I wish he would have stopped drinking and flown his 172 around the country or something. That poor airplane got abandoned for some booze.
Every time I read the transcript from the CVR from that one, it truly brings tears to my eyes. They never, ever, stopped fighting to live, to save their passengers.
I saw it last night and enjoyed it. Sure, overplayed the booze/drugs part a bit and we never got to see the 172 get off the ground, but my SO and I enjoyed the movie. John Goodman's role seemed to fit him well...
An enjoyable rental.
Of course, don't expect the flying to be represented realistically. That'll only happen when flying movies are made by pilots FOR pilots...not a great business plan. But only the beginning scenes involve flying, and has been mentioned, it's incidental. It's not an action flying flick. If you wanna see a bunch of awful flying CGI, you can rent 'Fly Boys'.
He was probably from the old school and didn't think twice about it.Some folks sent me background info on Robertson after I posted that clip to FB of the movie trailer. Never seen the movie, nor knew anything about him.
Apparently owned a Spitfire, and really was a pilot.
Also apparently was a drunk and a womanizer, ironically, for this thread.
Just thought it was interesting. Doing a movie about a drunk pilot when you are one, is pretty ballsy...
I haven't seen it. As an airline pilot, I'm not in a hurry to see another drunk, womanizer pilot movie.
I prefer "The Pilot" starring Cliff Robertson.
I just had a lady thank us after the flight for not being drunk. I had to bite my tongue and not say anything. I really wanted to say, "What makes you think I wasn't drunk?" My sense of humor could get me into trouble.
I'll see Flight on Netflix someday.