A small group of survivors is left behind after millions of people suddenly vanish and the world is plunged into chaos and destruction.A small group of survivors is left behind after millions of people suddenly vanish and the world is plunged into chaos and destruction.A small group of survivors is left behind after millions of people suddenly vanish and the world is plunged into chaos and destruction.
- Awards
- 5 nominations total
Georgina Armstrong
- Venice Baxter
- (as Georgina Rawlings)
Lauren Swinney
- Old Lady
- (as Laura Swinney)
Featured review
**Spoilers**
Now obviously everyone has reviewed this saying how terrible it is. So I thought I would start picking holes in the aviation side of things. In no particular order (and ones i can remember)
1. Captain leaving the flight deck without really talking to the F/O, no handover of control.
2. Captain returns to the flight deck using emergency flight deck access code. This does not unlock the door immediately.
3. Why is the aircraft in an unusual attitude? At that altitude the aircraft would be on autopilot, not manual flight. So without either pilot on the flightdeck it would continue straight and level and the current speed until the fuel ran out.
4. Non-Standard unusual attitude recovery (disregarding the fact it wouldn't get into one)
5. TCAS with the other aircraft. Capt failed to follow the TCAS resolution advisory which would have guaranteed minimum separation between the 2 aircraft.
6. With that substitutional damage on the aircraft wing there would be an incredible amount of airframe vibration.
7. wing was damaged, why does he lose elevator control?
8. At point of divert JFK would not be the best airport to divert too. The great circle route between JFK and London would take you up the coast of Canada then passing just south of greenland. Most likely airport which could take an aircraft at that size would likely be Gander or similar.
9. Changing aircraft type throughout the film.
10. A lot of none-standard Radio Transmissions 10.1 using names on RT 10.2 Maydays are initiated by saying mayday 3 times 10.3 after declaring a mayday your normal callsign is preceded by mayday 10.4 all radio communication involves your callsign to identify who is talking and who you are talking too. 10.5 all attempts to contact were on VHF radio, no attempt made on HF? 10.6 while trying to make mayday he was selected on 121.9 (not a standard oceanic frequency) and while changing the dial he never actually made it active frequency so was always transmitting on 121.9 10.7 if you failed to contact anyone on a atc frequency a pilot would likely try 121.5 (guard) or 123.45 (aircraft to aircraft)
11. Failure of flight controls would make the autopilot unusable. However he seems to continue using it (though seemingly from other parts of the film there is no continuity regarding the autopilot)
12. Fuel situation, at the start of the flight the Capt says it will be a 6.5 hour flight, taking into account reserves and alternate fuel it is likely to be a conservative fuel for about 8.5-9 hours. However, he has a major fuel leak at the 3 hour mark which would probably cost him more than any reserves he had yet they somehow manage to fly 3 hours return back to JFK.
13. Sat phone problem (not strictly aviation but bear with me). Continually failing to contact on sat phone is a problem, but there is another service provided by Stockholm radio (HF, so would work in the middle of the Atlantic) which allows you to call a any phone in the world.
14. Ups the cabin altitude to force people to put on masks, this is possible but wouldn't happen as quickly as shown.
15.claims to be flying a 400 tonne aircraft. seems very heavy for aircraft shown in the film. (for reference, Max Takeof weights for A330: 242 tonnes: B757 255 tonnes: B777: 380 tonnes)
16. landing a "400 tonne" aircraft without flaps, spoilers, etc. is not possible, would be looking at at least 2-3miles minimum
17. Wing magically repairs itself
18. with no engines you would have no hydraulic pressure, would have to be a manual gear extension which he didn't do
19. wouldn't be able to lift the wing again once on the ground. it wouldn't provide enough lifting moment
20. evacuating the pane. as soon the door opened the slide would inflate. wouldn't have to push it out afterwards.
21. aircraft evacuation slides are very hard and don't give you any bounce as demonstrated when the guy was kicked off the plane.
22. very low quota of cabin crew for the size of the aircraft. rule is 1 per 50 passengers minimum.
23. when evacuation is undertaken, general rule is get away from the aircraft. not mill about near the burning wreckage.
Overall this film was terrible. I am sure i missed a few holes in the aviation side too but this made it slightly more amusing for me while watching.
Source of knowledge about the holes in the aviation parts, I am a commercial Pilot.
Now obviously everyone has reviewed this saying how terrible it is. So I thought I would start picking holes in the aviation side of things. In no particular order (and ones i can remember)
1. Captain leaving the flight deck without really talking to the F/O, no handover of control.
2. Captain returns to the flight deck using emergency flight deck access code. This does not unlock the door immediately.
3. Why is the aircraft in an unusual attitude? At that altitude the aircraft would be on autopilot, not manual flight. So without either pilot on the flightdeck it would continue straight and level and the current speed until the fuel ran out.
4. Non-Standard unusual attitude recovery (disregarding the fact it wouldn't get into one)
5. TCAS with the other aircraft. Capt failed to follow the TCAS resolution advisory which would have guaranteed minimum separation between the 2 aircraft.
6. With that substitutional damage on the aircraft wing there would be an incredible amount of airframe vibration.
7. wing was damaged, why does he lose elevator control?
8. At point of divert JFK would not be the best airport to divert too. The great circle route between JFK and London would take you up the coast of Canada then passing just south of greenland. Most likely airport which could take an aircraft at that size would likely be Gander or similar.
9. Changing aircraft type throughout the film.
10. A lot of none-standard Radio Transmissions 10.1 using names on RT 10.2 Maydays are initiated by saying mayday 3 times 10.3 after declaring a mayday your normal callsign is preceded by mayday 10.4 all radio communication involves your callsign to identify who is talking and who you are talking too. 10.5 all attempts to contact were on VHF radio, no attempt made on HF? 10.6 while trying to make mayday he was selected on 121.9 (not a standard oceanic frequency) and while changing the dial he never actually made it active frequency so was always transmitting on 121.9 10.7 if you failed to contact anyone on a atc frequency a pilot would likely try 121.5 (guard) or 123.45 (aircraft to aircraft)
11. Failure of flight controls would make the autopilot unusable. However he seems to continue using it (though seemingly from other parts of the film there is no continuity regarding the autopilot)
12. Fuel situation, at the start of the flight the Capt says it will be a 6.5 hour flight, taking into account reserves and alternate fuel it is likely to be a conservative fuel for about 8.5-9 hours. However, he has a major fuel leak at the 3 hour mark which would probably cost him more than any reserves he had yet they somehow manage to fly 3 hours return back to JFK.
13. Sat phone problem (not strictly aviation but bear with me). Continually failing to contact on sat phone is a problem, but there is another service provided by Stockholm radio (HF, so would work in the middle of the Atlantic) which allows you to call a any phone in the world.
14. Ups the cabin altitude to force people to put on masks, this is possible but wouldn't happen as quickly as shown.
15.claims to be flying a 400 tonne aircraft. seems very heavy for aircraft shown in the film. (for reference, Max Takeof weights for A330: 242 tonnes: B757 255 tonnes: B777: 380 tonnes)
16. landing a "400 tonne" aircraft without flaps, spoilers, etc. is not possible, would be looking at at least 2-3miles minimum
17. Wing magically repairs itself
18. with no engines you would have no hydraulic pressure, would have to be a manual gear extension which he didn't do
19. wouldn't be able to lift the wing again once on the ground. it wouldn't provide enough lifting moment
20. evacuating the pane. as soon the door opened the slide would inflate. wouldn't have to push it out afterwards.
21. aircraft evacuation slides are very hard and don't give you any bounce as demonstrated when the guy was kicked off the plane.
22. very low quota of cabin crew for the size of the aircraft. rule is 1 per 50 passengers minimum.
23. when evacuation is undertaken, general rule is get away from the aircraft. not mill about near the burning wreckage.
Overall this film was terrible. I am sure i missed a few holes in the aviation side too but this made it slightly more amusing for me while watching.
Source of knowledge about the holes in the aviation parts, I am a commercial Pilot.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaNicolas Cage's brother Marc, who is a pastor, is a big fan of the novel and asked Cage to star in the movie as favor to him.
- GoofsCaptain keeps saying he barely has fuel to go to JFK. However, there are at least five available airports on route NYC - London that are closer than JFK, Gander in Canada being the emergency airport on all transatlantic flights.
- Alternate versionsThe UK release was cut, the distributor chose to reduce elements of stronger threat and violence in order to obtain a 12 classification. An uncut 15 classification was available.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Faithful Word Baptist Church: Left Behind Exposed (2014)
- How long is Left Behind?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- La última profecía
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $16,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $14,019,924
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $6,300,147
- Oct 5, 2014
- Gross worldwide
- $27,405,896
- Runtime1 hour 50 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 16 : 9
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