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Have you seen this movie!? Anything catch your spying-eye radar!?
‘The Hindenburg’ is a 1975 Technicolor film based on the disaster of the German airship Hindenburg. On a personal note, I became fascinated with this subject while doing a report fin 8th grade, during which I listened to the radio broadcast of the event on a compilation of classic radio broadcasts my grandparents had on vinyl. Produced & directed by Robert Wise, the movie (a highly-speculative thriller) was written by Nelson Gidding, Richard Levinson & William Link, based on the 1972 book of the same name by Michael M Mooney. While the film is done mostly in color, a portion is presented in monochrome, edited between portions of actual historical newsreel footage from 05/06/1937. Artistic license was taken in the production, but Wise started research by collecting documents & film footage for over a year. Filming locations included Munich, Milwaukee WI, New York & Washington DC. Studio & special effects were done at Sound Stage 12, Universal Studios. Artists & technicians worked double shifts for 4 months to create parts of the set, consisting of 8 tons of aluminum, 11,000 yards of muslin, 24,000 feet of sash cord & 2,000,000 rivets. Matte paintings were also used in sequences to bring the aircraft to life. Despite critical reaction to the film, it won 2 Special Achievement Awards in 1976: Sound Effects & Visual Effects. The cast includes George C Scott, Anne Bancroft, Charles Durning, Rene Auberjonois, Katherine Helmond, William Atherton, Roy Thinnes, Gig Young, Burgess Meredith, Richard A Dysart, Robert Clary, Alan Oppenheimer, Jean Rasey, Joanna Cook Moore, Stephen Elliott, Joyce Davis, Colby Chester, Michael Richardson, Herbert Nelson, William Sylvester & Greg Mullavey.
Never saw this one, but the street reminds me of streets I walked down.