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title: The Hindenburg year: 1975 cast: George C. Scott, William Atherton, Roy Thinnes, Burgess Meredith rating: *** |
1970's Disaster Films have several things in common: they all wind up with a
disaster and each has a bevy of famous actors playing people that will
either live or die. In THE TOWERING INFERNO everyone wound up on the top of a high-rise that
caught on fire. And THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE provided an
eclectic lot on a tipped-over ship, desperately searching for daylight.
Here we have THE HINDENBURG, based on the actual German Zeppelin that
crash landed in 1937. “Oh the humanity” indeed… The infamous visual of
the blimp gone up in flames embodies the real life tragedy – a
nightmare image for the history books and thus becoming another
Hollywood film.
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George C. Scott as Ritter in THE HINDENBURG |
After a documentary reel describing the origin of the hot air balloon,
the first act is somewhat dull since not all the peripheral characters
are worthy investments. These include society folk, an entertainer, a
Dalmatian, and Germans under the growing Third Reich...
But a few of these are wary of Hitler, especially George C.
Scott’s “Ritter,” a reluctant rogue specialist sent aboard the aircraft
as a surreptitious security guard. William Atherton’s former Hitler
Youth member and Roy Thinnes charming Nazi agent know that Ritter’s
someone to keep their eyes on — and vice versa.
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Gig Young, suspect in THE HINDENBURG |
So now we have two prime suspects, but for what exactly? The
Hindenburg’s demise was said to be the cause of a lethal combination of
electricity and hydrogen, but we’re dealing with not only a
fictionalized account but an espionage tale — how else do you spend 90
minutes aboard a vessel we know will crash without suspense, intrigue,
and most important of all, mystery?
That’s when (and how) the pace picks up — Ritter honing in on which
passenger could be the person that had, days earlier, threatened to
sabotage the craft. Other suspects include Gig Young as a greedy
salesman and Burgess Meredith as a rich gambler. Although it’s really
Atherton’s wily Boerth, sneaking around the craft’s upper decks in a
very suspicious manner, that
seems the prime target.
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Burgess Meredith and Ann Bancroft in THE HINDENBURG |
What’s needed now is a love interest — well there’s one, sort of. THE
GRADUATE temptress Anne Bancroft is a classy opium-smoking German who
flirts with Scott, but that’s as far as it goes. He’s too busy
investigating and they had little chemistry to begin with.
Bancroft, like many of the passengers and crew, including Charles
Durning’s hard nosed pilot and Katherine Helmond as a snotty socialite, are
a wasted lot. Perhaps because, unlike INFERNO or POSEIDON, they don’t
have specific goals or relationships to make their characters intriguing
once the stakes are raised.
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William Atherton, suspect in THE HINDENBURG |
Despite the flaws, director Robert Wise provides a few nice suspenseful
scenes: one includes part of the zeppelin’s hull ripping apart and two
soldiers having to repair it. Here we see dynamic Matte paintings of the
craft soaring through blue skies, providing special effects that, while
not perfect in today’s standards, make the titular vessel seem
both enormous and ominous...
Another has Ritter, in James Bond mode, having to disarm the bomb that
could send the craft, and everyone on board, into oblivion. The Oscar
Winning actor wields his usual edgy prowess, and is finally, in a movie
full of paper cutouts, someone to actually root for.
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Special effects of a final shot for George C. Scott in THE HINDENBURG |
And then the disaster itself — the Hindenburg’s inevitable crash onto the landing pad… And what the audience is waiting for, and basically, what everyone paid to see happen, happening...
Shot in black-and-white with flashes and choppily edited photographs,
the special effects aren’t only rushed and somewhat cheap but almost
non-existent: providing an anti-climactic conclusion and making those
scenes when George C. Scott remained in the dark really matter.
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Roy Thinnes, suspect in THE HINDENBURG |
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Jean Rasey signs on board in THE HINDENBURG |
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Lists of the Dead and the Alive, and THE DOG LIVES in THE HINDENBURG |
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Full shot of the Hindenburg matte painting from THE HINDENBURG |
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