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Movies - Iron Eagle


Iron Eagle is a 1986 action film about a teenage boy named Doug Masters (Jason Gedrick
) who steals an American F-16 fighter jet to rescue his father (Tim Thomerson
), a prisoner of war being held in an unidentified rogue Middle Eastern country. The film also stars Academy Award winner Louis Gossett, Jr.
as Col. Charles 'Chappy' Sinclair and features the Queen hit "One Vision" as part of its soundtrack.

Iron Eagle was released in the same year as another popular aviation-based action film, Top Gun, thus forcing a shift in release dates as to avoid competition at the box office with each other. The film was followed by three sequels: Iron Eagle II. Aces: Iron Eagle III and Iron Eagle IV.

Trivia / Movie Mistakes

Interestingly, the delta-winged hostile aircraft featured in the movie are identified as MiG-23s, however they are obviously IAI Kfirs, a Dassault Mirage variant flown by the Israeli Air Force. In the second film, F-4 Phantoms were used in the role of MIG 29s. All aircraft used in the making of the two first films are Israeli craft and were filmed with the help of the IAF.

The movie is known for having some of the most unrealistic prop explosions in history. When the enemy Kfirs explode you can clearly see wooden parts of a mock-up model splintering for example. When an F-16 explodes, you can see clearly they are using the explosion of the Kfirs instead. The capabilities of the F-16 as depicted in the film are also vastly unrealistc - for example, Doug uses the F-16's 20mm Vulcan cannon to blow up a whole host of large targets including a control tower building which errupts into a massive fireball, something that wouldn't happen in real life from mere bullets. In a famous scene, Doug creates a wall of flame across a runway using the "Hades Bomb," a completely fictional weapon that does not exist in the U.S. Air Force inventory. He also fires an AGM-65 Maverick missile while on the ground, which is not possible in real life - the F-16's weapon system is inhibited by a pressure sensor in the nosegear.

Numerous continuity errors are also present including constantly changing weapon loadouts on the F-16's and the aircraft type switching between single seat F-16A models and two-seat F-16B models within the same flight sequence.

Despite the errors the movie remains a cult classic among action movie and aerial-combat fans.

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Iron Eagle ]



Some related entries: Zinda | Rajiv Menon | Grbavica | H. Leivick | Q | Resident Evil 4 | Son of Dracula | Gosei Sentai Dairanger | Double Wedding | Stargate | Labyrinth

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Iron Eagle; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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