This
Italian-made, low-budget adventure film is such a shameless ripoff of the Airport series that the plot combines
the premise of one Airport picture (a
plane crashes underwater, as in Airport ’77)
with that of another (a scheme to sabotage the Concorde, as in The Concorde: Airport ’79). The
producers even stole the Airport
series trope of ending a title with an abbreviated reference to a year. Yet any
similarities to the lavishly produced escapism of the Airport flicks end there: The execution of Concorde Affaire ’79 is inept on every level. The villain
of the piece is an evil businessman named Milland (played by the impossibly
bored Joseph Cotten), whose company has interests in the air-travel industry. He orders that several Concorde jets be sabotaged in order to throw the
whole Concorde line out of operation, thus (in theory) eliminating his main competition.
Never mind two big logic problems: 1) Every clue would point to Milland as a
suspect, and 2) Wouldn’t all Concordes get grounded after the first couple of
suspicious accidents? Anyway, smartass journalist Moses Brody (played by the
impossibly tanned James Franciscus) gets assigned to look for a missing
Concorde that went down in the Atlantic near Caracas. Yes, the story asks
viewers to assume that no one else is
looking for the missing airplane. What ensues is an absurd potboiler, with
Milland’s agents trying to kill Brody before he learns too much. There’s also
some tiresome crap involving a flight attendant (Fiamma Maglione) who survived
the Atlantic crash, and a stalwart pilot (Van Johnson) who must land a Concorde
that’s been rigged to explode. Suffice to say, the choppy editing ensures that
none of this coheres, and the bizarre musical score—electronic disco at one
moment, tense classical during the next—adds to the bewildering effect. About
the only sequence that works is a very long underwater bit with scuba divers
chasing after each other through coral-reef formations. However, those few
almost-exciting moments are not nearly reason enough to slog through the mess
of confusing storytelling (and terrible dubbing) that comprises Concorde Affaire ’79.
Concorde Affaire ’79: LAME
Joseph COTTEN, please.
ReplyDeleteOy! Embarrassing that I did that again. Fixed, thanks.
ReplyDeleteDon’t feel bad ... the movie poster spells out Edmund Purdom’s name Edmund “Purdon"
ReplyDeleteRobert Kerman (famous in X-rated movies by the name Richrd Bolla) and who also starred in Deodato´s Cannibal Holocaust appears in both Ruggero´s movie and in t David L. Rich´s Concorde film (i like this one much better than the one with Delon)
ReplyDelete