Cone of Silence
Jet crash mystery solved !!! Where does the blame belong ? Is it the plane ? Is is the pilot ? Is it a plot ?
A seasoned pilot is condemned for an error which causes a crash. The pilot later dies in a crash with similar circumstances and an examiner looks for scientific reasons for the crashes.
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Cast

Michael Craig
Capt. Hugh Dallas

Peter Cushing
Capt. Clive Judd

Bernard Lee
Capt. George Gort

Elizabeth Seal
Charlotte Gort

George Sanders
Sir Arnold Hobbes

André Morell
Capt. Edward Manningham

Gordon Jackson
Capt. Jock Bateson

Charles Tingwell
Capt. Braddock

Noel Willman
Nigel Pickering

Delphi Lawrence
Joyce Mitchell

Marne Maitland
Mr. Robinson

Jack Hedley
First Officer

Hedger Wallace
Navigator

Ballard Berkeley
Commissioner

Charles Lloyd Pack
Commissioner

Anthony Newlands
Controller

Geoffrey Bayldon
Aircraft Controller

Olga Dickie
Miss Wright

Frederick Leister
Sir Henry

Gerald Sim
Operations Room Worker
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Just as jet engine-powered aircraft were starting to take to the skies, veteran "Capt. Gort" (Bernard Lee) is involved in a near miss trying to take off in his new, state-of-the-art "Phoenix" aircraft. At the subsequent inquiry, he faces thinly veiled criticism from "Sir Arnold" (George Sanders) but is nonetheless cleared to keep flying by his senior colleague "Dallas" (Michael Craig). This earns both of them the chagrin of fellow pilot "Judd" (Peter Cushing) who's convinced of operator error and makes no bones about expressing his suspicions about "Gort" - especially when a landing at Calcutta reveals some foliage in the undercarriage. Thing is, both "Gort" and "Dallas" are convinced they are following the rules, to the letter, so what's wrong? When a tragedy ensues, the most convenient solution would seem to be to simply blame the pilot, but perhaps the foliage might reveal more clues as to what actually went wrong? There's a rather unnecessary romantic sub-plot with Craig and Elizabeth Seal's "Charlotte", but otherwise this is quite tautly directed thriller that uses some decent photography to illustrate the perils of the pilots and the claustrophobia of their tiny cockpits. The setting in India also presents us with an almost palpably hot and humid scenario for these airborne shenanigans. Cushing delivers best, I thought, as the man who comes across as jealous, or concerned, or ambitious or maybe all three? It's a simple story well acted and told and maybe isn't a film to watch if you have the slightest fear of flying (or, indeed, want one!).
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