such as "Wrongfully Accused" and "Scary Movie 3," and had his iconic comedy shtick ripped off by many screen veterans - most noticeably by George Gaynes in the unbearable "Police Academy" (1984).
When it comes down to a single evaluation, "Airplane" is simply the best spoof film ever made. It's like a MAD Magazine parody come to life. There are the occasional misfires, but unlike many other spoof film imitators, this one contains far more hits. The deadpan acting is genius and everything else fits into place, resulting in what may arguably be one of the absolute funniest films ever conceived and put on the big screen. And if you decide to watch the movie, don't blink - you might miss a gag or two. The "Police Academies" will come and go but "Airplane!" will never be forgotten.
72 out of 82 people found the following comment useful :-

We have clearance, Clarence...., 15 agosto 1999
Author: George Litman de Marietta, OH USA
It is my understanding that there are still a few people in the world that haven't seen "Airplane!" yet.
Those people probably are still waiting for electricity, indoor plumbing and all the other great advances in humanity, too.
To see "Airplane!" is to take part in the great move to subvert all self-importance in movies, which this film does with great relish (and plenty of corn).
You get a chance to see such "serious" actors as Peter Graves, Lloyd Bridges, Robert Stack and Leslie Nielsen subvert themselves and their own personnae into near oblivion thanks to the writing/directing team of Zucker, Abrahams and Zucker. Not to mention visual and verbal send-ups of darn near every movie that ever took place in the air, and a few that didn't, but should have.
Kudos to Leslie Nielsen, who with this movie gave himself the greatest reinvention of any actor this century. At one time, he was the very model of stoic sensibility.
I swear. Seriously.
A looooong time ago.
Ten stars. A laugh riot.
And I STILL think this would make a great in-flight movie.
66 out of 73 people found the following comment useful :-
Still hilarious and fresh decades later, 28 noviembre 2001
Author: bob the moo de Birmingham, UK
War pilot Ted Striker boards a flight for the first time since the war in order to stop his relationship with stewardess Elaine breaking up. Unfortunately the fish meal on the flight is bad and causes the crew to go sick leaving the plane on automatic pilot. With Striker the only man on board who can land the plane can he overcome his fears of failure stemming from the war? This without a doubt one of the best comedies of cinema, it is far and away the best spoof ever made - and it was made when this type of humour was still fresh. From the opening moments right down to the closing credits this is hilarious. The plot is a straight spoof of 1970's Airport disaster movies, and is only an excuse for a range of jokes. However the plot is bang on - it's detailed enough that it could be a serious disaster movie and allows the film to poke fun directly at the disasters movies themselves. The cast are perfect. For Robert Hays and Julie Hagerty this represents the best things they've ever done. Both play the straight men for the majority and are relied upon to take it all seriously and drive the plot while jokes occur all round them, that said they deliver many themselves but always straight faced. Nielsen and Bridges are also spot on as stereotypical doctor and traffic control guy who "chose the wrong day to give up drinking"! They are both so straight faced that they make the whole thing seem even more silly. Robert Stack is excellent as the man brought in to talk the plane down, playing the butch masculine figure ignoring all the madness around him. Also on the ground, Stephen Stucker is great as the camp controller who delivers many brilliant one liners as he walks through scenes. Peter Graves and Kareen Abdul Jabbar are great as two of the pilots that almost are in a different movie the things they say! The film is a spot on spoof of disaster movies, making fun of the many clichés of the genre - the nuns on board, the sick child, the "only man who can land the plane", the poisoned food etc. But it does more than just poke fun at these - it is hilarious in it's own right. All the cast deliver their lines brilliantly and the script! The script is excellent - I'm not going to start listing lines but they come so thick and fast that you usually miss something because you're laughing at the last joke.
This is the mould for all spoofs - this is the one to beat. While many spoofs are hit and miss this is almost a total hit. Decades on and many viewings later this is still as fresh and as funny as it ever was. A brilliant, brilliant comedy!
58 out of 66 people found the following comment useful :-

The original spoof classic!, 7 mayo 2003
Author: Michael DeZubiria (miked32@hotmail.com) de Luoyang, China
Unfortunately, Airplane! has been, for me, one of those comedies that I have seen so many times in the video store that its appeal has gradually worn down to almost nothing, resulting in a total absence of interest in renting it. I eventually watched it one day because I worked at the video store and could rent movies for free, and was continuing on my desperate attempt to watch every movie in the store (a goal which continues to this day, although by now I've come to realize that it's never going to happen). During my quest, by the way, I also saw the old 1970 film Airport, probably ten years after having seen parts of Airplane!, and realized that this is one of the many movies that inspired Airplane!
In general, I'm a little cautious about movies that have exclamation points in the titles, but Airplane! is without a doubt one of the funniest movies ever made. Consider, for example, those little montages that studios sometimes put together and put at the beginning of movies when they come out on videotape, honoring the great movies that the studio has made in the past. They show lots of memorable clips from their old movies (and I always write all of these titles down, determined to watch them all, and then promptly lose the list that I made) to remind you how great they are. I had a good time watching Airplane! and picking out how many scenes are in the movie that can and do go into those memorable montages.
Airplane! is made up of a series of hilarious scenes that string together a thin shoestring plot, which ironically speaks in the movie's defense. In general, movies with weak stories that are driven along by comedic stunts and pranks and whatnot tend to be pretty weak, but Airplane! is not driven by stunts to cover a weak story as much as the quality of the stunts and the slapstick comedy is so good that they overshadow everything else. It's interesting to watch someone like Robert Stack so many years ago and see that he looked and talked exactly like he did in Unsolved Mysteries so many years later, a show the seriousness of which boggles the mind, given that it's hosted by someone who did so well in a movie like this one.
My favorite thing about this movie is, obviously, the huge amount of sound bytes that comes from it, just the cleverness of the way it was written and put together. You have the main character's `drinking problem,' the airport announcers (`Listen, Betty, don't start up with your white zone sh*t again '), the stress of the people investigating the situation on the plane (`Looks like I picked the wrong week to quit smoking/drinking/amphetamines.'), the plays on words (`There's a problem at the control tower!' `What is it?' `It's the big tower where the air traffic controllers talk to the planes.'), that one airport employee who was suspiciously bubbly and excited throughout the entire movie (while providing some of its best comedy), and then of course were the situational gags, such as Robert Stack pulling off his sunglasses to reveal another pair underneath (arguably the most famous scene in the entire film).
This is a movie where a list like this could go on and on, and I'm sure if you go to the memorable quotes page on the IMDb you'll find a gigantic list of hilarious quotes from the movie there. It is no secret that this is something of a childish and immature comedy, but it is smartly written and has so many great scenes and bits of dialogue that it's one of those rare movies that makes you want to take notes so you won't forget a lot of the lines. It is one of the earlier versions of Leslie Nielsen's spoofs, a genre in itself which went on to tremendous success with lots of great (and some not so great) spoofs to follow.
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the greatest comedy of all time, 30 marzo 2005
Author: the-jerk de Newark, DE
Airplane is simply the funniest movie of all time. It handles the broad range of parody, satire, and plain silliness expertly, and has some of the greatest one-liners and sight gags ever put in a movie. Sure some of the jokes are dated, but great comedies (especially parodies) exist in the moment, and you have to expect that. The fact is, enough jokes hit the bullseye that it really is one of those rare movies where you are laughing constantly. I am, at least. This movie launched Leslie Nielsen's career as a comedy actor, although he still hasn't made anything this good (Naked Gun comes closest, but it's still light years away from this). Do any movies come close to hitting the zenith that this one does? "Young Frankenstein" comes close, but even the best Mel Brooks film doesn't top this. There has simply never been a funnier movie than "Airplane!" and for that, it deserves to be considered one of the greatest MOVIES of all time (I know for many people that's a stretch, but I stand by it; I've been watching it my whole life and there's still nothing I flat-out enjoy watching more).
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"You have clearance, Clarence." "Roger, Roger. What's our vector, Victor?", 18 enero 2004
Author: Scott LeBrun de Winnipeg, Canada
When the flight crew of a commercial airliner fall victim to food poisoning, the only one on the plane who can save everybody from disaster is former war pilot Ted Stryker (Robert Hays), who's a neurotic mess, in this spoof of the 1970's "Airport" series from Universal, but which actually takes its biggest inspiration from the 1957 thriller "Zero Hour".
"Airplane!" is a classic, influential comedy, among the best of its kind. It may be not the first of its kind - when I wrote my original comment, I somehow forgot about earlier Mel Brooks classics like "Young Frankenstein" and "Blazing Saddles". The film-makers (Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, and Jerry Zucker) throw joke after joke at the audience - both verbal and visual, and even when the joke is stupid, it's still worthy of a laugh.
There is an impressively high quotient of successful and memorable gags (I've always loved the "Saturday Night Fever" parody), as well as many hilarious quotes. The great cast includes some veteran "straight man" actors (Lloyd Bridges, Robert Stack, Peter Graves, Leslie Nielsen) who do marvelous self-parodies, as well as some gag cameos and a number of now-familiar character actors (Nicholas Pryor, Jonathan Banks, James Hong, and others). The three film-makers themselves have bit parts, and the Zucker brothers even throw their mother into the mix (she's the one having a hard time putting on her makeup).
Even after many years of watching this movie, it still holds up remarkably well, and for me, that plays a big part in its appeal. Some of the jokes may be dated now, but they are all still funny.
Followed by a decent yet inferior sequel two years later.
8/10
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A hilarious gem!, 13 marzo 2003
Author: mattymatt4ever de Jersey City, NJ
This is voted as one of the funniest comedies of all time, and it deserves that honor! The film is filled with hilarious gags! Sure, in every one of these campy farces, there's usually a few gags that are way too silly. In this case, it was the "drinking problem" gag and that annoying gay man who works on Lloyd Bridges' staff. But when I can actually count on my hand how many gags didn't work, that's a good sign. The majority of the film sent me into a frenzy of laughter! One of my favorites is when the blow-up auto-pilot runs out of air and Julie Hagerty blows it back up again. You'll have to see the movie to find out why it was so hilarious! I also got a great kick out of the running gag in which every passenger who listens to Robert Hays ends up killing themselves. This is definitely the Zuckers and Abrahams in top form! Unfortunately, I haven't seen a great spoof in years. The "Scary Movie" films were pretty good, but incredibly lewd and crude. And obviously the Zuckers and Abrahams have much better eyes for satire than the Wayans brothers. I caught "Scary Movie" on cable and watched it a second time, and I didn't laugh nearly as many times as I did the first time. I can watch "Airplane" 200 times and still laugh like there's no tomorrow! The film was made back when comedies didn't go strictly for sex and toilet gags to make an audience laugh. This was back when writers used to employ this quality called "wit." "Kentucky Fried Movie" had some racy gags, but even those were witty for the most part. There is a certain rhythm in every gag that helps make the film work. For example, Lloyd Bridges starts out by saying "I think I picked the wrong day to quit smoking." Then he says he picked the wrong day to quit drinking. And when he finally says "I picked the wrong day to quit amphetamines," I was laughing my head off! So basically, you watch a film like this and feel the urge to mail a copy of the video to the Wayans Brothers and whatever crackheads wrote "Not Another Teen Movie," along with a note saying "THIS is how to make a spoof!"
There are so many other gags worth mentioning, including the "Saturday Night Fever" sendup, which is definitely one of the best comic moments caught on film! That scene also contains my favorite line: "I told the guy next to me to pinch me to make sure I wasn't dreaming." After that voice-over, we see the guy next to Robert Hays repulsed and walking away from him. Another great example of perfect comic timing and delivery!
If you want to get some authentic belly laughs--I'm not talking chuckles, but actual LAUGHS!--you must check out "Airplane." Trust me, movies don't get much more original or funny than this!
My score: 9 (out of 10)
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"I am serious... and don't call me Shirley.", 13 febrero 2005
Author: Ryan (rkuhn_psu@yahoo.com) de King of Prussia, PA
In a tense moment where Ted Striker (Robert Hays) needs to land an airplane where the pilots (Peter Graves and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) have fallen sick, and several passengers need to get off the airplane for various reasons, all Striker can think to himself (with an echo in his mind, of course) is "I've got to concentrate... concentrate... concentrate... I've got to concentrate... concentrate... concentrate... Hello?... hello... hello... Echo... echo... echo... Pinch hitting for Pedro Borbon... Manny Mota... Mota... Mota..." That pretty much sums up the seriousness of Airplane!, the lampoon of the 1970s Airport movies, and pretty much every other disaster movie pumped out by Hollywood. The same guys who pieced together the Naked Gun movies write and direct this silly movie. Most of the jokes need to be seen to be properly experienced, the first rate actors are what brings the laughs. Robert Stack plays it straight, over-the-top straight, as a problem solver for the airline who happens to wear 2 pairs of sunglasses at all times. Stack's comedic timing and deadpan delivery bring out some of the biggest laughs of the film. Lloyd Bridges is the over-worked, over-stressed traffic controller who has picked the wrong week to stop drinking, smoking, and sniffing glue. And Leslie Neilson plays a doctor who has an acute sense for the obvious, surely one who could save the passengers and airline crew if they land safely, just don't call him Shirley. A few cheap laughs, a few misses, but over all, a pretty funny movie. If you like The Naked Gun, you'll like Airplane!
22 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :-

"It's an Entirely Different Kind of Flying.", 3 agosto 2005
Author: nycritic
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Only the writing/directing team of Jerry and David Zucker and Jim Abrahams could conceive of spoofing a film like ZERO HOUR! while sticking pretty close to its source and garner a smash hit. It's a shame they didn't do more spoofs, or that their output has been rather infrequent, resulting in each of this team making their own movies with varying degrees of success, since there is so much material out there to rip apart from.
Here, it's the fear of flying. That any flight could encounter problems either from the weather or from machinery is nothing new -- it happens, plain and simple. That a shot of the flight depicted here as it flies dangerously close to the Chicago skyline probably won't give anyone a 9/11 jolt nowadays, but the undertone is there. There is a fear of planes, and this movie takes that specific fear and turns it inside out with hysterical results from the opening shot to the closing credits.
Using the premise of ZERO HOUR and the AIRPORT franchise, AIRPLANE brings Ted Stryker, a man who has a neurotic fear of failure and is a war veteran, gets on a plane to get back with his estranged girlfriend Elaine, a stewardess on the flight. That he tells his "tragic" tale to not one, but three people (all who commit suicide) is one of the many laugh-out-loud sequences, but some danger actually ensues when the meals are served and those who have eaten fish fall ill, and this includes the pilots. With no one left to fly this plane, Ted is called into duty and guided by Captain Kramer (whom he hates) he has to fly the plane to safety.
This is, essentially, the bare-bones of the plot. The real stars of the movie are the incessant, mile a minute visual, referential, and verbal jokes that assault the viewer faster than he or she can register. References to classic movies, soap operas, commercials from the 70s ("Jim never drinks a second cup of coffee at home..."), pedophilia, basketball, voice recordings that guide people through airports, outrageous takes on characters from the very movies they are spoofing; in short, nothing is spared here, and it makes for a relentlessly funny movie.
That the actors play it straight makes AIRPLANE even funnier. It's as if they weren't sure as to what exactly were they doing and were trying these waters out on a lark; luckily for them that it paid because not only it made David Zucker's, Jerry Zucker's, and Jim Abrahams' career, it also brought back Leslie Nielsen into the limelight as a deadpan funny man who could deliver ridiculous lines as if it were the real thing. Its success was so evident that it spawned an inferior remake, a slew of similar-toned movies, many of them directed by the Zucker-Zucker-Abrahams team, together or separately. This, however, remains as the spoof movie to watch, the one all spoof movie should measure itself to, and one of the funniest comedies of all time.
21 out of 23 people found the following comment useful :-

An Undoubted Classic, 15 enero 2005
Author: mjw2305 de England
Still one of funniest spoof movies ever made, Airplane is one of the first and one of the best around.
Hot Shots, Loaded Weapon even Naked Gun have tried to follow in its footsteps, but they have failed to hit the mark. That's not to say that they are bad movies, just that its difficult to follow a movie of this calibre.
Spoof movies definitely have there place in everyone's collection, but this is probably the best you'll ever see in the genre, if you have never seen it and you fancy a laugh, I can't recommend a better film, even though it has dated; it's still hilarious 9/10
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