Airports and the movies
Delays, cancellations, strikes, long waits and chaos at security checks: European air travel can be tasking this summer. Here are the best movies set at airports or with unforgettable airport scenes.
The Terminal
In this 2004 comedy, Tom Hanks plays an Eastern European trapped at New York's John F. Kennedy Airport because a military coup in his – ficticious – native country has left him stateless. Charming, witty, and in broken English, with only his luggage and a peanut can, he ekes out an existence at the bustling terminal for all of nine months.
Catch Me if You Can
Forgery expert and conman: Frank Abagnale made a fortune impersonating a doctor, a lawyer and a flight captain. Leonardo DiCaprio plays Abagnale in the 2002 Steven Spielberg film Catch Me if You Can, flying the world, strolling through terminals posing as a Pan Am pilot and cashing fraudulent checks before being apprehended by an FBI agent. He ends up devising unforgeable checks for the FBI.
Up in the Air
A frequent flyer if there ever was one: For his job, corporate "downsizer" Ryan Bingham (George Clooney) lives out of a suitcase flying around the country, racking up thousands of miles a week. He knows the layout of every airport eyes closed, and all the ins and outs of air travel. This character in this 2009 comedy is an expert at perks, priviliges, short cuts and time savers.
Airport
Based on a bestselling novel by Arthur Hailey, the 1970 film Airport involves a terrible snowstorm paralyzing Chicago and a plane that gets stuck on an air field at the city's fictional Lincoln International Airport, in effect shutting down the runway. The film received nine nominations at the 1971 academy awards and won Helen Hayes, playing a stowaway, the award for Best Supporting Actress.
Casablanca
Airfields or terminals often feature in movies, sometimes in unforettable scenes. The final scene of the 1942 classic romantic drama Casablanca brings the main protagonists together in the dense fog of an airfield, with a transport plane waiting for takeoff in the background. The film with its many memorable lines and theme song won Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director and Best Writing.
Home Alone 2
Home alone 2: Lost in New York - the 1992 US comedy is the second film revolving around young Kevin's holiday chaos and adventures. Probably every parent's nightmare: the family decides to go on a trip to Florida, but at the airport, their youngest son boards the wrong plane. It takes him to New York City - all alone.
Top Gun
The 1986 movie that launched Tom Cruise's international career - he plays naval aviator "Maverick" Mitchell in the action drama film - is set at a naval air station training school. Top gun was a huge commercial hit. For Best Original Song, the title song "Take My Breath Away" won an Academy Award and a Golden Globe Award.
Mogadishu
On a darker note, a 2008 made-for-TV thriller based on a true story: the abduction of a German Lufthansa plane by a team of terrorists in 1977. The plane made several stops to refuel before it landed in Mogadishu, Somalia where a German counter-terrorism unit stormed it and rescued the hostages. The hijacking came at the height of the far-left militant RAF's crusade against the West German state.