Only the brave or the
brazen dared to make UFO movies in the immediate aftermath of Steven
Spielberg’s monumental Close Encounters
of the Third Kind (1977), which realized nearly all the potential of the
genre in spectacular fashion. Undaunted, the happy hacks at Sunn Classic
Pictures forged ahead with their own entry into the flying-saucer genre, Hangar 18, perhaps emboldened by their
success in the paranormal realm with such “documentaries” as Beyond and Back (1978) and The Bermuda Triangle (1979). Anyway, Hangar 18, which shamelessly borrows
plot elements from Peter Hyams’ larky sci-fi adventure Capricorn One (1978), begins in space, where the crew of a
space-shuttle mission witnesses a UFO striking a satellite. Returning to earth,
the astronauts (played by Gary Collins and James Hampton) seek an explanation
for what happened but get a run-around from officials, even as their boss
(Darren McGavin) receives the true story. Turns out the UFO crash-landed on
earth and was recovered by the U.S. military, then hidden in a secret hangar in
the Southwest. (Shades of Roswell, New Mexico.) McGavin’s character is tasked
with examining the spaceship.
Meanwhile, in Washington, D.C., a presidential
aide (Robert Vaughn) conspires to keep the whole mess secret until the impending
election because—how convenient!—the president recently scolded his opponent
for suggesting that UFOs might be real. Making the story even sillier is an
action/adventure subplot about the astronauts trying to find the secret hangar,
and a very Star Trek-ish thread about
McGavin and his team entering the spaceship, discovering quasi-humanoid bodies
inside, and trying to decode the alien language they discover on the ship’s
computers. Had any of this been put across persuasively, Hangar 18 could have built up a tremendous head of steam, but the
filmmaking and storytelling exist on the level of a bad TV movie, with each
scene feeling more outlandish than the preceding all the way to the
anticlimactic ending. Yet even with its goofy storyline and C-lister cast (apologies
to Messers. McGavin and Vaughn), Hangar
18 represents a sort of pinnacle moment for Sunn Classics, combining myriad
layers of speculative-fiction bullshit—ancient astronauts, government
conspiracies, and so on—into one cartoonish pseudoscience extravaganza. Call it
a close encounter of the tepid kind.
Hangar 18:
FUNKY
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