Wednesday, March 18, 2026

BRACE FOR IMPACT! BQ BOARDS ALL FOUR 'AIRPORT' MOVIES AND WONDERS WHERE WAS THE TSA WHEN WE REALLY NEEDED THEM.....

     Fasten your seatbelts, kids......it's going to be bumpy flight! Grab your boarding passes, neck pillows and 3 oz. bottles of shampoo, cause this trip lasts the entirety of the 1970's......

First destination....

Airport (1970)

       For producer Ross Hunter, slick purveyor of glossy, glitzy technicolor'd crowd-pleasers ("Imitation of Life", "Magnificent Obsession", "Pillow Talk") this one became his Magnum Opus and a roaring box-office success.

      Consider this an amazing feat, given that 1970 continued the enormous upheavals in the cinema arts, with a youthquake of fresh new taboo breaking filmmakers, audiences and a studio system crumbling faster than ever. 

        Writer-director George Seaton smoothly scripted and directed this polished-to-a-shine soap opera based on Arthur Hailey's bestseller about a barely averted airline disaster. And Ross Hunter filled up the cast with as many stars and familiar faces as he could lay his hands on. Besides reigning superstars Burt Lancaster and Dean Martin, you could also spot a pile of 'Hey! Isn't that....?' beloved characters actors in every supporting role.

         Lancaster's the harried airport manager multitasking through multiple crises in the middle of a raging snowstorm. Martin's the footloose pilot with a wife he's tired of and a devoted stewardess (Jacqueline Bissett) he's impregnated. Everyone's got marital woes, including a poor sad waitress (Maureen Stapleton) whose depressed, anguished husband (Van Heflin) has boarded the plane with a bomb in hopes of getting her a huge life insurance settlement.

         We can't even begin to catalog the many little side stories unfolding among the corny, but vividly drawn players here.....(including reliable George Kennedy as gruff but lovable Chief airport engineer Joe Patroni, Helen Hayes as a sly geriatric stowaway, and Jean Seberg as Lancaster's loyal assistant and budding mistress.) George Seaton and Ross Hunter assemble the whole package together with that sparkling glaze of Hollywood studio product, a throwback to the kind of movie all of America flocked to in the 30's, 40's and 50's.

          Call it corny and obvious all you like, but lots of people found themselves thoroughly entertained by its old fashioned professionalism and eager-to-please attitude. (That forceful driving music score from Alfred Newman was more icing on the cake....)

           Come to think of it....we loved all its retro charms too.  4 stars (****).

           Check to see if your life preservers are under the seats, 'cause it's a straight plunge downward from here on...... 

Airport 1975 (1974)

        And now we come to the shameless cash grabs as Universal Studios began to squeeze those cash cow udders and glide to more big buckolas by hopping on the wings of 'Airport's enormous success. 

         Naturally bigger and better disasters were needed to befall this airplane.....(something more cinematic than a distraught Van Heflin exploding himself out of the plane's toilet)

          The subsequent 'Airport' sequels were each stand-alone stories unrelated to (but 'inspired by') the Arthur Hailey novel. As a touchstone connecting them, only George Kennedy's 'Joe Patroni' airline tech appears in the next three films (though his job, backstory and screen time change in each one).

          Universal bigwig Jennings Lang took over producing the rest of the series......this mogul certainly didn't lack instincts for showmanship and spectacle, but he didn't much care how ridiculous and unintentionally funny the results might turn out. 

           In that regard, 'Airport 1975', steeped in literally overblown hilarious melodramatics, caricature performances and playing like its own 107 minute blooper reel, became an instant prime target to lampooning.  Mercilessly mocked, much of it became the inspiration for the no-holds-barred spoofery of 1980's 'Airplane' comedy.

            Karen Black, the most over-employed, ubiquitous leading actress of the 1970's plays the plucky, stalwart stewardess who's forced to fly a 747 after a small plane swipes a jumbo hole in its cockpit, sucking out the poor co-pilot and severely injuring the pilot.  Desperately talking her through the '747-For-Dummies' instructions are boyfriend Charlton Heston....which, as you might imagine, doesn't much comfort the passengers who scream out, "The stewardess is flying the plane!!"

           And speaking of the passengers, what a ripe for satire bunch was on board here. There's Norman Fell, Jerry Stiller and Conrad Janis as three drunks who can't hope to compete with elderly Myrna Loy chugging whiskey-and-beer boilermakers......a singing nun (pop singer Helen Reddy) serenading a gravely ill little girl awaiting a much needed kidney (played by Linda Blair, minus the 360 head rotations). And let's not forget comedian Sid Caesar and best of all Gloria Swanson, stretching her range to play.....Gloria Swanson. 

            And all you nailbiters, prepare yourselves for breathless scenes where Heston, unable to part oncoming mountains like Moses, tries lowering himself into the cockpit as he's tethered to a helicopter flying along side the plane......

            Yes, it's all as foolish and funny as it sounds, but moviegoers lapped it up for the major hoot that it was, prompting.......get a grip on your armrests....yet another 'Airport' movie. But 'Airport 1975' in its own goofy way, became a perfect emblem of bloated, clueless Big Studio product of the 70's. 

            We still smiled all the way through it. 3 Guilty Pleasure stars (***).

           Now hold tight to your styrofoam noodles....we're about to go from in-flight to a really deep dip in the pool......the Bermuda Triangle...

Airport '77 (1977)

           Little or no pleasure to be had here, guilty or otherwise.  This third entry, connect-the-dots dreary, plods along with the usual Universal machine tooled efficiency and by the time it's done (and the last cast member rescued), you wonder why you watched it all.

          Jack Lemmon's on hand to pick up an easy paycheck as our pilot and his plane's hijacked by thieves after a priceless art collection on board.  They gas Lemmon and the passengers into sleepy-bye, and try steering the plane toward some island to unload the goods. But oopsie, in the fog they clip an oil rig and go crashing into the ocean. The plane sinks into the drink, putting everybody in danger of going glug glug before any rescue effort can even find them. Cue the 'who's-gonna-live-or-go-belly-up' survival sweepstakes. 

          For star gazers, there's Joseph Cotton, Olivia de Havilland and Christopher Lee (in a rare sympathetic role.) At least the always superb Lee Grant gets some jollies tearing through her role as an obnoxious shrew you just know is destined for the terminal list. The rest of cast are talented enough folks, but generally not very interesting minor leaguers.

         A blah 2 star (**) waste of time, this one. Even George Kennedy's Patroni is hardly in it, as if he saw the script in advance. 

         Clutch those little bags of pretzels, everyone.....here comes the worst fight of all.....

The Concorde...Airport '79 (1979)

         We could almost believe the rumor that Universal, embarrassed and shamed by this last entry, tried marketing it as a comedy.....(but that ploy would've only worked well with 'Airport 1975')

       Stupid beyond belief and clumsily plotted, it's fitting the final 'Airport' plane was a Concorde, a supersonic gas guzzler, larger and faster than Rodan on the hunt for Mothra. This behemoth was so expensive to service and maintain, tickets had to cost $30,000 a seat to help pay for its upkeep. (One of the last of these horribly crashed, killing all on board and four on the ground.....so the Concorde followed the Tyrannosaurus straight into the tar pits...)

         An international flavor to the cast enlivens things a little. French superstar Alain Delon, tried breaking into American cinema as one of the pilots, but it's a nothing role for him and he does nothing with it.....not even when he's romancing ultra-hottie Sylvia Kristel, soon to cavort naked through multiple soft core 'Emmanuelle' sex romps. 

         The cast line-up is all over the place...plenty of familiar TV faces like Eddie Albert, Susan Blakely, Avery Schreiber, Martha Raye, John Davidson, Jimmy "J.J. Walker  and God help us, Charo. And some quality folk pop up too.....David Warner, Mercedes McCambridge, Bibi Andersson, and Cicely Tyson.

          Robert Wagner's a scummy corporate CEO and secret arms dealer whose nasty secret's discovered by the reporter he's romancing (Blakely). So much for love....Wagner re-programs his spiffy new combat drone to blow up the Concorde while Blakely and the rest of the cast is aboard and in flight. 

         Fear not! Our trusty new pilot is.....none other than George Kennedy's good old Joe Patroni. But evidently a Patroni from an alternate universe since Joe 2.0 suddenly has an extensive background as a veteran combat pilot with Vietnam experience. Avoiding the relentless drone, Joe steers the massive plane into 360 barrel roles, taking the entire cast on one crazy Six Flags ride after another.

          You'd think the passengers would've had enough of the Concorde after Joe manages to land the plane in Paris, almost hurling off the runway before it's caught in a safety net. Are you kidding? Get real, this is an Airport movie. Off they go again to complete their flight to the Moscow Olympics, conveniently forgetting they spent the first half of the trip rolling upside down. Way to compartmentalize, guys......

           But scumbag Wagner, still afraid Blakely will spill the beans on him, has a mechanic rig the cargo hold door to open in flight.......which of course it does, not only ripping gaping tears in the plane's floor, but sending the cabin into that passenger favorite, the 360 funhouse roll.  (A special Little Dutch Boy award to Eddie Albert, whose seat, with him in it, gets jammed into one of the holes.)

            It's up to our hero, Joe 2.0 to save the day by skirting over the Alps to find a long, long patch of snow he can safely plow the Concorde into without ramming the Matterhorn.

            Don't get too excited thinking you'll laugh yourself silly at all of this as much as "Airport 1975". The film simply lacks that kind of dopey energy and the cast members only dutifully perform their tasks so as to pick up their checks and go home. So Universal's Hail Mary to market the film as a farce could only make everyone think they'd lost their minds.

            One amazing credit did, in fact, stagger us - the script for this rambling circus came from Eric Roth.....the screenwriter of 'Killers of the Flower Moon', 'Dune Part One', 'Munich', 'The Horse Whisperer' and Forrest Gump'. Huh???  Well, everyone has to start somewhere......

      1 star (*) (for those barrel rolls only). 

       BQ thanks you for flying with us and hope to see you again soon......maybe to cover movies where everyone stays on the ground.......  








         

        

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

'YOU DID NOTHING WRONG'.....HAUNTINGS, HORROR AND NEWLYWEDS WHO AREN'T WHAT THEY SEEM......

 You Did Nothing Wrong by C.G. Drews (2026) 

     The title of this book could just as easily be applied to author C.G. Drews. When it comes to fashioning a horrific, creepy storyline, dripping with hauntings, psychosis, twisted long held secrets and ever mounting dread.......mission accomplished. This author does all of it right and then some.

     Elodie, a young Australian woman and single mom, has gone through a whirlwind romance with fair-haired, even-tempered and head-over-heels in love American, Bren. He's even all in with co-parenting Elodie's 6 year old autistic son Jude, whom Elodie has struggled to prevent giving Bren a full view of his raging tantrums, mood swings and learning disabilities. .

     Bren's whisked his newly pregnant bride, and his stepson back to the States, where he's been busy renovating a falling-apart mansion that's a textbook illustration of "Nasty Crumbling House That Anyone In Their Right Mind Would Run Screaming Away From In Stark Terror"

     And it doesn't take long at all for the house to start living up to its disturbing, ominous appearance. Jude hears the house talking to him. Doors slam mysteriously. The walls ooze some sort of fluid. And to Elodie's growing terror, Jude's increasing hysterical behavior, begins to crack the veneer of both her and Bren's personalities that they present to each other........as if maybe there's something even more corrupted and broken going on here than the house itself.

     Readers who cherish and treasure a plunge into pure grisly horror will get a full helping here. For me the bonus was author Drews bringing the flawed lead characters to life, especially Elodi ,as she's being held over a slow fire from every possible source around her.

     A genuine thrills 'n chills express train.. 5 star recommendation. (*****).

Monday, March 16, 2026

THE 2026 ACADEMY AWARDS......NOT THE GOOD OLD DAYS, BUT SOME NOMINEES WITH PIZZAZZ HELPED A LOT.......

 The 98th annual Academy Awards Ceremony (2026)

           We'll always sigh and pine for that Golden Era when millions of us crowded into theaters to watch the most exciting and popular movies of the year.

      And we couldn't wait to see our favorite blockbusters competitively vie for the ultimate prize at the end of the rainbow.....the Oscar statuette.

       All of that began to fall apart with the onslaught of streaming services and the nominations dominated by obscure, unwatchable, audience unfriendly films that nobody cared about and nobody had the slightest interests in sitting through. 

        But some of the long gone glamour and anticipation returned this year with the addition of actual crowd-pleasing nominees that audiences enjoyed and turned out for....("One Battle After Another", "Sinners", "Weapons"...

         Surprise, surprise....even at over 3 & 1/2 hours, we were never bored and for a change, we took an active interest in who was going to win the clash of the 'One Battle' and 'Sinners' titans. 

         So here's our impressions, in no order whatsover.....

          Conan O' Brian  The "Weapons" kickoff was inspired, his subsequent bits ranged from funny to mildly amusing and his monologue, with a only a few bumps, was on target. We say bring 'im back next year by all means.

           Timothee Chalamet  Got exactly what he deserved.....nothing. His 'I'm-a-legend-in-my-own-mind' shtick finally undid him and we're not sure he learned anything from the hard lesson of not taking your ego out of a walk in public.  He's a gifted kid and we've no doubt there's more nominations in his future as his career progresses.....who knows, with a little injection of humility, he could even win one. C'mon Timmy....show you're a good sport and next appear in an IMAX mash-up of 'Swan Lake' and 'La Traviata'...

          The orchestra and its conductor   When they started playing off the 'K-Pop Demon Hunters' song winner who tried to speak, Conan should've sprayed the band a with fire extinguisher. 

          Bill Pullman and his son Lewis Pullman  Granted, it was a dumb, flop bit they wrote for you, but you should've tried to pull out of it with a little more grace and professionalism. Most painful moment of the show. 

          Choreographer Mandy Moore...a genuine MVP here, with her dynamic staging of the 'Sinners' and 'K-Pop Demon Hunters' songs...each of which stopped the show.

         Legendary songwriter Diane Warren....lost her 17th competitive Best Song nomination (but did receive a Life Achievement Oscar in 2022).  Sadly,  her expert musical craft in storytelling never connects with whatever popular film nails the Zeitgeist of the moment. But maybe....sooner or later the stars will align for her.......

       In Memoriam   We stood fully prepared to unleash our usual evisceration of the Academy's death roll, which it consistently screws up every year, both in selection and presentation. And with 2025 being a cruel, brutal year for the loss of so many beloved cinema icons, we expected the worst.

         But what a stunner.....this year the Academy finally stepped up and acknowledged that the passing of these legends required some extra special effort. Yes, there were omissions (Brigitte Bardot) but those heartfelt tributes to Rob Reiner, Robert Redford, Diane Keaton, Catherine O' Hara and Robert Duvall were, for splendid change of pace, handled with taste, care and a whole lot of heart. 

         Miss Congeniality Award:  to Elle Fanning. We didn't see anyone who looked like they enjoyed the ceremony more than Fanning, who bubbled over with happiness from the Red Carpet to the finale credit crawl. Love her to pieces.....

          "Wish I Were Somewhere Else" Award to Leonardo DiCaprio, who probably checked his watch 300 times throughout the proceedings.

            "I Actually Was Somewhere Else" Award: to sourpuss Sean Penn, who passed up a golden opportunity, as a likely Best Supporting Actor winner, to use the Oscars as a Bully Pulpit to vent about whatever's pissing him off at the moment. We don't blame the other most-likely competitor, Delroy Lindo, for scowling and sitting on his hands when the absent Penn won.   Yay to Kieren Culkin for his casual backhanded diss on Penn. 

             Best Acceptance Speeches: Both winners, Michael B. Jordon and Jessie Buckley, delivered all the emotional, heartfelt highpoints you'd expect.

             And finally....Conan, do NOT join the Christmas Adventurers Club  Perfect wrap-up as Conan spoofed Sean Penn's fate in 'One Battle After Another'......but we still need him back.....

             Overall.....a typically messy, overlong night at the Oscars....but a lively, funny, always entertaining spectacle.....with enough stuff going right to counterbalance all the gaffes, fluffs, mistakes and verbal bloopers of a live event. 

             3 and 1/2 stars (***1/2).....hooray for Hollywood.


Friday, March 13, 2026

WEEKEND MADNESS WRAP-UP......SPECIAL "DEPARTMENT OF EXCURSION" EDITION.....

Melania Trump, attempting to imitate the demented rants of her husband, declares herself a "visionary"...

But enough of her......time to go off to war!! Oops...we mean...Trump's new term for it...."excursion".....


And finally.....to all Trump voters....(both the brain-dead cultists and the "But I didn't vote for this!!" gang....particularly the ones who have loved ones actively serving in the military......

How about it, folks?  Since your Dear Leader may be putting your fathers, mothers, husbands, wives, sons, daughters, brothers and grandchildren at risk....(the Dear Leader who promised you no more foreign wars...)....how about his young, healthy, fit-for-service larva joining up too....(even if he's inherited his father's now-you-see-'em-now-you-don't bone spurs....)  

To BQ visitors:  Thank you for your kind, caring get-well messages.  We're back in action Monday with an Academy Awards  wrap-up!  Happy Weekend! 





























 

Thursday, March 12, 2026

'STAKEOUTS AND STROLLERS'.....A FEARLESS REPORTER TURNED FECKLESS PRIVATE EYE....UP TO HIS EARS IN DANGER AND DIAPERS....

  Stakeouts and Strollers by Rob Phillips (publishes 3/17/26)

      Be on the lookout for this mystery gem, for which BQ received an advance copy, courtesy of NetGalley and Minotaur Books/St. Martin's Publishing.

     If this is the start of a series, I'm all in for more danger, cozy childcare and dry wit with Charlie Shaw - former San Francisco wild card news reporter turned relentless, fearless but fairly reckless Private Eye.

     The brazen Charlie, with his distaste for authority and ability to stumble into peril at any given moment gets a lot more than he bargained for while surveilling a cheating wife. This seemingly simple adultery case puts him in the path of a feisty but heartbroken 16 year old girl searching for her drunken petty criminal father........and also in the path of hoodlum brothers and their hulking scary hit-goon. And all this doesn't sit well with his  loving wife, who's not crazy about Charlie sometimes taking their adorable baby daughter with him on stakeouts.

     I loved how this story is told almost entirely in rapid fire, pithy, right-to-the-point dialogue exchanges and also with plenty of humanity, heart and a whole lot of sly humor. (In many ways, it sounded inspired by the priceless back-and-forth repartee of the Robert B. Parker 'Spenser' mysteries.) And by the way, the mysteries Charlie has to unravel are top-notch as well, filled with twists among a variety of characters, some vulnerable, some nasty and some of them downright hazardous to Charlie and his family's health.

     A terrific run read from start to finish and I can't wait for Charlie's further adventures.

      5 stars (*****).



Monday, March 9, 2026

PARDON US AS BQ BRIEFLY HEADS FOR SOME MEDICAL FIX-ME-UPS.......

 Sorry we won't be with you for a few days as we're hospital bound for a bit of a quick, medical repair job......hope to back in action within a couple days time and with loads of more reviews and commentary.....

      Our doctor (seen here examining us) is a recent graduate of R.F.K.Jr's newly opened medical school and assures us nothing could go possibly wrong.....

      See you in a few!





'SCREAM 7'....LIKE SANDS IN THE HOURGLASS....THESE ARE THEY DAYS OF THEIR KNIVES...

 Scream 7 (2026)

     Over the years, we've seen our fair share of slash-a-thons and watched countless numbers of slash-test-dummies go under the knife.....(mostly horny teen boys and cheerleaders...Numbers #1 and #2 on every slasher's to-do list).

      We actually held slightly higher hopes for this one, given that Kevin Williamson,  one of the primary masterminds of the meta-snarky gag 'n gore gilled 1996 'Scream', returned to both write and direct this new entry.  (the other mastermind being the original film's director, the late Wes Craven).

         Oh well.....pardon us while we exhale a sigh of resigned disappointment. Eh-h-h-h-h-h......

         Williamson hits all the usual tropes of this series.....the high body count, the endless references to other familiar horror movies (including the 'scream' movies themselves), the big reveal as to who (or how many people) were hiding behind the Ghostface mask.

           But there's no snap, crackle or pop in any aspect of 'Scream 7'......the direction, script, performances, camera work and set design. It feels like Willliamson and everybody else down the line just phoned it in and worked from a well worn 'Scream' Movies For Dummies' paperback instruction manual. 

           As always, whoever plays Ghostface is not simply a blade-wielding psychopath, but gifted with the physical stamina of a Marvel superhero.....like the old slogan for Timex watches.....they take a lickin' and keep on tickin'. 

          For the gorehounds, the kills are more than plentiful and every so often startling......the most imaginative and grisly is reserved for the poor little manic pixie theater kid played by McKenna Grace, whose final (and fatal) performance as Tinkerbell will give Scream-o-holics what they crave. 

          And we do salute the film's use of cinema's new arch-nemesis, A.I. as an excuse to resurrect a game Matthew Lillard, having the time of his life re-playing original Scream Ghostface Stu Macher.....

           Yet the whole dreary enterprise reeks of out-of-ideas filmmakers and studio execs lining up to squeeze more cash out of an exhausted franchise. The many deaths of the cardboard archtypes parade past us with little or no meaning, emotion or importance. We could almost imagine them holding on to tickets to await their names called for their turn into the meat grinder. 

           Mainly for 'Scream' completists and determined horror fans. For everyone else, it's never any better than 1 & 1/2 stars (* 1/2)  

           Easily skipped at theaters......just wait for whatever streaming services it wanders into.