Most of the passengers on an airplane disappear, and the remainder land the plane in a mysteriously barren airport.Most of the passengers on an airplane disappear, and the remainder land the plane in a mysteriously barren airport.Most of the passengers on an airplane disappear, and the remainder land the plane in a mysteriously barren airport.
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 3 nominations total
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn the novella, there is no wind, not even a light breeze when they are in Bangor. Since this was virtually impossible to execute for the movie they simply created dialogue to explain that even with a wind down here the clouds are not moving.
- GoofsWhen approaching LAX, Laurel notes that everything looks the same and there's no one there. Except there are cars driving around.
- Quotes
[Engle informs the remaining passengers that they are diverting to Bangor]
Craig Toomy: I have an important meeting in Boston at nine O'clock! And I forbid you... From flying to some whistle-stop Maine airport! DO YOU HEAR ME?
Laurel Stevenson: Can you please quiet down? You're scaring the little girl.
Craig Toomy: Scaring the little girl? SCARING THE LITTLE GIRL? LADY! We've been diverted to some tin... pot airport in the middle of nowhere! And I have more important things to think about than scaring a little girl!
- ConnectionsEdited into The Timekeepers of Eternity (2021)
This is a delightfully creepy mystery, as is the abandoned airport where the plane lands, but the film bogs down in its irrationally slow reveal of the facts. The director compacts a 90-minute script into hours and hours of excessive subplots. Some of these are necessary for character development, (since the movie focuses on how these different personalities react to the situation), but the script burdens itself with a lot of clutter. Some of the actors overact, others underact. I blame the weak direction, as even David Morse seems awkward at times.
Worst is the inconsistency of the menacing attackers. It takes them a zillion years to cut through some fields--you see objects collapse in the distance, but you see this same "approaching unseen monster" shot again and again. Then, when the things do emerge, they race around at a hundred miles an hour. The nature of how they go about annihilating their targets follows no logical pattern. The things are so bizarre looking they are both funny and scary, so you don't know whether you're supposed to laugh or not. The "corruptions of the time stream" are not consistent, either. It's as if the script made up rules how this would work, and then changed those rules whenever it felt like it.
Even though some of the effects are confusing, others are downright cool. I love the portal; it was ethereal yet sinister at the same time. It evokes the intended curiosity: what lies beyond it? Overall, the movie is so weird that it holds your interest, but don't expect any sane continuity. If you look for sound thought in this one, you'll wind up as nuts as the movie is.
- MartianOctocretr5
- Jan 28, 2007
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Stephen King's The Langoliers
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1