Skyjacked

Skyjacked 6dt3o

1972 "On Board Flight 502 Is A Bomb. It Could Be Anywhere. And A Skyjacker. It Could Be Anyone."
Skyjacked
Skyjacked

Skyjacked 6dt3o

5.7 | 1h41m | PG | en | Drama

A crazed Vietnam vet bomber hijacks a Boeing 707 and demands to be taken to Russia.

View More
5.7 | 1h41m | PG | en | More Info
Released: May. 24,1972 | Released Producted By: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer , Walter Seltzer Productions Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
info

A crazed Vietnam vet bomber hijacks a Boeing 707 and demands to be taken to Russia.

Genre

Thriller

Watch Online

Skyjacked (1972) is currently not available on any services.

Cast

Susan Dey

Director

Edward C. Carfagno

Producted By

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Skyjacked Videos and Images 1he5r

View All
  • Top Credited Cast
  • |
  • Crew
Charlton Heston
Charlton Heston

as Capt. Henry 'Hank' O'Hara

Yvette Mimieux
Yvette Mimieux

as Angela Thacher

Jeanne Crain
Jeanne Crain

as Mrs. Clara Shaw

Susan Dey
Susan Dey

as Elly Brewster

Edward C. Carfagno
Edward C. Carfagno

Art Direction

Charles Pierce
Charles Pierce

Set Decoration

Harry Stradling Jr.
Harry Stradling Jr.

Director of Photography

Jack Bear
Jack Bear

Costume Design

Gloria Montemayor
Gloria Montemayor

Hairstylist

Siegfried H. Geike
Siegfried H. Geike

Makeup Artist

John Guillermin
John Guillermin

Director

Robert Swink
Robert Swink

Editor

James C. Pratt
James C. Pratt

Associate Producer

Walter Seltzer
Walter Seltzer

Producer

Perry Botkin Jr.
Perry Botkin Jr.

Original Music Composer

David Harper

Skyjacked Audience Reviews l4qd

StunnaKrypto Self-important, over-dramatic, uninspired.
Flyerplesys Perfectly adorable
Tacticalin An absolute waste of money
TaryBiggBall It was OK. I don't see why everyone loves it so much. It wasn't very smart or deep or well-directed.
alexanderdavies-99382 "Skyjacked" isn't a terrible film by any means but the plot runs out of momentum about 20 minutes before the end. By the time the film reaches its climax, I just wanted to get it to get all over with. Charlton Heston plays a similar character to the one he played in the "Universal" film, "Airport '75." I understand that the actor was reticent to appear in another film that involved an airplane only 2 years after "Skyjacked." There are a few bits of action here and there but not enough to sustain interest. It's a shame as this film had some promise.
blanche-2 If only all we had to fear today were hijackers.As any film about an airplane made before 9/11, Skyjacked is badly dated but it's a real kick.The plane wasn't full, first class was nearly empty - when was the last time anyone saw that? People entered and left the cockpit as though it was the Holiday Inn.There was both a bomb and gun on board inside a carry-on satchel.None of the carry-on baggage was screened.People were smoking.Roosevelt Grier could fit in a seat.The story itself concerns a soldier from Crazytown (James Brolin) who hijacks the plane to take him to Moscow where he expects some sort of decoration for his service. Charlton Heston is the pilot. There are three people in the cockpit, which is a practice I recommend for all airlines now that a pilot left one cockpit and couldn't get back in.Yvette Mimeux and Leslie Uggams are two of the flight attendants; Mimeux had a hot romance with the married pilot and is now engaged to the copilot.Mariette Hartley plays a woman about to give birth.Susan Dey is a hippie and a good suspect for leaving lipstick notes on the bathroom mirror.It's a typical airplane story. There were some very exciting moments, particularly when the plane attempted to land in Alaska. There were some dumb moments: why Heston had to suggest the engers deplane -- he was in the cockpit with James Brolin - the flight attendants, one would have thought, could have come up with that themselves. He also had to tell Yvette Mimiuex in code to deploy the chute and get the engers out. Again, they couldn't have figured that out? Some parts of this were quite entertaining, and it's certainly worth seeing to look at old airline procedures. Flying was a lot simpler. And I wonder if it's any safer now.Lots of familiar TV faces from the '70s and '80s besides those mentioned: Nicholas Hammond, who is still working, the late Claude Akins, Ken Swofford, now retired; the late Ross Elliott, Newhart's John Fiedler, and Magnum's John Hillerman, now retired. And two stars of the classic era of films: Walter Pidgeon, 75 then, and Jeanne Crain in her last film. If anyone is wondering, Jeanne Crain at 47 was still beautiful.
Pipesofpeace Had this been made by Universal Studios instead of MGM, they might well have called it AIRPORT '72, so closely does it follow the template of that popular disaster movie series; it even casts Charlton Heston as a pilot two years prior to his playing a similar role in AIRPORT 1975. The film introduces us to the personal lives of several engers, including a U.S. Senator (Walter Pidgeon), a jazz cellist (football legend Roosevelt Grier), a smart-mouthed teenage girl (Susan Dey from The Partridge Family), and a very pregnant lady (Mariette Hartley, who used to do those cute Polaroid commercials with James Garner)who probably shouldn't be flying to begin with at this late stage. There's also an unusually twitchy Vietnam vet on board (hammily played by James Brolin) which should remove all doubt as to who is leaving scary notes on the bathroom mirror and threatening to blow up the plane if his demand to be flown to Moscow isn't met. Yvette Mimieux and Leslie Uggams appear as two of the best-looking flight attendants in aviation history (they were called stewardesses back then, but then again that was a time when you could also smoke openly on a commercial airplane.) TV's Claude Akins shows up in the control tower, essentially playing George Kennedy. This sounds pretty ridiculous, and in some ways it is, but director John Guillermin (The Blue Max, The Towering Inferno) keeps up a brisk pace and makes this quite watchable, for what it is.
Rodrigo Amaro "Skyjacked" is another disaster movie from the 1970's but the main difference is that the casting is not so famous and the story doesn't take too much time to happen. Charlton Heston plays the captain of an airplane dealing with a risky enger and his bomb. Following the model of "Airport" in its plot this movie also has the background of some of the characters but it was added during the flight in some weak flashbacks. That was good because the major audience gets easily bored with the long beginning of "Airport" whose airplane took almost an hour to take off. Here the airplane gets up in the air in five minutes and most of the characters were already presented. It had a great beginning but was trapped with a poor ending. Once again the kidnapper of the plane dies and everyone is saved just like in "Airport". By the way I think that in every movie involving airplanes hijacked the hijackers are killed (except for the woman in "enger 57" who was arrested). But at least the movie created a certain intrigue in not telling who was the hijacker. Threats starts to appear in the bathroom, then a paper telling to land in some place in Alaska, and then we find out who is. One thing that bothered me is that it was only a lunatic war veteran (played by James Brolin) who wanted take the plane to Moscow for nothing. The good thing is the casting who has a fine performance of Heston (playing the heroic captain), Brolin has some good moments, Susan Dey (in her first film), veteran actor Walter Pidgeon (plays a senator), Roosevelt Grier (the friendly black guy carrying the cello who sits next to the hijacker) and Yvette Mimieux. And of course the funny exaggerations of the story: There's a pregnant woman in her last months of pregnancy on the flight; the senator smoking calmly on the plane after the disaster started; the excessive close-up shots showing a lipstick in the beginning of the movie (this is explained later throughout the movie); and some other moments. Nothing so laughable but funny anyway. Entertaining and enjoyable to any aviation buff. 7/10