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The Hindenburg (1975) is a movie based on the disaster of the German airship Hindenburg. The film was produced and directed by Robert Wise, and was written by Nelson Gidding, Richard Levinson and William Link based on the book of the same name by Michael M. Mooney (The Hindenburg [1972]). A.A. Hoehling, author of a previous book also about the sabotage theory, Who Destroyed The Hindenburg? (1962) sued Mooney along with the film developers for copyright infringement as well as unfair competition. However, Judge Charles M. Metzner dismissed his allegations.[1] A highly speculative thriller, The Hindenburg depicts a conspiracy leading to the destruction of the airship. In reality, while the Zeppelins were certainly used as a propaganda symbol by the Third Reich, and anti-Nazi forces might have had the motivation for sabotage, the theory of sabotage was investigated at the time and no firm evidence for such sabotage was ever put forward. The possibility of Boerth's (i.e. Spehl's) deliberate sabotage is one theory of the fire that had been the subject of Mooney's book, published around the time of the film's development. It has never been proven definitively. Although sabotage may be only a theory to the disaster, the sequence in the beginning about a bomb threat from a Kathie Rauch of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is fact.[2]
[edit] PlotAn interesting aspect of the film was its transition from black and white to technicolor and back to grayscale with the film beginning with a Universal Studios newsreel that gave a educated view to the history of the lighter-than-air craft. At the beginning of the film during the fake newsreel, the name of the airship Graf Zeppelin is shown painted on its side but it is painted in a different typeface, a dead giveaway that the airship shown is actually the LZ 130 Graf Zeppelin II, which was not completed until the year after the Hindenburg crashed, and therefore a 1937 newsreel would not show it. Immediately after, the story reverts to the events of the last flight, with aspects of the saga being told through many of the passengers and crew of the airship, played by an all-star, ensemble cast, including George C. Scott, Anne Bancroft, Burgess Meredith and Charles Durning. A caricature of Fritz Erdmann, Luftwaffe Colonel Franz Ritter (George C. Scott) boards with the intention of protecting the Hindenburg as various threats have been made to down the airship which some see as a symbol of Nazi Germany. Ritter is assisted by a Nazi government official, SS/Gestapo Hauptsturmführer Martin Vogel (Roy Thinnes) -- who was posing as official photographer -- although both operate independently in investigating the background of all passengers and crew on the voyage. Ritter has reason to suspect everyone even his old friend, a German countess named Ursula von Reugen (Anne Bancroft) who vehemently opposes the Nazi regime. Other prime suspects include card sharks Emilio Pagetta (Burgess Meredith) and Major Napier (Rene Auberjonois), Edward Douglas (Gig Young), a suspicious German-American ad executive, as well as several crew members and even the Hindenburg's captains Pruss (Charles Durning) and Lehmann (Richard A. Dysart). In the film, the characters of Ernst Lehmann and Hugo Eckener (Herbert Nelson) are portrayed as very wary of the Nazi party. In reality, while Eckener hated the Nazis and spoke against them openly, Lehmann was very accommodating to the powers in Berlin in order to advance his career and the fortunes of the Zeppelin Company. In fact, while the movie shows Lehmann protesting using the ship in the previous year to drop propaganda leaflets, in reality Lehmann was eager and glad to oblige in this undertaking, to the extent that he launched the ship in a dangerous wind condition, bashing in the tail. In real life Eckener lashed out at Lehmann for endangering the ship to please the Nazis, resulting in Propaganda Minister Goebbels blacklisting Eckener in the press forever after, despite his being a national (and international) hero.[3] There were also other passengers:
As the Hindenburg makes its way to New York, events conspire against Ritter and Vogel. Ritter and later Vogel soon suspect the rigger Karl Boerth (William Atherton), a former Hitler Youth leader who has become disillusioned with the Nazis with whom Ritter is sympathizing because he is becoming the same way after his thirteen-year-old son was killed. The airship pops over Lakehurst Naval Air Station; actual black and white newsreel footage of the explosion is intertwined with the color film footage (now entirely black and white in all current prints due to continuity reasons) to recreate the dramatic last moments of the airship. The film focuses on a bomb exploding and uses a unique segue utilizing special effects, (a combination of a model of the Zeppelin, animation and a superimposed explosion) to recreate the first moments of the actual explosion (which were missed by all newsreel cameras at the actual event), subtly dissolving into the black and white news films taken at the scene. The film ended with a tribute to Herbert Morrison's radio commentary, with the memorable quotation, "Oh the humanity!" Two dramatic escapes depicted in the film were based on fact (though one was slightly inaccurate).
[edit] CastAs appearing in screen credits (main roles identified):[4]
(*) Beside name indicates actual name of person on the last flight of the Hindenburg, (**) beside name indicates actual person, but wasn't on board the Hindenburg. Many of the fictional characters are based on actual people. For example: Franz Ritter is based on Fritz Erdmann, Karl Boerth is based on Eric Spehl, as well as a few others.[4] [edit] Production crewAs appearing in screen credits (main positions identified):[4]
A full cast and production crew list is too lengthy to include, see: IMDb profile.[4] [edit] ProductionDirector Robert Wise, known for an attention to detail and background research, began to collect documents and film footage on the real-life Hindenburg for over a year at the International Archives in London, the National Air and Space Museum Library and Archives in Washington, DC as well as in Germany.[5] In 1974, while casting took place in United States, pre-production photography was undertaken in Munich (doubling for Frankfurt), Milwaukee, New York and Washington, DC.[5] Lakehurst, New Jersey would also be a primary location but the Tustin Marine Corps Air Station where two 1,000 ft hangars constructed for airships, still existed, doubled for the original Hindenburg mooring station.[6] (The base was officially closed in 1999.)[7] Additional locations in southern California were also chosen.[5] Studio and special effects work was carried out at Sound Stage 12 in the Universal Studios complex. Wise's research was used to advantage since the bulk of Zeppelin blueprints were destroyed in World War II. Using photographs, a recreated passenger area, gondola and superstructure of the giant airship was constructed to create a realistic exterior and interior set for the actors. A team of 80 artists and technicians working double shifts for four months, assembled a "giant erector set" consisting of eight tons of aluminum, 11,000 yards of muslin, 24,000 ft of sash cord and 2,000,000 rivets.[8] The Hindenburg made extensive use of matte paintings to bring the Zeppelin to life, in addition to a highly-detailed 25-foot long miniature which was "flown" via an elaborate setup where the stationary model was photographed by a mobile platform consisting of a camera and dolly on a track.[6] on Universal Studios largest and tallest sound stage, Stage 12.[6] The miniature of the Hindenburg today is on display at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.[9] A real-life tragedy nearly happened during the filming of the Hindenburg's fiery death. A full-scale section of the Zeppelin's nose was built for the film on Universal Studios' Stage 12, and was set to be destroyed by fire for the film's final destruction sequence. A half-dozen stunt artists wearing fire-retardant gear were placed in the nose replica as it was set afire; however, the fire quickly got out of control, causing several stunt artists to get lost in the smoke, damaging several cameras filming the action, and nearly destroyed the sound stage. Some of the footage from this sequence was used in the final cut of the film, but the full sequence, as it had been planned, was not included.
[edit] Historical errorsThe film tries to stay fairly accurate although minor inaccuracies occurred:
[edit] ReceptionAlthough well received by the public as typical "disaster movie" fare, The Hindenburg was "savaged" by critics. Roger Ebert from the Chicago Sun-Times dismissed it as a failed project, "The Hindenburg is a disaster picture, all right. How else can you describe a movie that cost $12 million and makes people laugh out loud at all the wrong times?"[10] Similar reactions were recounted and when the film eventually made it to television screens, the TV Guide summed up a near-universal review: "This insipid, boring, implausible, senseless, deliciously funny, and expensively mounted film... There's no tension whatsoever and none of the characters is remotely interesting, let alone sympathetic."[11] [edit] AwardsDespite critical reaction, The Hindenburg was noteworthy for its use of special effects and won two Special Achievement Academy Awards in 1976:[12] The film was also nominated for Best Art Direction, Best Cinematography, and Best Sound. In the same year, The Hindenburg was nominated for an "Eddie" in the category of Best Edited Feature Film in the American Cinema Editors Awards. [edit] References
[edit] External links
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