And the Oscar Goes to... the Airplane!

Some of the airplanes that loom largest in our collective memory have flown only in the movies.

  • By Preston Lerner
  • Air & Space magazine, November 2012
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Clint Eastwood Raiders of the Lost Ark Jimmy Stewart Humphrey Bogart F/A-37
Clint Eastwood

Courtesy Warner Communications / Your Trailers


MiG-31 in Firefox (1982)

In 1977, Welsh author Craig Thomas published his bestseller Firefox, which featured a fictitious Soviet fighter based on the most advanced MiG at the time, the -25. Thomas upgraded it with telepathic avionics—it could be flown by thought alone—and dubbed it MiG-31. Five years later, Clint Eastwood directed and starred in the film version. “Clint had some very specific ideas about what he thought the airplane should look like,” says special visual effects producer John Dykstra. “This was when stealth technology was just becoming public. So faceted surfaces were an important part of the design. But at the same time, he wanted it to have the elements of a kick-ass airplane. So it had very large engines, which were antithetical to the stealth concept, and a delta wing configuration. We went with a chisel-shaped nose and added canards.” Several models were built, including a radio-controlled version. “It was a handful to fly,” says Dykstra, a private pilot and RC enthusiast. A full-size mockup was fabricated out of a radio tower skinned with plywood and foam. It was powered by a four-cylinder Volkswagen engine so it could taxi on the runway while turbine fans blew flames out the back of the engine nacelles. Before the movie was released, the Soviets began production of a real MiG-31. But their Foxhound was no match for Eastwood’s Firefox.


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Comments (10)

Couldn't you get a picture of the plane used in the movie? The plane pictured is a prop from the "Indiana Jones Epic Stunt Spectacular" show at Disney's Hollywood Studio park in Orlando Florida. Saw the show just this past August and I would say this stage show prop is fine for it's purpose but it is just a shadow of the one depicted in the movie. EDITORS' REPLY: You are correct that the airplane that we show is based in Orlando at Disney World. It’s part of the Indiana Jones Epic Stunt Spectactular. Our understanding is that the original mock aircraft created for the filming of Raiders of the Lost Ark was mostly destroyed during its filming in 1981 in Tunisia, and that the few remaining parts of that airplane were then scrapped a few years later. Only a handful of studio production stills of that airplane were released, and none were of high enough resolution to use in our print feature, so we used the Disney World mockup.

On page 61 of the October/November issue it states that the XB-51 was supersonic. In the movie, Unknown, the XF-120 might have been supersonic, but the Martin XB-51 was not.

Great pictures! I hope that everyone's Sunday is going safe and great!

Where is the Bell 222 from Airwolf? It's unbelievable that you have missed it.

While it may not have been built or even flown, the Germans did have a plane a lot like the one in Raiders of the Lost Ark. It was designed by the Lippisch company to compete with the Messerschmitt Bf 110, but was rejected by the Luftwaffe for unspecified reasons. Here is a picture of it.

Another note of shock and dismay at the lack of Airwolf. From the beautiful adaptation of a standard Bell 222 airframe to the lunatic premise (a Mach 2+ attack helicopter that operated as like the worlds most heavily armed *gyrocopter*), it's a classic of 80's action TV.

I, too, ask where is the Bell 222 and the Airwolf. That was one of the greatest fictional aircraft ever (and had better theme music than most, too).

No Snoopy Doghouse? No Flying Sub from "Voyage to the bottom of the Sea?" No, Colonial Vipers or Cylon fighters?

To those who are dismayed at the omission of Airwolf and other such aircraft that where featured in TV programs, the title of the piece is "And the Oscar Goes To...The Airplane!", not the "The Emmy goes to...". Maybe a follow-up article could include fictional aircraft from other media besides the movies

Well, it's not fictional, but the Oscar goes to...

The B-52 in "Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb" who could forget that plane. Well sometime I read that the nuclear launch sequence and probably the cockpit was fictional, at that time was top secret, buy they do it pretty good.

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