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Score: 7.8 Good 52 votes

The Beast From the Belly of a Boeing

Episode Number: 13    Season Num: 1    First Aired: Tuesday May 3, 1983    Prod Code: 113A
The A-Team is called to rescue a hijacked 747 when the police shouldn't get involved. So the Team plans to go on board. When B.A. realises he sits in an airplane, he enters a state of paralytic comatose. When Hannibal and Face are captured, Murdock has to free them. But how to land this plane, when Murdock is blinded?

Cast and Crew

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Writer: Patrick Hasburgh
Director: Ron Satloff
Star: William Lucking (Colonel Lynch),  Melinda Culea (Amy Amanda Allen),  Dwight Schultz (Captain H.M. "Howling Mad" Murdock),  George Peppard (Col. John "Hannibal" Smith),  Mr. T (Sgt. Bosco "B.A." Baracus),  Dirk Benedict (Lt. Templeton "Faceman" Peck)
Guest Star: Andrew Robinson (Jackson),  Alan Stock (Thomas),  Jim McKrell (Hertzog),  Michael Swan (Trigg),  Jesse D. Goins (Phillips),  Milt Kogan (Unknown),  Xander Berkeley (Unknown),  Scott Lincoln (Unknown),  Mary Kate McGeehan (Unknown),  Melvin F. Allen (Orderly),  Tony Brubaker (Marty),  Wayne Storm (Guard),  Steve Chambers (Price)

Notes

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The Scene Of The Jet Crashing Into The Terminal Is From The Comedy Movie "AirPlane" (edit)

Quotes

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Orderly: You Murdock?
Murdock: Sometimes. (edit)
Hannibal: You've been found sane. (edit)
Murdock: You've got to come up with some kind of plan.
B.A.: If you ain't crazy no more, why don't you come up with a plan?
Murdock: Well, why don't you make up your mind? First I'm crazy, then I'm not. Then I'm crazy, then I'm not. She loves me, she loves me not.
B.A.: Shut up, Murdock! Shut up! (edit)

Trivia

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Hertzog: Okay, Smith, we're gonna bring you in VFR.
Hannibal: VFR?
Murdock: That's pilot talk. It just means you're flying this baby on your own.

VFR stands for "Visual Flight Rules," and it means flying by what you can see, not solely by what the instruments tell you; the latter is IFR: Instrument Flight Rules. Most commercial flights are IFR, and in the U.S., all planes flying in Class A airspace (18,000 feet or higher) must fly IFR. (edit)
Goof: When the gun goes off, blinding Murdock, the close-up shows the bullet going into a burgundy seatback. But the scene takes place in economy class, where the seatbacks are gray; the burgundy seats are in first-class, where Hannibal is sitting. (edit)
The high-altitude shots of the hijacked airliner are actually of a TWA plane; in some of the shots, the film has been flipped, so that the initials on the tail read "AWT" instead. (edit)
Goof:
Watch carefully at the scene where the plane crashes through the terminal. A lady tosses her prop baby up in the air. (edit)

Allusions

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Murdock: My good sir, this doctor has released me because I'm sane! I have papers and everything!

Murdock's voice from this point until the ending credits roll is an imitation of Richard Burton. (edit)
Murdock: By the way, B.A., I thought that now that I'm not nuts anymore, maybe you and I could room together.
(B.A. glares at him.)
Murdock: On the other hand, good fences do make good neighbors.

"Good fences make good neighbors" is a line from Robert Frost's poem, "Mending Wall." (edit)
Murdock: Did any of you guys ever see that old Doug McClure movie Terror in the Sky?

Terror in the Sky was the fifth incarnation of a well-used story by Arthur Hailey. The story began as Flight into Danger, a 1956 television movie that Hailey wrote for CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation). It was remade as the feature film Zero Hour in 1957; then Hailey novelized the story as Flight Into Danger: Runway Zero-Eight in 1958. It was remade as a television movie in West Germany in 1964; in 1971, Terror in the Sky was adapted into an American television movie from Hailey's 1958 novel. The rights to Zero Hour were eventually sold to the makers of the 1980 cult classic Airplane!, which used much of the original screenplay verbatim. (edit)
Jackson: You and Tonto can crack your lousy jokes as you go into the ocean.
Face: Get 'em up, Scout.

Moments earlier, Hannibal had referred to himself and Face as "Lone Ranger types." In these lines, Jackson and Face continue the allusion: Tonto was the Lone Ranger's sidekick, and Tonto's horse was named Scout. (edit)
Murdock: (singing) Pardon me, Roy, is that the catatonic choo-choo?

This is a parodied allusion to the Glenn Miller hit, "Chattanooga Choo-Choo." (edit)
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Community Reviews (1)

 
10.0
Perfect
The Beast From the Belly of a Boeing
"Series classic"
B.A and Murdock are in the cargo hold and the plane takes off and BA froze and Murdock tries to snap him out of it.
Continue » Posted Sep 11, 2006 9:01 pm PST
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Episode Vital Stats

 
Episode: The Beast From the Belly of a Boeing
Season Number: 1
Episode Reviews: 1
Episode
Score:
7.8 Good 52 votes
Rating Statistics:
superb: 13 (25%)
great: 11 (21.2%)
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Episode Downloads

 
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