Airspeed – Rettung in letzter Sekunde (1999)
17KAirspeed – Rettung in letzter Sekunde: Directed by Robert Tinnell. With Elisha Cuthbert, Bronwen Booth, Joe Mantegna, Lynne Adams. After lightening strikes Flight 109, the only chance for survival is a young girl.
“I work nights, so my nights off are filled with bad movies and infomercials at 3am. Airspeed was actually kind of fun in a u0026quot;Mystery Science Theater 3000u0026quot; sort of way. I never expect depth and find new ways to amuse myself at the absurdity. This movie is a stereotype, as mentioned in the other reviews. I wonu0026#39;t rehash. That being said, most movies expect you to suspend disbelief for a little bit in order to enjoy the flick. I couldnu0026#39;t get past the fact that at 20-30,000 feet above the earth, the temperature of the air is beyond normal u0026quot;coldu0026quot; and a big hole in the plane would depressurise the cabin, sucking everything out into the big blue yonder. At skydiving height, yes, you can do neat heroic things like run a guy wire from one plane to the other and save lives. You can peek outside the back of a low flying aircraft like in the old war movies. Not on a jet. Sorry folks, itu0026#39;s not going to happen. Everybody would turn blue and die. Even the cute little girl who almost fell through the hole, lost a shoe to the great beyond, but managed to push herself away so she could get up and move about the aircraft. If it COULD be done, I do believe there are people insanely heroic enough to jump across on a tether and save the day…but not on this planet. Aside from that…one of the better flicks Iu0026#39;ve seen. Iu0026#39;d rate it up there with the USA Network movie called u0026quot;Class Warfareu0026quot;. I was half asleep and missed seeing the contrived ending to that movie 10 minutes into it. I like it when movies can trip me up like that.”