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The Hindenburg Details

FULL SYNOPSIS

"The German Air Force is not at all what it used to be," says Anne Bancroft's Countess, about 16 minutes into The Hindenburg, pausing and then adding, "But then, nothing is these days." That seems to sum up the ponderous, irony-laden script and plot of Robert Wise's movie, which is posited -- in true post-Watergate fashion -- upon notions of conspiracy and cover-up behind the destruction of the German airship. The movie opens with a handy Universal newsreel that gives a vestpocket history of lighter-than-air flight, and that carries us to 1937 Germany. Colonel Franz Ritter (George C. Scott), a former hero pilot now working for military intelligence, finds himself assigned to the flight of the Hindenburg as chief of security; reports and rumors about the destruction of the zeppelin have circulated both in Germany and America, and the Nazi government takes these very seriously. What Ritter walks in on is a "Grand Hotel" of the air, several dozen passengers and crew whose ranks contain enough red herrings to keep Ritter (and us) jumping through hoops for most of the first half of the film, when we're not watching glorious shots of the zeppelin in flight. The answer to the script's presentation of the plot against the airship,and theidentityof the bomber and his motivations, are actually presented in the first 15 minutes, but there are so many false leads, subplots, and blind alleys put before us that the solution will probably pass by unnoticed. In the meantime, Ritter dances around with his ex-paramour (Bancroft), scheming businessmen (Gig Young), and passengers with skeletons in their closets (Alan Oppenheimer), an entertainer (Robert Clary) with a knack for offending loyal Nazis, several officers and crew with known "political" differences with the Nazi Party, a Gestapo man (Roy Thinnes) who's got an agenda of his own, and two genuine mystery men (Burgess Meredith, Rene Auberjonois) who don't seem to have any reason for traveling on this particular voyage. It's all a little tiring, or would be, if the setting and special effects weren't that interesting, and the cast wasn't so entertaining to watch in these relatively thankless roles. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

  • Release date:December 25, 1975

Awards

Awarded by
Nominee
Category
Year
Status
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Peter Berkos Special Achievement 1975 Winner
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Robert Surtees Best Cinematography 1975 Nominee
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Edward C. Carfagno Best Art Direction 1975 Nominee
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Albert J. Whitlock Special Achievement 1975 Winner
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Don Sharpless Best Sound 1975 Nominee

Cast

George C. Scott
as Col. Ritter
Anne Bancroft
as Countess
William Atherton
as Boerth
Roy Thinnes
as Vogel
Gig Young
as Douglas
Burgess Meredith
as Pajetta
Charles Durning
as Capt. Pruss
Richard Dysart
as Lehmann
René Auberjonois
as Maj. Napier
Peter Donat
as Channing
Alan Oppenheimer
as Breslau
Joanna Moore
as Mrs. Channing
Stephen Elliott
as Capt. Fellows
Greg Mullavey
as Morrison
William Sylvester
as Luftwaffe Colonel
Katherine Helmond
as Mrs. Mildred Breslau
Joe Turkel
as Detective Moore
Charles Macauley
as HIrsch
Colby Chester
as Eliot Howell III
Curt Lowens
as Elevator Man
David Mauro
as Goebbels
Stephen Manley
as Peter Breslau
Ted Gehring
as Knorr
Teno Pollick
as Frankel
Betsy Jones-Moreland
as Stewardess Imhoff
Val Bisoglio
as Lt. Lombardi
Rex Holman
as Dimmler
Ruth Kobart
as Hattie
Sandy Ward
as Detective Grunberger
Jan Merlin
as Speck
Jean Rasey
as Valerie Breslau
Joyce Davis
as Eleanore Ritter
Kip Niven
as Lt. Truscott
Lisa Pera
as Freda Halle
Norman Alden
Peter Canon
as Ludecke

Crew

Robert Wise
Director
Robert Wise
Producer
William Link
Screen Story
William Link
Screenwriter
Nelson Gidding
Screenwriter
Clifford Stine
Cinematographer
Robert Surtees
Cinematographer
David Shire
Composer (Music Score)
Donn Cambern
Editor
Edward C. Carfagno
Production Designer
Albert J. Whitlock
Special Effects
Howard Kazanjian
First Assistant Director
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