American title: TROUBLE IN THE SKY
In a courtroom inquest in London, barrister Arnold Hobbes, working for Atlas Aviation, the company that makes the Phoenix jet, argues successfully that Captain Gort, and not the plane company, is responsible for the crash of a Phoenix during takeoff in Ranjibad, India, which resulted in the death of Gort's co-pilot. Gort is upset with the verdict as he prizes his reputation as a careful, by-the-rules pilot, claiming that the fault had to do with the suggested parameters for takeoff speed established by Phoenix. Gort's daughter Charlotte is particularly critical of the courtroom decision, though examiner Hugh Dallas does clear him for future flights. Hugh and Charlotte get interested in each other, leading some to think that Hugh was too easy on Gort during testing. Captain Judd thinks the middle-aged Gort should be put on desk duty, and airplane designer Pickering, who is working on a new version of the Phoenix, resents suspicions that the plane was at fault. During a stormy landing in Calcutta, Gort's window breaks open though he handles the situation well. Later, however, Judd finds a bit of hedge in the undercarriage of the plane, indicating that Gort was coming in too low. What Gort, Hugh and Judd don't know is that other pilots have figured out that the unstick (basically, lift-off speed) parameters indeed need adjusting and have been doing so unofficially. Hugh eventually figures out that the bit of telltale hedge was left on the plane from Ranjibad, but by then it's too late; one more tragic accident occurs before people start to realize that all along, the problem wasn't Gort.
Don't come to this movie with expectations of a traditional disaster film. Though we do see the Calcutta incident in detail, no other carnage is shown. Instead, this is a story of flawed people all basically trying to do the right thing. Judd and Pickering are set up as possible villains, but neither one has bad intentions and both think they are doing the right thing in casting aspersions toward Gort. Gort is sympathetic, but it does seem plausible that he should be retiring. Hugh and Charlotte are well-intentioned, but they might be blinding themselves due to their own prejudices. Even the cold-blooded barrister Hobbes is eventually willing to realize he might have been wrong. The movie is nicely paced and well shot with good acting, so we don't miss the disaster scenes we might have been expecting. Handsome leading man Michael Craig (pictured) anchors the film well as Hugh, and Bernard Lee is especially good as Gort, someone we need to be uncertain about for a time—he's good at coming off as both professional and a little nervous. Peter Cushing interrupted his string of Hammer horror films to play Judd, and Elizabeth Seal is fine if unmemorable as Charlotte. George Sanders has what amounts to a fleshed-out cameo as the barrister, and doesn't need to stretch his talents much to play the stuffy and arrogant Hobbes. The original British title refers to a blind test in which the pilot must navigate using only an audio signal. Gort passes the test, but it has little to do with the movie's plot. Gordon Jackson and Noel Willman are also present. Overall, good ensemble acting and just the right amount of tension. [YouTube]













