Shootdown (film) explained

Genre:Drama
Director:Michael Pressman
Starring:Angela Lansbury
George Coe
Kyle Secor
Molly Hagan
Jennifer Savidge
Music:Craig Safan
Country:United States
Language:English
Russian
Producer:Judy Merl
Paul Eric Myers
Executive Producer:Leonard Hill
Robert O'Connor
Editor:Daniel Cahn
Cinematography:William Wages
Runtime:100 minutes
Company:Leonard Hill Films
Network:NBC

Shootdown is a 1988 American made-for-television drama film starring Angela Lansbury. Leonard Hill served as the executive producer.

Plot

In the film, Nan Moore (Lansbury) loses her son in the Korean Air Lines Flight 007 disaster. She wishes to discover the truth about her son's death.

Cast

Production

The film's production was delayed due to controversies surrounding the KAL007 incident. NBC subjected the film to various cuts and rewrites. Producer Leonard Hill said that NBC's censors "played the role of grand inquisitor. It was quite a relentless interrogation and it turned into a war of attrition." The network deleted dialogue that criticized the U.S. government for using the incident for its own political purposes, and specific criticisms of the Reagan administration were likewise repressed. Consequently, the film made no mention of the U.S. Air Force destroying all radar tapes after the incident, nor that the Korea pilot Captain Chun took out a grand sum of insurance the night before the flight. The network also insisted that Seymour Hersh's view that the aeroplane had simply drifted into Soviet airspace be inserted into the film.[1]

See also

Coded Hostile

References

  1. News: The New York Times. Why Sparks Flew in Retelling the Tale of Flight 007. Farber. Stephen. November 27, 1988. January 4, 2008.