- No Highway in the Sky
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No Highway in the Sky Directed by Henry Koster Produced by Louis D. Lighton Written by Alec Coppel
Oscar Millard
R. C. SherriffStarring James Stewart
Marlene Dietrich
Glynis Johns
Jack HawkinsMusic by Malcolm Arnold Cinematography Georges Périnal Editing by Manuel del Campo Distributed by 20th Century Fox Release date(s) 28 June 1951
21 September 1951Running time 98 min. Country UK Language English Box office $1,150,000 (US rentals)[1] No Highway in the Sky is a 1951 British disaster film (aka: No Highway) directed by Henry Koster and starring James Stewart and Marlene Dietrich. The film is based on the novel No Highway by Nevil Shute, and was one of the first films that involved a potential aircraft crash.
Contents
Themes
Although the film follows Shute's original novel closely, the film notably omits references to the supernatural that had been contained in the original novel, including the use of automatic writing to resolve a key element in the original novel's story.
Plot
The film follows Theodore Honey (James Stewart), a highly eccentric "boffin" with the Royal Aircraft Establishment. A widower with a precocious young daughter, Elspeth (Janette Scott), Honey is sent from Farnborough to investigate the crash of a "Reindeer" airliner in Labrador, which he theorizes occurred because of a structural failure in the tail caused by sudden metal fatigue. To test his theory in his laboratory, an airframe is continuously shaken in eight-hour daily cycles.
It isn't until Honey is aboard a Reindeer that he realizes he himself is flying on one such aircraft and that it may be close to the number of hours his theory projects for the fatal failure. Despite the fact that his theory is not yet proven, Honey decides to warn the passengers and crew, including actress Monica Teasdale (Marlene Dietrich). After the Reindeer lands at Gander Airport an inspection clears it to continue on. He takes drastic action to stop the flight by raising the undercarriage while the aircraft is still on the ground, lowering the aircraft to its belly and damaging it. Shocked by the act, some people demand that he be declared insane to discredit his theory.
Teasdale and flight attendant Marjorie Corder (Glynis Johns) both take a liking for Honey and Elspeth, who is lonely and isolated from her schoolmates. Teasdale speaks on his behalf to his superiors, while Corder, seeing that he is decent but disorganized, decides to marry him.
During a hearing in which his sanity is questioned, Honey resigns but continues trying to prove that his mathematics are sound. In the laboratory, the time he predicted for failure passes without failure. The Reindeer he disabled is repaired, but after landing from a test flight the tail falls off. Shortly afterward, the same thing happens to the test frame in the lab, and Honey discovers that he failed to include temperature as a factor in his calculations.
Cast
- James Stewart as Theodore Honey
- Marlene Dietrich as Monica Teasdale
- Glynis Johns as Marjorie Corder
- Jack Hawkins as Dennis Scott
- Janette Scott as Elspeth Honey
- Elizabeth Allan as Shirley Scott
- Ronald Squire as Sir John, Director
- Jill Clifford as Peggy, Stewardess
- Niall MacGinnis as Captain Samuelson, Pilot (uncredited)
- Kenneth More as Dobson, Co-Pilot (uncredited)
- Dora Bryan as Rosie, Barmaid (uncredited)
- Felix Aylmer as Sir Philip (uncredited)
- Maurice Denham as Major Pearl (Tour guide) (uncredited)
- Wilfrid Hyde-White as Fisher, Inspector of Accidents (uncredited)
- John Lennox as Farnborough Director (uncredited)
- Bessie Love as Aircraft passenger (uncredited)
- Arthur Lucas as Farnborough Director (uncredited)
- Pete Murray as Peter, the Radio Operator (uncredited)
- Hugh Wakefield as Sir David Moon, Airline President (uncredited)
Production
The working title was No Highway which was also the British release title. As noted in contemporary sources, the picture was filmed in 1950 at Denham Studios with location shooting at Blackbushe Airport, Hampshire, England, although a scene with a Gloster E.1/44 prototype was possibly staged at Boscombe Down.
The November 1950 Hollywood Reporter news items noted while the film was in production, Stewart underwent an emergency appendectomy in London.
Reception
Bosley Crowther of the New York Times voiced a favorable review, noting the film's "...sly construction of an unusual plot and wry suspense."[2]
Life imitating the movies
Three years after the film and six years after Nevil Shute's original novel (No Highway) there were two fatal crashes of the world's first jet passenger airliner, the de Havilland Comet. Investigation found that metal fatigue was the most likely cause of both accidents, albeit in the fuselage and not the tail.
Adaptations in other media
Stewart and Dietrich, along with a full cast, reprised their roles on the CBS Lux Radio Theatre’s adaptation of the film on 21 April 1952, before a live studio audience.
References
- Notes
- ^ Solomon 1989, p. 224.
- ^ Crowther, Bosley. "No Highway in the Sky (1951), With James Stewart and Marlene District, Opens at Roxy." The New York Times, 22 September 1951. Retrieved: 3 January 2011.
- Bibliography
- Jones, Ken D., Arthur F. McClure and Alfred E. Twomey. The Films of James Stewart. New York: Castle Books, 1970.
- Shute, Nevil. Slide Rule: Autobiography of an Engineer. London: William Heinemann Ltd., 1954. ISBN 1-84232-291-5.
- Solomon, Aubrey. Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History (The Scarecrow Filmmakers Series). Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1989. ISBN 978-0810842441.
External links
- No Highway in the Sky at the TCM Movie Database
- No Highway in the Sky at the Internet Movie Database
- No Highway in the Sky at AllRovi
Films directed by Henry Koster 1930s Three Smart Girls (1936) · One Hundred Men and a Girl (1937) · The Rage of Paris (1938) · Three Smart Girls Grow Up (1939) · First Love (1939)1940s Spring Parade (1940) · It Started with Eve (1941) · Between Us Girls (1942) · Music for Millions (1944) · Two Sisters from Boston (1946) · The Unfinished Dance (1947) · The Bishop's Wife (1947) · The Luck of the Irish (1948) · Come to the Stable (1949) · The Inspector General (1949)1950s Wabash Avenue (1950) · My Blue Heaven (1950) · Harvey (1950) · No Highway in the Sky (1951) · Mr. Belvedere Rings the Bell (1951) · Elopement (1951) · Stars and Stripes Forever (1952) · My Cousin Rachel (1952) · The Robe (1953) · Désirée (1954) · A Man Called Peter (1955) · The Virgin Queen (1955) · Good Morning, Miss Dove (1955) · D-Day the Sixth of June (1956) · The Power and the Prize (1956) · My Man Godfrey (1957) · Fräulein (1958) · The Naked Maja (1958)1960s The Story of Ruth (1960) · Flower Drum Song (1961) · Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation (1962) · Take Her, She's Mine (1963) · Dear Brigitte (1965) · The Singing Nun (1966)Categories:- 1951 films
- Aviation films
- British films
- Disaster films
- Films based on novels
- Films directed by Henry Koster
- Films set in Canada
- Newfoundland and Labrador in fiction
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