Script To Screen: “Airplane”

A scene from the 1980 comedy Airplane [written by Jim Abrahams & David Zucker & Jerry Zucker].

Script To Screen: “Airplane”

A scene from the 1980 comedy Airplane [written by Jim Abrahams & David Zucker & Jerry Zucker].

Setup: The flight crew has been taken down by food poisoning. Fortunately there is ex-pilot Ted Striker on board. Unfortunately he is psychologically scarred as a pilot from an event in the past…

INT. PASSENGER CABIN — ANOTHER AREA — NIGHT
Striker is sitting next to a MAN FROM INDIA in a business
suit and turban.
STRIKER
 You see, the day we left the village it
 was raining, so we had to take a special
 jeep to the main road…
The Indian is dousing himself with a can of gasoline. In
b.g. Randy is talking to passengers.
STRIKER
 In fact, we were lucky to even get a jeep
 since just the day before the only one we
 had broke down — it had a bad axle…
The Indian lights a match to immolate himself. Randy
approaches.
RANDY
 Excuse me, sir. There’s been a little
 problem in the cockpit and I was
 wondering…
STRIKER
 The cockpit? What is it?
RANDY
 It’s the little room at the front of the
 plane where the pilots sit. But that’s not
 important right now. The first officer is
 ill and the Captain would like someone
 with flying experience to help him with
 the radio. Do you know anything about
 planes?
The Indian holds the match, awaiting the outcome.
STRIKER
 Well, I flew in the war, but that was a
 long time ago. I wouldn’t know anything
 about it.
RANDY
 Would you go up, please?
He has a moment of indecision. The Indian encourages Striker
with an adamant nod. Striker gets up to leave. The Indian,
relieved, blows out the match.
INT. PASSENGER CABIN — ANOTHER AREA — NIGHT
Jack is sitting across the aisle from a 65-year-old
con­servatively dressed SPINSTER. He pulls a flask from his
coat pocket and takes a swig. She eyes him dis­approvingly.
JACK
 Would ya like a little whiskey, ma’am?
SPINSTER 
 (insulted)
 Certainly not.
She inserts a two inch straw in her nose and snorts a couple
lines of cocaine off a piece of glass.
INT. COCKPIT — NIGHT
Striker enters.
STRIKER
 (to Rumack and Randy)
 The stewardess said…
STRIKER’S POV
Empty pilot’s seat and inflated automatic pilot.
STRIKER
 Both pilots!
DR. RUMACK
 Can you fly this airplane and land it?
STRIKER
 Surely you can’t be serious.
DR. RUMACK
 I am serious, and don’t call me Shirley!
 What flying experience have you had?
STRIKER
 Well, I flew single-engine fighters in the
 Air Force, but this plane has four
 engines. It’s an entirely different kind
 of flying…all together!!!
RANDY/RUMACK
 (all together)
 It’s an entirely different kind of flying.
STRIKER
 Besides, I haven’t touched any ­kind of
 plane in six years.
DR. RUMACK
 Mister Striker. I know nothing about
 flying. All I know is this: you’re the
 only person on this plane who can possibly
 fly it. You’re the only chance we’ve got.
DRAMATIC MUSIC as Striker turns to face the controls.
STRIKER’S POV
CAMERA PANS controls. CAMERA KEEPS PANNING and PANNING as WE
SEE more and more controls ad absurdum.

I’ll see you in comments for a discussion of this scene from Airplane.

One of the single best things you can do to learn the craft of screenwriting is to read the script while watching the movie. After all a screenplay is a blueprint to make a movie and it’s that magic of what happens between printed page and final print that can inform how you approach writing scenes. That is the purpose of Script to Screen, a weekly series on GITS where we analyze a memorable movie scene and the script pages that inspired it.

For more articles in the Script To Screen series, go here.

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