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Airport arrivals

Posted in Useful Resources by Susan on the February 19th, 2010

When you’re collecting someone at the airport, it’s a good idea to check the details of their flight online before you leave the house.  I learned this the hard way after being despatched to an airport to pick up a friend’s mother.  We had never met before and we spoke different languages, so it was never going to be an easy task.  Unfortunately, when I got to the airport, I discovered my friend had told me the wrong flight time and the wrong airline, which led to a lot of panic and running around as I tried to work out how I was going to find this woman!  I succeeded in the end, by a process of luck and guesswork, but it would have made life a lot easier if I had taken a few minutes to check out one of these internet sites for airport arrivals information.

Flight Arrivals.com

This site allows you to search for travel information by flight number, airline, arrival airport or departure and arrival airport.  This is perfect if you’ve been given incomplete or erroneous information by your lovely friends and family!  It gives you a list of all the flights with details of when they’re due to land, when they’ve landed and if there are any delays or cancellations.  British and international airlines and airports are covered by this feature.  The site also offers more detailed information on weather and delays at American airports.

plane landing

Flight Stats.com

The homepage of this site has a map which shows you, at a glance, which airports are suffering from delays.  This is indicated by green, yellow or red dots on the map, according to the amount of disruption to flights.  You can click on the dots for more information on the airport, weather and so on.  The site covers airports all over the world, but the map feature works best for Europe and the United States.   As with the previous website, you can search for arrivals information by flight number, airline, airport or route.  You can also register to have alerts sent to you by email or text message when the plane lands, or if it’s delayed or cancelled.

Flight Wise.com

If you want to track the progress of your friend’s flight across the world and imagine what sights they can see out of the window, this site is the place to go.  You can search by airport, airline, flight number or aircraft type, and call up a map with a drawing of the plane’s position and its route.  You can do this for any aircraft or flight on an IFR flight plan anywhere in the world (that means most scheduled airline flights).  You also get a wealth of other information including flight plans, altitude, speed, time elapsed and time to go before landing.  So there’s no excuse for not being prepared to meet them when that time finally comes!

 

flight view

Airport Hotels.com

When you’re planning your journey to the airport to pick up your friend, you might find it helpful to take a look at the guides right here on Airport Hotels.com.  We’ve put together useful information on 28 UK airports, including public transport options and details of short stay parking arrangements, for those travelling by car.  In the current climate, most airports have done away with pick up and drop off areas right outside the terminal, so you will probably have to make your way to a car park even if you’re only stopping for a minute.  Many airports offer a brief period of free parking for this purpose.   We cover all the main British airports, including Heathrow Airport, Manchester Airport and Edinburgh Airport.

 

Picture Credits

1 – John Wardell

2 – Flight View

 

We’d like to hear from you!

Have you found these websites to be useful?  Are there any other good ones we should know about?

Airports in the movies

Posted in Interesting Info by Susan on the February 4th, 2010

Airports are dramatic places.  All those hellos and goodbyes, greetings and partings, some setting out on adventures and some arriving home at last.  In the past, airports conveyed a sense of glamour; today they can conjure up a sense of tension or fear.  With their great potential as a setting for emotion and action, it’s not surprising that airports are featured so often in the movies.  Let’s relive some of the most iconic airport scenes of all time.

 

Casablanca, 1942

This film is set in Africa, in the early days of World War II.  Humphrey Bogart plays Rick, an American expat, and Ingrid Bergman, Ilsa, his former lover.  The pair had an affair whilst living in France, but she is now fleeing the war with her husband.  The dramatic airport scene comes at the end, when Rick convinces her to get on a plane to safety.  He sends her off with the famous line, “We’ll always have Paris”.

 

The film became a classic, and in the late 1980’s, an attraction called the Great Movie Ride was built at Walt Disney World in Florida.  It contained a tableau of the famous airport scene, with what was said to be the actual Lockheed Electra 12A plane that was used in “Casablanca”.  However, the movie was filmed just a few months after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour, when military security was at its height.  Filming at an airport was absolutely out of the question.  The crew had to shoot the scene on a soundstage, and it wasn’t big enough to hold a real plane.  They built smaller model aircraft and hired dwarfs to move around them in the background, to give the illusion that they were full size.  (You can see them in the clip above.)  So the plane at Disney World cannot possibly have been used in the film, despite what the staff might tell you.

 

 Airport, 1970

This film follows the action at an American airport which is struggling to remain open in the middle of a blizzard.  At the same time, a passenger on board a Boeing 707 is planning to blow himself up mid-flight, so that his wife can benefit from an insurance policy.  The movie was filmed on location at Minneapolis St-Paul Airport.  It has many scenes showing the day to day running of the airport and reminds us of a more innocent time, before the current era of suicide bombers.  “Airport” was a massive box office hit and paved the way for later disaster movies.  Airodyssey has an article with much more information and trivia about the film.


 

Die Hard 2, 1990

This action film stars Bruce Willis as John McClane.  The character is waiting for his wife at Washington Dulles International Airport when terrorists take over the air traffic control system.  The scenes weren’t actually shot at Dulles, but at many other locations including LAX and Stapleton International.  The airport setting in the film is brought alive with fantastic stunts and special effects.  The last scene, where McClane lights a leaking fuel stream and blows up the baddies’ plane, was groundbreaking.  It was the first to combine live-action footage with a traditionally painted background scene on a computer.

 

Catch Me If You Can, 2002

This film dramatises the true-life story of Frank Abagnale Junior, a master forger and con artist.  By the age of 19, he had successfully posed as a pilot, doctor and prosecutor, and made millions of dollars.  The story begins in 1969 and the airport scene is a reminder of the bygone glamour of air travel.  Frank parades through Miami Airport, surrounded by a team of beautiful air hostesses, to the sound of Frank Sinatra singing “Come Fly with Me”.  This is a turning point in the plot, as a bystander remarks, “I should’ve been a pilot,” showing that Frank has now reached a position where he is envied and respected.  These scenes were actually filmed at Ontario Airport in California, in a terminal which is no longer in use.   Many other directors have shot scenes here, for a range of movies including “Blow” (2001) and “Zodiac” (2007).


 

Love Actually, 2003

This film follows the lives of 8 couples in London in the run up to Christmas.  They all have their problems and we watch their comic and touching struggles to resolve them.  The movie opens with a montage of real scenes from the arrivals gate at Heathrow Airport.  It shows family and friends being reunited, embracing each other with great love and joy.  The scene sets out the film’s heart-warming, if slightly cheesy premise – that love actually is all around.  The story returns to an airport near the end, when the youngest character chases after his sweetheart, who is leaving for America. The movie closes with another montage from Heathrow Airport.


 

We’d like to hear from you!

What’s your favourite airport scene from the movies?  Please leave your comments below.