
Airport 1975
1974 • Action, Drama, Thriller • PG
When an in-flight collision incapacitates the pilots of an airplane bound for Los Angeles, stewardess Nancy Pryor is forced to take over the controls. From the ground, her boyfriend Alan Murdock, a retired test pilot, tries to talk her through piloting and landing the 747 aircraft. Worse yet, the anxious passengers — among which are a noisy nun and a cranky man — are aggravating the already tense atmosphere.
Runtime: 1h 47m
Why you shoud read the novel
Reading Arthur Hailey’s novel Airport offers a far richer and more immersive experience than watching Airport 1975. The book meticulously builds the personalities, private lives, and struggles of a large cast of characters, drawing readers into the tension and complexity of managing a major airport caught up in a crisis. Hailey’s in-depth research and extraordinary attention to realistic detail give insight into aviation, airline operations, and the intricate interdependencies that hold the airport together in the face of emergencies.
Unlike the movie’s straightforward, spectacle-driven disaster narrative, the novel captures the pulse of a living, breathing community and organization. You witness the personal pressures faced by the staff, from the harried airport manager to the customs inspectors, baggage handlers, and maintenance crews. Each subplot deepens the reader’s understanding of the stakes involved and the real human cost of disaster in a way that’s emotionally resonant and dramatically satisfying.
Hailey’s work is not just a tale of catastrophe, but also a nuanced exploration of responsibility, leadership, and the imperatives that drive people in moments of chaos. For anyone interested in complex characters and the hidden workings of crucial infrastructure, reading the novel unlocks narrative layers and insights the movie simply cannot convey.
Adaptation differences
Airport 1975 is not a direct adaptation of Arthur Hailey’s novel Airport, but rather a sequel inspired by Hailey’s bestselling work and its 1970 film adaptation. The novel focuses on the operations and crises affecting a single bustling airport over a single night, complete with multiple interweaving personal dramas and a major snowstorm, while the film Airport 1975 shifts its attention to a midair disaster involving a collision and an imperiled Boeing 747, largely abandoning the multifaceted airport focus.
In the novel, the narrative emphasis is split between a diverse cast, including airport administrators, airline personnel, inspectors, and passengers. Their individual stories intersect across the airport’s facilities. In contrast, Airport 1975 prioritizes high-octane action and suspense by centering on the flight crew and passengers trapped on a crippled aircraft, with only limited connection to ground operations and little exploration of the airport staff’s lives behind the scenes.
Another significant difference is tone and depth. Hailey’s book invests considerable time developing characters’ backgrounds, personal conflicts, and ethical dilemmas amid systemic challenges. The film, conversely, streamlines character development to keep the story moving at a brisk pace, often leaning into melodrama and spectacle rather than introspective analysis. The adaptation’s style reflects the formulaic disaster genre approach popular in the 1970s, focusing on suspense rather than emotional nuance.
Lastly, the central crisis differs in both nature and execution. The novel’s primary emergencies—runway blockages and a snowstorm—highlight the tension and coordination required at the ground level. Airport 1975 creates a wholly new, airborne catastrophe not found in the source material. This results in a movie that is more an action-driven sequel than a direct translation, missing much of the original book’s grounded realism and intricate storytelling.
Airport 1975 inspired from
Airport
by Arthur Hailey