Airport
- G
- Year:
- 1970
- 137 min
- 2,311 Views
Attention. Attention, please.
Continental Airlines announces
for Los Angeles and Honolulu
at Gate 28, the Blue Concourse.
Global 45, Lincoln Tower.
Cleared to land,
runway two-niner.
Wind one-five, gusting to two-five.
Roger. Cleared to land.
Runway in sight.
I think we cut the taxiway a little
too short and we're stuck in the snow.
Please notify company dispatch.
I think we'll need assistance.
We've got a condition four
on two-niner at taxiway Echo.
Right. Change traffic to runway two-two.
Two-niner's closed.
Trans World 17.
I have a change now.
Taxi to runway two-two.
Runway two-niner is closed.
Air Canada ninety-niner,
move to taxiway Bravo immediately.
Emergency equipment
will pass to your left. Over.
Runway two-niner closed,
account disabled aircraft.
Two-two approach.
Runway two-niner is closed.
All right, we'll stay
with two-two with everything.
Global 10, Lincoln Tower,
cleared for takeoff.
For this food, your many blessings
and your bounteous goodness
we give thanks to thee
in the name of Jesus Christ.
Hello, Mel? I'm glad I caught
you before you got away.
We just lost runway two-niner.
A tail sticking out
onto the runway about 20 yards.
I don't know. Could be a long time.
All right. I'll go right out there.
Air Canada Flight 425
from Quebec will arrive at Gate 44-A,
the Green Concourse.
Bakersfeld.
Mel, Tanya.
How about some coffee?
- I just found something.
- I just lost something.
Runway two-niner.
Oh no. Snow?
One of your jockeys missed a turnoff,
buried the wheels.
- No one told us.
- It just happened.
Flight 45. I'm on my way.
- Any casualties?
- Just me.
There's bound to be a passenger
with a $50-wrenched back.
I'd better get there
with some release forms
and plenty of sympathy
and understanding.
May I ride with you?
- See you downstairs.
- Good.
Mr. Bakersfeld, white phone.
Urgent.
Bakersfeld.
Where the hell are you?
I'm on my way to the field.
We've got an emergency.
You said you'd be home at 6:00.
You promised me you
wouldn't miss this dinner.
You promised that a week ago.
A week ago, I didn't know
we'd have the worst storm in six years.
You've always got some damn excuse.
I'll call you back.
Let me take that for you, ma'am.
You'll be much warmer in the bus.
I'm sorry this happened.
Captain wants you to take off
as much weight as possible
then hook onto the nose gear
and tow it out with a tractor.
Buried like that, the nose gear
That's what I told him.
I think we ought to use pneumatic
bags to lift the wings.
Could take most of tomorrow.
I want that runway cleared tonight.
Tonight?
Look, I know you're doing
everything you can
but if I can con TWA
into giving us Patroni, will you object?
No, Joe can have all the tries he wants.
- Mr. Bakersfeld.
- Yes?
Snow desk!
- Yes, Danny?
- I'm calling Patroni.
Stand by on mobile phone.
Roger.
- Hello. Joe?
- Hi, Mel.
Save your breath.
Danny gave me the poop.
Tonight I'm not available.
Joe, I need you right away.
I got 14 on the ground
and 18 stacked upstairs.
I've got our five kids
stacked away at my mother's
so that me and Marie
could be alone for a while.
Tell Marie I'm sorry
to louse up her evening
but I need two-niner badly.
Can't the Global crew handle it?
Well, they're having a conference
now to decide what to do.
But I need somebody who knows,
a genius like Patroni.
Hold the whipped cream.
I've just had dessert.
All right, I'll be there.
Good.
In the meantime,
give everybody a shovel
have them start digging a ten-degree
incline in front of the wheels.
Right. Out.
Joe, do you have to go to
work on a night like this?
They don't call them emergencies anymore.
They call them Patronis.
I suppose you'll be late?
I'll be back in time, if I have to pull
that plane out with my teeth.
What's this you found
I should know about?
Your brother-in-law was on
the snow clearance committee today.
My boss got a copy of the report.
I can guess what it says.
"The airport", meaning me, "has been
inefficient in snow clearance".
"Grossly inefficient".
"Causing flight delays"
"loss of revenue
to all airlines, etc."
Signed, captain Vernon
Demerest, Chairman.
How can he say a thing like this?
Because he's a no-good,
irresponsible louse
who can't pass up
the opportunity to knife me.
Global 1, Snow Desk.
Where are you?
Coming up to the ramp.
Commissioner Ackerman wants you
at the street side of the terminal.
- Trouble.
- I'm on my way.
Close Down Runway 22.
Close Down Runway 22.
Keep moving, please.
Keep moving, please.
Mr. Harold Porter
please come to Braniff
information counter.
They'll break it up soon and go home.
After the TV cameras get a few shots.
TV?
The lawyer they hired yesterday
arranged for news coverage.
That's all we need.
I'd better get in touch
with the other commissioners
and tell them about this.
Afterwards, we'll meet
in the boardroom, you and I
and see what we can figure out
to calm those people down.
I'll call you.
Mel?
Hi, sis. I thought Vern
was on Flight Two tonight.
He is.
You're sure here early enough.
Well, what with the weather
and the traffic
Vernon didn't want to take
But we just sailed right along.
Skycap 14.
First, I thought they were
pilots picketing you.
I was all set to join them.
I heard about your report.
Besides everything else
now you're an authority
on snow clearance?
I call them as I see them.
Then you're due for an eye check.
For your information, clearing
those runways and taxiways
is the equivalent of 700 miles
of two-lane highway.
Well, what do you know.
And I'll bet you measured
every foot of it by yourself.
We've also had ten inches
of snow in the last 24 hours.
Anchorage had twice as much,
and they're clean.
They've got twice the equipment.
Well, then get some more.
This isn't Alaska.
You don't spend an extra
two million dollars for machinery
you might use once in ten years.
You buy for the average snowfall.
When emergency hits you use
what you have
and you work around the clock.
Sitting behind that desk has made
you think like a bookkeeper.
I didn't always fly a desk.
Well, all right, Daddy.
Now, you tell me all about
when you were a war hero.
You flew those pursuit jobs
you could land in a parking lot.
When I'm setting down
over 200.000 pounds of 707
I want something under my wheels
that's plenty long and mighty dry.
It'll be dry tonight,
but not too long.
Two-niner's closed.
made a shortcut across the field,
and he didn't make it.
Well, what are you doing about it?
Well, when the snow melts in April,
we'll get it out.
What the hell do you think
Now stop that, both of you.
You're right. It's a waste of time
arguing with a penguin.
Goodbye.
Have a good flight, dear.
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"Airport" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/airport_2372>.
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