Crash_Landing_(1999_film)

<i>Crash Landing</i> (1999 film)

Crash Landing (1999 film)

1999 Chinese film


Crash Landing (simplified Chinese: 紧急迫降; traditional Chinese: 緊急迫降; pinyin: Jǐnjí pòjiàng; lit. 'emergency forced landing') is a 1999 Chinese thriller film directed by Zhang Jianya.

Quick Facts Crash Landing, Directed by ...

A Shanghai Film Studio production, Crash Landing follows the contours of many airplane disaster films, such as the Airport series, and stars Shao Bing, Xu Fan, and You Yong.

Plot

Crash Landing follows the tense hours on board a stricken passenger aircraft that was on a routine flight from Shanghai to Beijing. Shortly after taking off, the pilot (Shao Bing) discovers that the plane's landing gear is unable to be retracted. Unable to continue, but unable to land, he and his flight attendant wife (Xu Fan), are forced to circle Shanghai.

Meanwhile, on the ground, a troubleshooter (You Yong) is called to see if he can get the aircraft safely back on the ground.

Inspiration

The aircraft in question, registered as B-2173.

The film is inspired by the first emergency landing in China. On September 10, 1998, China Eastern Flight 586, a McDonnell-Douglas MD-11, flying from Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport to Beijing Capital International Airport, suffered a nose gear failure after take-off. The aircraft landed back in Shanghai with the nose gear up on a foamed runway.

Reception

Due to the film's scale and budget, Crash Landing was seen upon its release as a prime example of the growing sophistication of China's mainstream film industry,[1] with one western media review calling it "one giant leap for Chinese cinema."[2]


References

  1. Elley, Derek (2000-10-02). "Crash Landing Review". Variety. Retrieved 2009-04-20.
  2. Short, Stephen (2001-10-29). "Have Kitsch, Will Travel". Time. Archived from the original on March 10, 2007. Retrieved 2009-04-20.



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