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Gripping and heartbreaking. E1 Entertainment and Cineflix International have released Mayday - Air Disasters, a fascinating 2003 cable series from Canada that originally aired as Air Emergency on the National Geographic Channel in the U.S. (and under the name Air Crash Investigations in Canada). This two-disc release includes all six episodes from the series' first season (that pertinent info isn't mentioned on the DVD case - a marketing flub, there), where real air crashes (and some near-crashes) are painstakingly examined. The technological aspects of the investigations are minutely detailed, but the human element isn't ignored, either, with victims' families and survivors interviewed to make these air crashes, which always seem so anonymous when we read about them or hear about them on the news, resonate emotionally for the viewer. ![]() Mayday - Air Disasters follows a fairly standard investigative documentary format. Through narration, the events and conditions leading up the accidents are introduced, as we get a mixture of interviews with air crews, investigators, victims' family members, and survivors (if any), along with recreations of the actual accidents, which include actors portraying the pilots (with their dialogue and actions based on actual "black box" flight recorder transcripts), crew, air traffic controllers, and passengers, as well as CGI depictions of the aircrafts under duress. While Mayday - Air Disasters may not be original in its structure, what did distinguish the series from many others like it that I've watched, was its grim-faced intensity and suspense, its thoroughness (and felicity) in unfolding the causes of the accidents for the lay viewer, and most importantly, the non-exploitive manner in which it treats the victims and their families in an effort to humanize these terrible events. All three of these elements are smoothly combined to give the Mayday - Air Disasters episodes an informative and emotional weight that I found quite outside the normal cut-and-dried, un-involving investigative docs that are so prevalent on cable channels today. These first six episodes of Mayday - Air Disasters, directed by Greg Lanning, Bernard Vallot, Gary Lang, and Bryn Higgins, are remarkably tense little thrillers right from their beginnings, with Stephen Bogaert's blankly ominous narration setting up in the viewer a sickening dread of what we know is going to happen - that airplane is going to fail, and people are going to die - while the directors ratchet up the suspense as they dispassionately record the futile efforts of the pilots to save their planes. The performances by the actors portraying these pilots are also quite good - something you rarely see or even notice in these kinds of documentary recreations. And with the aid of some serviceable CGI animation of the aircrafts in distress (along with more convincing live-action depictions of the interiors of the aircraft during their incidents), these episodes achieve a level of anxiety and apprehension that I found unusual for this type of TV documentary. As well, Mayday - Air Disasters brings to its investigative format a muckraking angle that makes the excitement of its action sequences more meaningful. It's difficult to watch these episodes and not get infuriated with the games the airlines play, balancing the admitted realities of the economics of running an airline versus the lives and safety of their passengers. A good example is the opening episode on disc one, Unlocking Disaster, which details the horrifying "accident" that befell United Airlines Flight 811 in 1989. United Airlines and Boeing, the designer and manufacturer of the 747 used here, were both aware for some time of a design flaw on the locking system for the jet's cargo door. Opening out instead of being an inside "plug" door, the locking system on the cargo door had to be of "fail safe" integrity, but poor design (a deadly combination of using aluminum instead of steel for the latch pin locks, along with faulty wiring that allowed motors to inadvertently open the seemingly locked cargo door) ultimately resulted in Flight 811's incident, where the door blew open over the Pacific Ocean, rapidly decompressing the cabin, and ripping out five rows of seats, killing 9 people as they fell to their deaths to the ocean below. The fact that both companies knew what the problem was, and were slow to act on it, along with government agencies giving them too much time (18 months) to correct the problem (because grounded jets cost the airlines millions of dollars per day), compounded by the NTSB blaming ground crew personnel for an inherent design flaw, combines to create both absolute dread at the thought of ever getting on a plane again, and disgust at the cold, calculating venality of the airlines. Pilot error is also a factor in some of the accidents looked at here in Mayday - Air Disasters, but after the episodes make it sickeningly clear how one error in judgment can be compounded by the exponentially accumulating stress factors involved in flying a complex, computer-and-gauge-laden modern jetliner either besieged by mechanical problems or extreme weather conditions (or both), those isolated moments of human frailty pale in comparison to the calculations of airline companies "playing chicken," as one survivor of a crash states, with people's lives. That particular episode, Unlocking Disaster, also highlights Mayday - Air Disasters' quite affecting use of victims' stories to give true meaning to these recreations. Never at all exploitive in nature (we never get the feeling the episodes are offering up these disasters to give viewers a vicarious thrill), these brief looks at some of the people who died in these accidents are heartbreaking to watch. In the case of Unlocking Disaster's Lee Campbell, a young man killed in a horrific manner during the Flight 811 accident (it's possible that he may very well have been alive during his four minute fall to the ocean surface), the efforts of his parents, Kevin and Susan Campbell, to force the truth out of Boeing, American Airlines, and the National Transportation Safety Board about what happened to their son, was as heroic as it must have been heartrending. Mayday - Air Disasters creates an indelible portrait not only of Flight 811's accident, but of the human cost of that accident you won't soon forget. ![]() Here are the six, 52-minute episodes included on the Mayday - Air Disasters two-disc set: Unlocking Disaster Racing the Storm Fire on Board Flying Blind Cutting Corners Flying on Empty ![]() The DVD: The Video: The Audio: The Extras: Final Thoughts: Paul Mavis is an internationally published film and television historian, a member of the Online Film Critics Society, and the author of The Espionage Filmography.
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