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You are here: Articles > Movie reviews > Final Descent (book)
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Movie overview Comparison between the movie Final Descent and the book it was loosely inspired on, The Glass Cockpit Originally published in December 2004. |
Trent Aircraft Ltd., in conjunction with Saab and Rolls-Royce built the Trent 270, the largest twin-engine aircraft in the world. The Trent 270 is 232 feet long, is slightly larger than a Boeing 747 and can carry over five hundred passengers. Five years after FAA certification (and three unfortunate crashes), an Intra-Continental Trent 270 is being prepared for IA flight 19, Tulsa to Chicago. Under the command of Captain Glen "Lucky" Doyle, his co-pilot and ex-girlfriend Connie Esposito and check pilot André Bouchard, the Trent 270 lines up at the end of the runway. Meanwhile, 49-year old Douglas Halsey is preparing to fly his six-seat Rockwell Turbo Commander out of Tulsa. IA flight 19 – "Whisky Charlie" – is cleared to depart. Doug Halsey's plane, November Five Four Victor (N54V) mistakenly takes-off from a disused runway, into the path of the oncoming Trent 270. Five Four Victor slams into the tail of "Whiskey Charlie", badly damaging the horizontal stabilizer, the tail and the rudder. The Rockwell is destroyed instantly, killing the only occupant, Doug Halsey. Meanwhile, "Whiskey Charlie" climbs through 2,000 feet with a nose-up attitude of twelve degrees. The rudders and elevators are utterly useless, there seems to be no way to adjust the aircraft's pitch...
There are a few differences I know of between the film and the book:
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