WT

Airport '77

1977 · Directed by Jerry Jameson

🧘4

Woke Score

36

Critic

🍿67

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 32 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #1391 of 1469.

🎭

Representation Casting

Score: 15/100

The ensemble cast includes performers of different backgrounds, but this reflects standard 1970s disaster film casting conventions rather than any conscious progressive agenda about representation.

🏳️‍🌈

LGBTQ+ Themes

Score: 5/100

No LGBTQ+ themes, characters, or content whatsoever. The film is entirely focused on survival mechanics.

👑

Feminist Agenda

Score: 10/100

Brenda Vaccaro and other female performers appear in the ensemble, but the film operates within traditional disaster film archetypes with no commentary on gender or feminist themes.

Racial Consciousness

Score: 5/100

No racial consciousness or commentary. The diverse cast is functional to the genre formula, not a statement about race or systemic issues.

🌱

Climate Crusade

Score: 0/100

The ocean setting and crash are plot devices. There is no environmental consciousness or climate messaging.

💰

Eat the Rich

Score: 5/100

Wealthy characters exist in the ensemble as archetypal figures, but there is no anti-capitalist commentary or class consciousness underlying the narrative.

💗

Body Positivity

Score: 0/100

A 1977 disaster film contains no body positivity messaging or representation.

🧠

Neurodivergence

Score: 0/100

No representation or discussion of neurodivergence of any kind.

📖

Revisionist History

Score: 0/100

This is a contemporary disaster film, not a historical narrative. No revisionist history present.

📢

Lecture Energy

Score: 5/100

The film prioritizes plot and spectacle over dialogue. Any dialogue serves survival mechanics rather than preachy messaging.

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Synopsis

Flight 23 has crashed in the Bermuda Triangle after a hijacking gone wrong. Now the surviving passengers must brave panic, slow leaks, oxygen depletion, and more while attempting a daring plan, all while 200 feet underwater.

Consciousness Assessment

Airport '77 stands as a monument to the disaster film genre in its purest, most unencumbered form. Director Jerry Jameson has crafted a spectacle of underwater survival that concerns itself with one matter alone: will the passengers escape the sunken 747, and how many dramatic beats can be extracted from this premise before the oxygen runs out. The film is refreshingly unconcerned with anything beyond the immediate mechanics of crisis and rescue.

The ensemble cast, featuring Jack Lemmon, James Stewart, Joseph Cotten, and an array of supporting players, represents the disaster film formula perfected over the preceding decade. Their presence reflects nothing more than the practical necessity of the genre: you need a pilot, a stewardess, a wealthy passenger, a comic relief character, and so forth. That the cast includes performers of varying backgrounds is incidental to this arithmetic, not evidence of conscious social positioning. The film treats its characters as functional units in a survival scenario.

What emerges most clearly from Airport '77 is the complete absence of any agenda whatsoever, progressive or otherwise. The hijacking, the crash, the underwater entrapment, the rescue attempt, are all treated as plot mechanisms pure and simple. There is no commentary on wealth, no exploration of identity, no contemporary social concern lurking beneath the surface. It is simply a 1977 entertainment product designed to deliver the thrills its title promises. In this respect, it is almost quaint.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

36%from 7 reviews
Chicago Sun-Times50

The movie’s a big, slick entertainment, relentlessly ridiculous and therefore never boring for long.

Roger EbertRead Full Review →
TV Guide Magazine50

Here we go again--it's time for a 747 to meet disaster once more with a host of colorful characters to worry about as they go down--and this time they go down 50 feet into the ocean.

Staff (Not Credited)Read Full Review →
Variety50

The story’s formula banality is credible most of the time and there’s some good actual US Navy search and rescue procedure interjected in the plot.

Staff (Not Credited)Read Full Review →
Time Out20

Disaster movie in which a converted luxury airliner laden with guests and art treasures is hijacked by terrorists and crashes into the sea near an oil-rig. The survivors then spend their time trying to overact their way out of the claustrophobic script, which threatens a death even more slow and painful than suffocation or drowning.

Staff (Not Credited)Read Full Review →