Flight Crew (film)

The Flight Crew

poster from 2015
Directed by Nikolai Lebedev
Produced by Nikita Mikhalkov
Leonid Vereshchagin
Anton Zlatopolskiy
Written by Tikhon Kornev
Nikolai Kulikov
Starring Vladimir Mashkov
Danila Kozlovsky
Agne Grudyte
Katerina Shpitsa
Edited by Irek Khartovich
Production
company
Distributed by Cinema Fund
Central Partnership
LipSync Chemistry
Release dates
  • February 20, 2016 (2016-02-20)

(Berlinale)

  • April 14, 2016 (2016-04-14)

(Moscow)

Running time
140 minutes
Country Russia
Language Russian
Budget $9 million
Box office $27 305 571

The Flight Crew (Russian: Экипаж, translit. Ekipazh) is a Russian disaster film produced by Russia-1 Channel which released in April 2016. Inspired by the 1979 Soviet film Air Crew, it was the second catastrophe film shot in the Russian Federation.

The film was shot in digital 3D IMAX camera and become the second Russian film shot using this equipment.[1]

Plot

Talented young pilot Alexey Gushchin does not accept authority and acts in accordance with a personal code of honor. For failure to comply with an absurd order, he is prevented from flying a military aircraft again and in spite of that, he refuses to ask his father (famous aircraft engineer) for help getting back on the scene. He applies to a passenger airline and displays remarkable flying talent, landing a chance as an intern. Alexey becomes the second pilot-trainee on the Tu-204SM under the guidance of an experienced crew commander, the pilot Leonid Zinchenko. Their work relationship is not easy, but due to Alexey's talent, Leonid chooses to keep him at his side, even after more cases of insubordination (again, failure to comply with absurd orders).

During the flight to Southeast Asia, the crew receives a message about an earthquake on one of the Aleutian Islands and decides to go to the epicenter of the disaster to evacuate people before the expected volcano eruption. Together, the two pilots manage to escape the island on two planes, however, the smaller cargo plane has not enough fuel. Using a risky maneuver, the crew manages to transfer passengers via sky line between the two vessels in air moments before the cargo plane would run out of fuel and crash into the ocean. After the rough, but successful landing in lightning storm the two are terminated from their positions as pilots (as they both disobeyed a direct order), and are transferred to Aeroflot as flight interns.

Cast

Production

Filmings

Tu-154M RA-85796 board, starring in the film (while working in UTair).

Director Nikolai Lebedev wanted to make a disaster film, but did not negotiate with potential producers, until Leonid Vereshchagin and Nikita Mikhalkov suggested to work on a remake for "Air Crew". The director started work with the support of Alexander Mitta, who directed the soviet film of the same name in 1979. The movie received support from Russian Government which funded the movie through the National Cinema Foundation.

Filming started on September 18, 2014 and wrapped on 10 February 2015. The filming took place in Moscow, Moscow region and in the Crimean peninsula. In the peninsula they filmed the earthquake-prone island volcano in the Indian Ocean. The crew shot the flight scenes in two planes: The Tupolev Tu-204SM (RA-64151 board) and decommissioned Tupolev Tu-154 of Kosmos Airlines (RA-85796 board).

Danila Kozlovsky, Vladimir Mashkov and Agne Grudite who played the pilots started to work long before the filming had begun, after receiving training in flight school at the helm of an ultramodern flight simulator.

The film was shot in digital 3D IMAX and become the second Russian film shot using this equipment after Stalingrad (2013) by Fedor Bondarchuk.

Post-Production

The film has been dubbed into English for international markets by LipSync Chemistry in London.

Release

The film has been released in Russia and other post-Soviet states in April, 2016.

The movie was also released in Japan and became the first Russian movie to be released theatrically in Japan after Timur Bekmambetov's Night Watch, which grossed $477,000 in April 2006. Apart from Japan, rights to theatrical distribution of The Crew have been sold to the Middle East, Malaysia, Philippines, Taiwan, Cambodia, Turkey, Baltics, Mongolia, Chile, Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador.

The film was released in China on August 19, 2016 and it has grossed CN¥30.7 million at the Chinese box office.[2]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.