I got in big trouble because of this theme song. When I was in 1st grade I couldn't stop humming this song. So then, the teacher made me hum it in front of the whole class. I laugh at this now, but at the time I was really embarrassed. Good memories...
Filmed at MSP January 31st to June 1969. I first saw it Nov. 11th, 1973 on ABC, it's first airing. This is the first blockbuster disaster film. The critics hated it; the audience loved it.
I remember seeing it on TV then too. It was an EVENT. My father made sure, a full week in advance, that he'd be parked in front of the TV without any disturbances from ANYONE in our household. You could watch the movie too, but you could not bother him while it was on.
Was born June of 1969, and my father was a pilot flying DC-8's for United at the time. He took me with him to the United Denver training facility (when I was very little), and I got to check out all of the simulator cockpits. That place is still burned into my memory! 😊
I think maybe Mel Brooks was referencing this opening with "High Anxiety," wherein he ends the credit sequence, with equally over the top music, by commenting "Wow, what a draMATic airport!"
What got me is that they had to make snow as it didn't snow at the Minneapolis airport where this was filmed. I have this on Blu Ray & have watched it a lot. You notice things you saw but didn't pick up. The ticket counter logos & how many of those airlines are now gone or merged. Trans Global is in small letters. Someone on Ebay is selling a model of the plane in the movie for a lot of money and another guy is selling a Trans Global T Shirt.
@@georgesenda1952 I understand this is the film that turned Universal, mainly a B movie studio known for its horror flicks that hadn't had a hit in more than a decade, into a major studio. They picked up the slack in the interim with some of the best tv series and movies of the 1960s.
Those were hustle-bustle times in 1970... a very sophisticated era of massive change. We had just put men on the moon and 747s were in the air. Just about everything we have now was on the drawing boards or in its infancy back then. This theme projects that feeling. The poorly educated kids now probably think 1970 was just past the dawn of prehistoric man.
Great soundtrack, brilliant story and a wonderful screen adaptation from the book. Airport is the only movie I think I've ever seen that got (almost) all the technical details dead right, and yet was still able to tell the story properly. Still my favorite aviation movie of all time (well, other than "Airplane!" but that's not important right now).
Has always been one of my favorites,, even though I lived it working over 30 years at an airport. But I love the multiple stories, how they all intertwine, and it's extremely well written using correct terminology , despite many procedures now have changed, but despite all that, its a very entertaining movie, and being a former employee, I love the glowing publicity for TWA
After watching Patroni on the throttle with a cigar in his mouth,we made a 707 cockpit under the bottom staircase as 10 year olds watching the movie on TV in '75 with bubble gum cigars🛬
One of my favorites. I got to stay stay up late to watch this one. In all the years I've watched this movie, I never noticed Snoopy on the Tower console. Nice touch for an awesome movie.
I keep watching this and listening to Alfred Newman's rousing main title, so I think I have to get the movie, just to remember old times when my siblings and I were friendly instead of fussy.
I was at SFO last February and someone had the a/c on in the people movers, the area was and is open to the elements and it was freezing at 6am and there is nowhere to get food or drink outside of the security check in except for a lone Starbucks that had 12 people in line. A far cry from the days in the 1970s where I would take the airporter bus to SFO, get a snack, buy a paper or book to read & take the wonderful PSA to LA for $19 & fly down, have dinner with friends, be driven back to the airport & get back on PSA & be back home by 2am. PSA had the best looking stewardesses ever too. It was fun to fly on it.
Back when flying was fun, instead of the airborne venue It has become for other people's displays of their emotional issues or political views to a captive audience 🙄
First watched Airport last year and proud to call it a classic masterpiece that we rarely get these days. One of the most perfect ways to open a movie with to let audiences know they're about to watch one of the best films ever made. Rest In Print: the brilliant cast and crew.
I first saw this at Radio City Music hall as a 15 year-old. I watched it again in college, multiple times on TV or at revival houses in the years that followed & last year on streaming. Hands down still the greatest all-star disaster film ever made. When the title comes flying at you on the screen to the blasting horn music of the sensational Alfred Newman score, you know you're in for a major thrill ride.
Great score by the great Al Newman, who was also a very fine conductor as well. In this case the opening titles and scenes were put together following the music and not the other way around.
Great great music! A great opening!! It reminds of O'Hare airport in the 1970s. Burt Lancaster and George Kennedy how could you go wrong. Mark in Milwaukee 🍻
I really like this introduction for this movie because the setback is Wintertime 1970 because it shows all of the grounds crew preparing the runways and clearing all of the snow for the aircraft to take off & land plus seeing a front loader tractor removing snow from the parking lots & all which is really cool to see back then because I still have original Airport Franchise collection on DVD .
Burt Lancaster said this movie was garbage and hated it. Words to that effect anyway. And the tab crashed while I was starting to write this. I saw this in the theater the day it opened in 1970 and liked it and bought the album. For years you could find the LP marked down to as low as 50 cents. The one who steals the movie is George Kennedy as Patroni. I was waiting for a sequel called Patroni. :) Kennedy was a great scene stealer and I always enjoyed seeing him.
Agreed. It's the background details that add a lot to this movie, with each part of the story showing the original novel's research. I would have loved to see an immediate sequel starring George Kennedy.
@@CaminoAir Patroni was a chief mechanic in the next 2 flicks,first for Columbia Airlines,then for Mr. Philip Stevens,and finally a Captain in the last one!😀
Super film sa c etait des acteurs burt lancaster martin Kennedy et tout les autres dommage que les chaine ne le passe plus la musique super sa vous donne envie de regardé quelle epoque formidable et merci encore a tout ses acteur formidable de nous avoir fait passé de belle soiree merci a tous
I find the electric bass part incongruous with such a big and masterful score, but I would never second-guess Alfred Newman as he was considered first among his peers. I am making an educated guess from the tone of the instrument that that is Carol Kaye of the Wrecking Crew is on the bass using her famous felt pick.
Admirable performance la música compuesta por Alfred Newman ...una película PERFECTA por el casting y la.. excelente adaptación de la novela de Arthur Hailey❗❗❗💞
One of the best opening credit rolls and scores! Alfred Newman was the son of Lionel Newman, who was the head of the music department of 20th Century Fox for decades. Both were talented geniuses.
Don't want to sound like a know-it-all but I think they were actually brothers. Randy Newman is also related to them. All are great, talented musicians. Merry Christmas...
This movie came out the same year my sister Karen applied for and became a Pan American stewardess (or, as we say today., flight attendant). So this title theme was her anthem, and she vowed to go out and "make like Jacqueline Bisset" in the movie, which she did, except that she never got injured on a flight.
A gorgeous, thrilling theme, and pretty kickass for a man of 69! Please note: while this is a terrific performance, it is not the recording from the movie. The recording heard in the movie was conducted by Alfred Newman. Also, while Laszlo was a great DP, most of this title sequence was likely shot by the 2nd Unit Team. (Usually DPs don't do the sorts of "generic" shots used in this title sequence.)
Speaking of snowy frozen weather in general, however bad you think it is during the day, wait until even the hint of sun goes down and the temps drop even lower at night. 😬
I read the book by Arthur Hailey and learned a lot about aviation from it. This movie did a pretty decent job of cramming a lot of material into a two hour movie.
I think Mel Brooks had this opening in mind during the opening of "High Anxiety" when he finally steps outside of the terminal and says "What a dramatic airport!"
Um bom Elenco de Astros e Estrelas,para um Roteiro e Enredo chato e monótono... O que SALVA é a Trilha Sonora de ALFRED NEWMAN...Duque de Caxias RJ Brasil 06/08/2024 19:49
I'll steal/repeat a line from another poster on the opening (which I love, btw) - "Wow, those are some dramatic snow plows!" Always gave me a chuckle ..
Mom and Dad and friends went downtown Chicago to see it at the Oriental...forgotten which month of 1970. I was 12 or 13. Most of the stars were on their "way out", especially Lancaster, but he rocked.
I notice a similarity between this and Gershwin Cuban Overture. Favorite opening theme of any film. Also on my list, the opening to North By Notthwest.
ShakespeareCafe : haha I'm sure Mr. Harris later regretted giving Mr. Torrance the job at the hotel after the terrible events that took place afterwards with him and his wife Wendy and son Danny. Haha
I flew for the first time in 2006 when I went to London and I got hooked on watching this movie for like six months prior to leaving. Of all the airport/airplane travel movies to watch and I chose this one. I love this movie and just couldn’t help it. To this day I love airports. I think I could live in one bc honestly they have everything you need and I love airplanes so I would be content
Amigos do UA-cam! Como gostaríamos que exibissem este filme inteiramente, para que do UA-cam pudéssemos passar para a TV. ? Fariam um belo ato de caridade aos amantes dos filmes de avião comercial...E se não for trabalho de pesquisa, "ir ao fundo do baú" , retirar filmes épicos.
Airport is the best, but another disasters movies in 70s including 2 Irwin Allen disaster movie is The Poseidon Adventures & The Towering Inferno & epic disaster WW2 movie biopic Patton
Alfred Newman did a great job with it's soundtrack. But, considering he also composed the music for the 20th Century Fox fanfare, he's gotta have something going on.
Fantastic score and composition by Alfred E Newman sadly I believe this was his last movie composition before his death. I thought Dean Martin was great in this role seemed tailor made for him
This movie partly led to me wanting to become a commercial pilot when i grew up. Now here i am:)
LoL me too. Only difference is, it was Joe Patroni that got me fixing aircraft.
I got in big trouble because of this theme song. When I was in 1st grade I couldn't stop humming this song. So then, the teacher made me hum it in front of the whole class. I laugh at this now, but at the time I was really embarrassed. Good memories...
At least you were not singing the Love Theme. I saw this the day it opened. I was 18, now 72.
Filmed at MSP January 31st to June 1969. I first saw it Nov. 11th, 1973 on ABC, it's first airing. This is the first blockbuster disaster film. The critics hated it; the audience loved it.
I remember seeing it on TV then too. It was an EVENT. My father made sure, a full week in advance, that he'd be parked in front of the TV without any disturbances from ANYONE in our household. You could watch the movie too, but you could not bother him while it was on.
I saw it at a friend's house who had a color TV (we only had black and white); his whole family watching. I was 9, but already a TV-movie addict.
Was born June of 1969, and my father was a pilot flying DC-8's for United at the time. He took me with him to the United Denver training facility (when I was very little), and I got to check out all of the simulator cockpits. That place is still burned into my memory! 😊
Amazing how Newman pumps so much excitement into shots of snow plows!
I think maybe Mel Brooks was referencing this opening with "High Anxiety," wherein he ends the credit sequence, with equally over the top music, by commenting "Wow, what a draMATic airport!"
I watched this movie in the theatre 3 times in a row as a 10 year old. My big sister and her girlfriends were babysitting me and they LOVED this film.
It's certainly one of my all time favorite Movies!💕
What got me is that they had to make snow as it didn't snow at the Minneapolis airport where this was filmed.
I have this on Blu Ray & have watched it a lot.
You notice things you saw but didn't pick up.
The ticket counter logos & how many of those airlines are now gone or merged.
Trans Global is in small letters.
Someone on Ebay is selling a model of the plane in the movie for a lot of money and another guy is selling a Trans Global T Shirt.
@@georgesenda1952 I understand this is the film that turned Universal, mainly a B movie studio known for its horror flicks that hadn't had a hit in more than a decade, into a major studio. They picked up the slack in the interim with some of the best tv series and movies of the 1960s.
Phantastic Greatest Music , Story, Actors and the Boeing 707!!
Those were hustle-bustle times in 1970... a very sophisticated era of massive change. We had just put men on the moon and 747s were in the air. Just about everything we have now was on the drawing boards or in its infancy back then. This theme projects that feeling. The poorly educated kids now probably think 1970 was just past the dawn of prehistoric man.
Bullshit it was a great time to be alive and an American!!!!!
@@scottmiller6495 but that's what he's saying.
@@mjt2231 Right on.
@@scottmiller6495 Read much?
@@clevlandblock I read now and then, but mostly listen to nostalgic television and specials from many years ago!
Universal was the snow king with this and Ice Station Zebra . Really set the stage for chilling adventure
Great soundtrack, brilliant story and a wonderful screen adaptation from the book. Airport is the only movie I think I've ever seen that got (almost) all the technical details dead right, and yet was still able to tell the story properly. Still my favorite aviation movie of all time (well, other than "Airplane!" but that's not important right now).
Has always been one of my favorites,, even though I lived it working over 30 years at an airport. But I love the multiple stories, how they all intertwine, and it's extremely well written using correct terminology , despite many procedures now have changed, but despite all that, its a very entertaining movie, and being a former employee, I love the glowing publicity for TWA
Remind me to send a Thank You note to Mr. Boeing.
Peter Dougherty. One of the best lines in this great film.
Surely you can't be serious...🎸✈🖖
@@TorchMagick I am serious. And don’t call me Shirley.
After watching Patroni on the throttle with a cigar in his mouth,we made a 707 cockpit under the bottom staircase as 10 year olds watching the movie on TV in '75 with bubble gum cigars🛬
That’s amazing!!
"Well, anyway she's gonna get it!" We turned our "Hot Wheels" building up on its end and used the motor control for the 707 throttles.
@@B-and-O-Operator-Fairmont Luv it! 👍. “ You promised me a box of cigars if I get this thing outta here so what are you waiting for?”
First movie I have memories of seeing in the theatre. I was 6 years old, and I fell in love with Dean Martin and this music...loved both ever since.
Fantastic film Brilliant soundtrack by Alfred Newman R I P !!!!!
Amazing music score by the great Alfred Newman.
One of my favorites. I got to stay stay up late to watch this one. In all the years I've watched this movie, I never noticed Snoopy on the Tower console. Nice touch for an awesome movie.
Great final film score by Newman!
I love this movie. I first saw it as a kid in 1970 when my family went as a group to see it. I have seen it it numerous times since then.
I keep watching this and listening to Alfred Newman's rousing main title, so I think I have to get the movie, just to remember old times when my siblings and I were friendly instead of fussy.
One of the very few soundtracks worthy of a wide-screen.
I was at SFO last February and someone had the a/c on in the people movers, the area was and is open to the elements and it was freezing at 6am and there is nowhere to get food or drink outside of the security check in except for a lone Starbucks that had 12 people in line.
A far cry from the days in the 1970s where I would take the airporter bus to SFO, get a snack, buy a paper or book to read & take the wonderful PSA to LA for $19 & fly down, have dinner with friends, be driven back to the airport & get back on PSA & be back home by 2am.
PSA had the best looking stewardesses ever too.
It was fun to fly on it.
Back when flying was fun, instead of the airborne venue It has become for other people's displays of their emotional issues or political views to a captive audience 🙄
First watched Airport last year and proud to call it a classic masterpiece that we rarely get these days. One of the most perfect ways to open a movie with to let audiences know they're about to watch one of the best films ever made. Rest In Print: the brilliant cast and crew.
Super film avec des acteur formidable ont en fait plus des film comme sa dommage le générique vous donner envie de voir le film bravo encore et merci
Why are you “proud”? You had nothing to do with its creation!
Such a perfect bit of theme music!!!❤
I first saw this at Radio City Music hall as a 15 year-old. I watched it again in college, multiple times on TV or at revival houses in the years that followed & last year on streaming. Hands down still the greatest all-star disaster film ever made. When the title comes flying at you on the screen to the blasting horn music of the sensational Alfred Newman score, you know you're in for a major thrill ride.
It just takes a good opening to assure us it's going to be a great film !
And it was although many people heard that Burt Lancaster didn,t like his role, but the film was Superb !!!!!
Some of the most brilliant film music ever.
So, it turns out Alfred Newman composed the music to many of my favorite movies. I'm happy to learn this!
Me too, have always s been a huge fan of all the Newmans actually! Quite a brilliant family
The movie that started it all. Airport 1975, Airport '77 and The Concorde... Airport '79.
Great cast...Great movie.
Great score by the great Al Newman, who was also a very fine conductor as well. In this case the opening titles and scenes were put together following the music and not the other way around.
Newman's last score. He definitely went out with a bang!
Whenever I fly from an airport affected by snowfall, I have this music and the scenes in my head
Excellent musical score for such a memorable film!
Good music by top composer
Brilliant Title Music Just Perfect For The Story!
Alfred Newman's Last Film Score!
what, me worry? 'THAT' Alfred Newman??? From 'MAD MAGAZINE'??? www.ebay.com/i/323778221034
He died in February 1970, three months prior to the film’s release so never got to enjoy its success which is sad I think.
@@tonyhonour665 Tony: Thank you for this information. Very much appreciated. Sincerely, Tom Pennock
GREAT movie!
懐かしいです。
空港パニック✈️初の映画👍
大好きです。
音楽🎵も好きですね。
シェアします。
Great great music! A great opening!! It reminds of O'Hare airport in the 1970s. Burt Lancaster and George Kennedy how could you go wrong. Mark in Milwaukee 🍻
I really like this introduction for this movie because the setback is Wintertime 1970 because it shows all of the grounds crew preparing the runways and clearing all of the snow for the aircraft to take off & land plus seeing a front loader tractor removing snow from the parking lots & all which is really cool to see back then because I still have original Airport Franchise collection on DVD .
Airport series disaster!
Airplane 1 & 2 spoof disaster!
Ahhhh nice... the correct aspect ratio is much appreciated.
_Airport_ was a great movie. The sequels, notsomuch.
The first of it's kind and absolutely the best!
Absolutely Great!
When the snow melts in April, we'll get it out.
What the hell do u think im doing about it?!
Burt Lancaster said this movie was garbage and hated it.
Words to that effect anyway.
And the tab crashed while I was starting to write this.
I saw this in the theater the day it opened in 1970 and liked it and bought the album.
For years you could find the LP marked down to as low as 50 cents.
The one who steals the movie is George Kennedy as Patroni.
I was waiting for a sequel called Patroni. :)
Kennedy was a great scene stealer and I always enjoyed seeing him.
Agreed. It's the background details that add a lot to this movie, with each part of the story showing the original novel's research. I would have loved to see an immediate sequel starring George Kennedy.
@@CaminoAir Patroni was a chief mechanic in the next 2 flicks,first for Columbia Airlines,then for Mr. Philip Stevens,and finally a Captain in the last one!😀
@@mikegallant811 Yes, but Kennedy is still a supporting actor until the Concorde movie.
Patroni rocks!
@@jodifisher2183 George Kennedy & Helen Hayes were the best things in this movie
Pilot: Need I remind your mechanic here, I've logged over 3 million miles in the sky....
Joe Patroni: ....and 2 1/2 feet in the ground!
One of Joe’s greatest lines. I loved that man, as personified by George Kennedy.
Newman's Main Title is the reason we go to movies.
Apparently it was his last score he recorded. Passed away the same year the movie was released.
Still a Class-Act Movie 🎥 on all levels
Qué magnífico compositor ! Insuperable Alfred Newman
If that soundtrack & opening credits don't give you the impression you're about to watch a great escapist film, I don't know what to tell you....
Saw at radio city music hall nyc easter show with the rockettes.
Super film sa c etait des acteurs burt lancaster martin Kennedy et tout les autres dommage que les chaine ne le passe plus la musique super sa vous donne envie de regardé quelle epoque formidable et merci encore a tout ses acteur formidable de nous avoir fait passé de belle soiree merci a tous
I find the electric bass part incongruous with such a big and masterful score, but I would never second-guess Alfred Newman as he was considered first among his peers. I am making an educated guess from the tone of the instrument that that is Carol Kaye of the Wrecking Crew is on the bass using her famous felt pick.
Admirable performance la música compuesta por Alfred Newman ...una película PERFECTA por el casting y la.. excelente adaptación de la novela de Arthur Hailey❗❗❗💞
One of the best opening credit rolls and scores! Alfred Newman was the son of Lionel Newman, who was the head of the music department of 20th Century Fox for decades. Both were talented geniuses.
Don't want to sound like a know-it-all but I think they were actually brothers. Randy Newman is also related to them. All are great, talented musicians. Merry Christmas...
This movie is such a classic. Burt Lancaster is something else. George Kennedy more than something else!
This movie came out the same year my sister Karen applied for and became a Pan American stewardess (or, as we say today., flight attendant). So this title theme was her anthem, and she vowed to go out and "make like Jacqueline Bisset" in the movie, which she did, except that she never got injured on a flight.
But did she get knocked up by a married pilot? (I'm just joking here, not offense intended OK!)
For how long did she work there?
Cool! Good story thanks for sharing.
MOCHA HAGOTDI
"Make Our Customers Happy, and Have a Good Time Doing It."
Fantastic
A gorgeous, thrilling theme, and pretty kickass for a man of 69! Please note: while this is a terrific performance, it is not the recording from the movie. The recording heard in the movie was conducted by Alfred Newman. Also, while Laszlo was a great DP, most of this title sequence was likely shot by the 2nd Unit Team. (Usually DPs don't do the sorts of "generic" shots used in this title sequence.)
Epic theme !!!
Superrrrrrr
Speaking of snowy frozen weather in general, however bad you think it is during the day, wait until even the hint of sun goes down and the temps drop even lower at night. 😬
I read the book by Arthur Hailey and learned a lot about aviation from it. This movie did a pretty decent job of cramming a lot of material into a two hour movie.
When you have the first screen James Bond and the first screen Matt Helm together in the same cockpit ... what could go wrong?
And a PERRY MASON connection
I think Mel Brooks had this opening in mind during the opening of "High Anxiety" when he finally steps outside of the terminal and says "What a dramatic airport!"
Top 10 Best 70s Movie Theme.
Um bom Elenco de Astros e Estrelas,para um Roteiro e Enredo chato e monótono... O que SALVA é a Trilha Sonora de ALFRED NEWMAN...Duque de Caxias RJ Brasil 06/08/2024 19:49
I'll steal/repeat a line from another poster on the opening (which I love, btw) - "Wow, those are some dramatic snow plows!" Always gave me a chuckle ..
アーサー・ヘイリーの原作本は昔読みました。やはり、この作品が最高!ですね。
From the Jack Hayes, Leo Shuken orchestration team.
Mom and Dad and friends went downtown Chicago to see it at the Oriental...forgotten which month of 1970. I was 12 or 13. Most of the stars were on their "way out", especially Lancaster, but he rocked.
I grew up in La grange and Hinsdale in the 1970s
foolish post
As Mel Brooks once said...."Wow! What a dramatic airport!!"
Dad's 69 Mercury Marquis at 1:42.
Nice re-edit of scenes at the end!
To paraphrase Mel Brooks from HIGH ANXIETY, "What a dramatic airport!"
I notice a similarity between this and Gershwin Cuban Overture. Favorite opening theme of any film. Also on my list, the opening to North By Notthwest.
A driving snowfall in crystal blue clear sky conditions 🤣😂
Captain Anson Harris went on to manage the Overlook Hotel in The Shining and gave Jack Torrance the job as caretaker, another great Winter flick
ShakespeareCafe : haha I'm sure Mr. Harris later regretted giving Mr. Torrance the job at the hotel after the terrible events that took place afterwards with him and his wife Wendy and son Danny. Haha
Boeing 377 Stratocruiser at 1:00!
In Chicago rn, playing this as I’m rushing to my flight on a shuttle bus
I flew for the first time in 2006 when I went to London and I got hooked on watching this movie for like six months prior to leaving. Of all the airport/airplane travel movies to watch and I chose this one. I love this movie and just couldn’t help it. To this day I love airports. I think I could live in one bc honestly they have everything you need and I love airplanes so I would be content
Amigos do UA-cam! Como gostaríamos que exibissem este filme inteiramente, para que do UA-cam pudéssemos passar para a TV. ? Fariam um belo ato de caridade aos amantes dos filmes de avião comercial...E se não for trabalho de pesquisa, "ir ao fundo do baú" , retirar filmes épicos.
Awesome
Il migliore 🔝🔝🔝
Intro de teletrece canal 13 de chile, 1970-1977📽️📽️📽️📺
Airport is the best, but another disasters movies in 70s including 2 Irwin Allen disaster movie is The Poseidon Adventures & The Towering Inferno & epic disaster WW2 movie biopic Patton
Barbara Hale looked so good in this movie.. #DellaStreetcrush.
A pilot from your flight 45 made a shortcut across the field and he didnt make it
Hold the whipped cream--I've had dessert.
When the snow melts in April, we'll get it out! 😂
@@goodowner5000 no let joe drive it out since the pilot was afraid.
They should do a remake of this only at Denver International Airport with the national guard helping out at Pina Blvd.
Anyone notice Snoopy with a scarf and a headset on the controller's console?
Finde ich super Film ❤❤❤
Would make the hair stand up on my head if I wasn't bald.
The one thing we never saw was the de-icing of the planes. In our Mpls weather the planes get treated before take offs
Joe Patroni, best character George Kennedy ever played
My how MSP has grown since then.
This film should remastered on put out in 4k bluray with extras not like the shifty bluray we have now.
Alfred Newman did a great job with it's soundtrack. But, considering he also composed the music for the 20th Century Fox fanfare, he's gotta have something going on.
This is NOT the main title sequence from the movie.
Get them Dino
Was actually filmed at Minneapolis International......without the Protesters and Antifa, too
Fantastic score and composition by Alfred E Newman sadly I believe this was his last movie composition before his death. I thought Dean Martin was great in this role seemed tailor made for him