Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
When the pilot and co-pilot of a commercial flight become ill from food poisoning, a passenger who once flew in WW2 must take the controls and try to safely land the aircraft.
When the pilot and co-pilot of a commercial flight become ill from food poisoning, a passenger who once flew in WW2 must take the controls and try to safely land the aircraft.
The film's central subject matter, a survival thriller focused on crisis management and overcoming personal fear, is inherently apolitical. The narrative champions universal themes of human resilience and skill without promoting any specific political ideology.
The movie features traditional casting and a narrative that positively frames its white male protagonist without critiquing traditional identities. Its focus is on a survival scenario, not on themes of diversity, equity, or inclusion.
Flight Into Danger, a 1957 disaster thriller, does not include any discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes within its narrative. The story focuses solely on the survival efforts aboard an airliner, resulting in no portrayal of queer identity.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
This film is an adaptation of the 1956 novel "Flight into Danger." A review of the main characters from the novel and their portrayal in the film indicates no instances where a character's established gender was changed.
This 1956 television film adaptation does not feature any characters who were canonically, historically, or widely established as one race in the source material and then portrayed as a different race on screen. The casting aligns with the implicit racial context of the original story.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources