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Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Fail-Safe
























THE ECCO PRESS

Written by Eugene Burdick + Harvey Wheeler

Copyright © 1962 by Eugene Burdick and John Harvey Wheeler, Jr.

All rights reserved



In Fail-Safe, during a routine strategic airborne incident deployment from the Strategic Air Command on an unknown airline, one group of American nuclear strike bombers accidentally gets a "go" code from their Fail-Safe box to complete their mission - to bomb Moscow.

I remember watching the 1964 movie Fail-Safe with Henry Fondawhich was based on the book, in junior high school and how suspenseful the movie was - and the awful executive decision the President was forced to make here at home. The movie was so suspenseful that all the students in my class were interested in the movie, which is hard to do to interest a rowdy junior high class. This was still during the height of the Cold War, so the relevance of the movie particulary hit home with us. I am not sure if it was the politics or the hardware that my class liked. I think the guys were interested in the planes and hardware, like I was. Watching a primitive, when compared to today, computerized tracking system as the high-speed, high-altitude planes head deeper into Russia - and the Russians response - was both cool and terrifying at the same time.

All of the above from the movie is in marked contrast to the book, which has the first half of the book dealing with all the politics. The bombers do not really get the orders to head for Moscow until halfway through the book, which I was a scene that I was waiting for. Reading through all the politics was boring when compared to the suspense of the movie. There was one entire chapter on the background of one character, but the character's background had no real bearing on the story except for the character's academic achievements. When I was reading this chapter, I was going - "Get on with the story!" Even the 2000 live-event TV movie Fail-Safe was more suspenseful than the book, of which I believe is mainly due to the quality of the acting and the compact pacing of telling a story in a two hour time-block. The cover of the book that I had read had a sticker on it, Soon to be a CBS-TV Live Movie Event Starring George Clooney.

You can see how trusting all of our military strength to such fail-safe machines like this, especially with such awesome power of the Strategic Air Command, is a precursor to such things as the Terminator movies - like Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines. It is interesting that the term "fail-safe" just really means that if a failure happens, the failure should happen in the safest fashion.

Pancho
All people smile in the same language.

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Flight of the Phoenix


HarperEntertainment
An Imprint of  HarperCollinsPublishers

Written by Elleston Trevor

Copyright © 1964 by Elleston Trevor. All rights reserved.

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In Elleston Tevor's The Flight of the Phoenix, a Skytruck air freighter runs into a sandstorm - and crashes in the Sahara desert,  the largest desert in the world. Now the survivors of the air freighter must struggle to stay alive in one of the hottest places on Earth as they desperately try to build a smaller new airplane from the wreckage of the Skytruck.

The development of the surviving characters are uneven - as I only recall half the characters of whom I could distinguish from the others. The struggle for leadership between the guilt-ridden pilot Towns and the obsessed engineer Stringer, as they construct the new plane to get away from their harsh landscape, is the main focus of the characters - although I was a bit put off by Stringer's inexperience with the real world. When the British soldier Captain Harris insists on traveling through the vast desert to a distant oasis to get some water, it seems almost cruel to me that the captain expects his sergeant to go marching with him into the parched, forbidding dessert. Especially since the Sahara desert gets less than three inches of rain per year. This book has been made into two movies - the 1965 film with James Stewart with a Fairchild C-82 Packet, as well as the 2004 film with Dennis Quaid with a Fairchild C-119 Flying Boxcar. I saw the 2004 film in the theater and the plot point towards the end of the movie was a shocker for me, but it seems to have been played down in the book.

Pancho
All people smile in the same language.
Search Amazon.com for the flight of the phoenix
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