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HANGAR 18
Rating:
USA. 1980.
Director James L. Conway, Screenplay Steven Thornly, Story James L. Conway & Tom Chapman, Producer Charles E. Sellier Jr, Photography Paul Hipp, Music Paul Cacavas, Special Effects Philip C. Kellison, Joseph Rayner & Harry Woolman, Makeup Ken Horn, Production Design Paul Staheli. Production Company Schick Sunn Classics.
Cast:
Gary Collins (Steve Bancroft), Darren McGavin (Harry Forbes), Robert Vaughn (Gordon Cain), James Hampton (Lew Price), Tom Hallick (Phil Cameron), Joseph Campanella (Frank Lafferty), Pamela Bellwood (Sarah Michaels), Andrew Bloch (Neal Kelso), Philip Abbott (General Frank Morrison), Steven Keats (Paul Bannister), William Schallert (Professor Arnold Mills)
Plot: A space shuttle mission is about to launch its satellite payload when a UFO appears. The crew are unable to abort the launch of the satellite and it collides with the UFO. The resulting explosion kills a crewman who has gone EVA. The damaged UFO crashes in Arizona where scientists immediately take it to the lunar receiving facility at Hangar 18 for study. The White House Chief of Staff Gordon Cain orders that a veil of absolute secrecy be kept so as not to damage The Presidents credibility during upcoming elections. The two remaining shuttle crew return to find NASA refusing to acknowledge the UFOs existence and blaming the death on commander Steve Bancrofts negligence. And so they set out to find the truth behind the cover-up. However when they start getting close to the truth, Cain orders them eliminated. Meanwhile the scientists examining the UFO discover that the aliens are genetically linked to humanity and find records showing how the aliens bred with early humans on a previous visit.
Hangar 18 comes from Sunn Classics, the company responsible for a series of really, really bad adaptations of various American literary classics including The Time Machine (1978), The Legend of Sleepy Hollow (1980) and the worst ever Edgar Allan Poe adaptation, The Fall of the House of Usher (1979). Sunn Classics were mostly known for a series of sensationalist cinematically-released documentaries on various tabloid subjects The Bermuda Triangle (1975), Mysterious Monsters (1976) concerning Bigfoot, In Search of Noahs Ark (1977), Beyond and Back (1978) about the afterlife, and In Search of Historic Jesus (1980).
It is not hard to see Hangar 18 as a fictional treatment of one of Sunn Classics tabloid documentaries it is really the National Enquirer version of Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977), perhaps also with a small dash of Capricorn One (1978) thrown in. But it is a Close Encounters that has been stripped of Steven Spielbergs magic show of lights and reduced to car chases and the cheap dramatics of tv movie melodrama. The film certainly takes its Erich Von Daniken seriously, going through all the nonsense about aliens breeding with early humans who worshipped them as gods and alien language being identical to the symbols at Nazca and Egyptian hieroglyphics, something that surely proves that the realm of B-budget science-fiction is where Von Daniken should be peddling his theories rather than posing them as anthropological-historical fact. The scenes of the scientists uncovering the mysteries of the sinister, gleaming black UFO are the films best. However just when developments start to become interesting they are abruptly disposed of in a ludicrously downbeat ending, one that would seem to confirm all the paranoid military cover-up fantasies that UFO cultists delight in.
James L. Conway directed many of the abovementioned Sunn Classics films. He also directed their other UFO film Earthbound (1980), as well as one horror film The Boogens (1981). These days Conway works in tv and has been a regular director on all the modern tv incarnations of Star Trek, among other shows.
Copyright Richard Scheib 1999-2012
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