I've mentioned quite a few times how I almost always enjoy the Warner Bros. B movies, even when they're objectively nothing more than pedestrian. Another such movie that certainly fits the "fun if not great" category is Fugitive in the Sky.
Before airline deregulation in the late 1970s, but even more so before World War II, flying was one of those luxuries that average people couldn't afford and was considered glamorous. Jean Muir plays Rita Moore, a stewardess on the sort of cross-country flight that stops at a bunch of places on its way from Los Angeles to New York. She's got a boyfriend in reporter Terry Brewer (Warren Hull), although the pilot Bob White (Gordon Oliver) also has a thing for Rita and as a result doesn't really care for Brewer.
Brewer has been covering the case of missing and wanted criminal Killer Madsen, and when Brewer sees an FBI agent board the plane, he figures that the agent must be after Madsen, and wangles the final seat on the plane for himself, which seems to make a bunch of people unhappy. Never mind that the flight is about to make a lot of people even more unhappy. The plane makes a scheduled stop in Albuquerque, where an obnoxious female passenger who keeps wittering on about astrology buys an Indian knife from the sort of souvenir stand that's set up to serve the passengers who are passing through. And wouldn't you know it, but that knife gets used to kill one of the passengers while everybody is ostensibly asleep.
At this point the FBI agent, Phelan (John Litel) reveals who he is; he kind of has to considering there's been a crime committed in the air. Madsen deduces as well as Brewer had before the flight that Phelan's original reason for getting on the flight was to follow him. So Madsen takes the passenger cabin hostage before going into the cockpit (this being well before 2001, there were no fortified doors) and turning the gun on the pilot and co-pilot and finding the spare guns that the two of them have just for a situation like this.
But wait, there's more. There's a dust storm going on even if it's ostensibly not over the part of the Plains that got the dust storms but in Missouri and points east. This means that the airports can't track the planes (never mind the fact that there was no radar yet) and want to ground all of the planes, while Madsen wants a detour to Evansville, IN where he was planning to make an escape. The radio's already been knocked out, and now the dust knocks out both engines, forcing the plane to land somewhere where nobody can quite deduce where they are. Except that there's a farmhouse in the area that Killer Madsen flees to. Since it's the only thing in the area, sure enough the passengers and crew of the stranded plane wind up there for the finale.
There's too much in Fugitive in the Sky that doesn't bear much relationship to reality. But audiences didn't always go to the movies for reality. Especially not when it came to the B movies. For audiences who wanted to be entertained, a movie like Fugitive in the Sky was going to give them that, all in just under an hour. Definitely worth watching the next time it shows up on TCM.
