This video is about my efforts to find the crash site of the Plane used in the 1966 movie, The Flight of the Phoenix. The pilot, Paul Mantz was killed during a filming sequence
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@williamroothАй бұрын
Thanks for the tribute to Paul Mantz. He was a true original who could never be replaced.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks! Much appreciated!
@robertking7269Ай бұрын
It doesn’t matter whether you found a piece of the airplane. Thanks for sharing that story of Paul’s life.
@charlesyoung7436Ай бұрын
I remember watching the film in 1965, and knew at the time that the stunt man had lost his life while filming. That's why you never saw the landing at the oasis. I did not know of his close association to Amelia Earhart, though. Thanks for this video!
@kevinamundsen7646Ай бұрын
A fine movie, especially the nail-biting scene trying to start the engine. But even as a 10-year old, I knew something was wrong when the movie failed to show the landing at the end. Many thanks for bringing some closure to this tragic story
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Yep! They cut the landing scene in the movie!
@KenSimmons-w1lАй бұрын
One of my favorite movies of all time! Paul was truly a legend! I have read about and discussed his tragic accident many times over the years. I never expected to see the actual location of the crash. Thanks for another great adventure Bill!
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thx Ken!! Merry Christmas!
@grzlbrАй бұрын
Hey Ken, any info on what was done that day, and if it was ever inspected ?
@neilfoster814Ай бұрын
Flight of the Phoenix is one of my favourite films, even more so that Jimmy Stewart is one of the lead characters. I was pretty shocked to see that Paul Mantz had given his life in the making of the movie. This is an excellent tribute.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks!
@Dive-Bar-CasanovaАй бұрын
I paid my $1.35, walked into the theater not knowing what to expect and was captivated by this film. Stewarts greatest work, of a lot great works. Didn't know of Mantz Passing until mentioned at the end of the rolling credits. Touching impression for this little kid.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
I agree, the original was a great movie!
@artblauvelt8607Ай бұрын
Ditto, love this movie and Jimmy Stewart.
@paulfromdevon4707Ай бұрын
Watching from England on Christmas morning. Superb film and, like you, a childhood favourite. Great investigative work to find the site.
@kixigvakАй бұрын
Merry Christmas from Alaska!
@michaelsimmons261Ай бұрын
Hi from Yuma Arizona USA, twenty miles or so away from the desert crash site. I live close to the Airport and watch planes come and go from my window. Have a great time this holiday season!
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks and Merry Christmas!
@chriscusick6890Ай бұрын
Merry Christmas from San Diego, California.
@paulpcsАй бұрын
Also watched on Christmas Day in England, ever since I watched the film as a boy I had wanted to know more, thanks and Merry Christmas all.
@benc1103Ай бұрын
Thanks for posting. Frank Tallman flew the Beech 18 through the billboard (he was associated with Paul Mantz though Tallmantz Aviation. He was supposed to fly the Phoenix, but had a medical issue with his leg from a go-cart accident, so Paul flew it)
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Interesting, thanks for the additional info!
@mt3311Ай бұрын
Paul was also supposed to be the navigator for Emilia Erhardt. Tallman flew the plane through the hangar at the Sonoma County Airport in Santa Rosa. Which was slick flying.
@YesMum-j6qАй бұрын
So he did neither?
@nzsaltflatsracer8054Ай бұрын
5:58 That part is an exhaust spark arrestor from an older ATV.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for the help!!
@LaLaLand.GermanyАй бұрын
Err, Eh… And if not? Why can´t You let the man have some closure? The Phoenix IS an epic movie, I love it. And now (grown up) I see and know what all else is happening in the movie, I now can really appreciate. And it wasn´t known to me until now that someone died whilst doing the movie. And I too want to belive that these are parts of the Phoenix. Spark arrestor? Maybe… Maybe not… Know what? Eff off. You didn´t drive in the desert, You didn´t research the crash. William did. So: eff off. Merry Christmas.
@CarreraTrackOntheFloorАй бұрын
Correct. Also, when you watch the crash video in slow motion, you can tell there wouldn't be that many small broken parts as the home made aircraft flipped over on landing, not the same as impacting the ground for the sky at a higher rate of speed.
@repairdroid77Ай бұрын
@@LaLaLand.Germany The man who went out there wants the truth. Someone gives it to him and you tell them to fuck off? That's what Eff off means. Some class act you are. You may enjoy false information but the rest of us do not.
@midgetraceАй бұрын
@@WilliamBerryDesertAdventures That is correct an exhaust baffle from an ATV.
@rjhinnjАй бұрын
That movie, along with many others about aviation and aircraft, inspired me in my quest to understand aerodynamics and flying, eventually leading to me getting a degree in aerospace engineering. The crash of the Phoenix during filming and the loss of Paul Mantz was tragic. The courage these pilots have to fly such contraptions is amazing. Rare men who risked life and limb to make a living, and to defend this country. Thanks for the video! I never saw the actual crash of the Phoenix. Heart wrenching…
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for the heartfelt comment!
@JK-rv9tpАй бұрын
Awesome vid! The '65 version is so much better than the newer one, which I found unwatchable. I saw it with my father, a WW2 C-47 pilot with the RCAF in Burma, at age 9 at the Odeon theatre on Queen St W in Toronto on a rainy fall night in '65. Nowhere Man was playing on the radio of his powder blue '64 Pontiac convertible when we parked, and the same song was playing when we got back in afterwards (CHUM AM radio in Toronto was playing Beatles songs constantly).
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
What a cool memory! Thanks for posting!!!
@JK-rv9tpАй бұрын
@@WilliamBerryDesertAdventures In the movie in the final scene, after the oil worker says "What the hell is that?", freeze the frame of the thing flying past. It's WW2 trainer, a Vultee BT 13 I believe, with a makeover to resemble the real one, substituted to complete the filming. The Mantz version only appears in the brief flying clip at takeoff and just after.
@Gundog55Ай бұрын
I saw the movie in the theater when I was 11 years old. I have a book signed by Frank Tallman who was Paul’s business partner and had chartered one of our aircraft to scout out a filming site for a movie. Thanks for the effort you put out in this.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for sharing that! Cheers!
@mikeonb4cАй бұрын
My Dad was a Lanc pilot in WW2. His navigator and lifelong friend was a chap called Len Smee. After the war, when they had demobbed, Len wanted to continue flying and as there was a queue a mile long for navigator jobs he took a job as a steward with BOAC. He was the navigator on a BOAC Hermes that crashed in the desert, and he was in fact the quiet hero of the incident. The incident might not have happened at all if the flight crew had listened to Len when he noticed the sun rising in the wrong position and tried to tell them they might be going the wrong way. Such was the hierarchy on a plane then. It was this crash that inspired 'The Flight Of The Phoenix', and it was Len who kept his head, organised everybody and then set off walking out of the desert to try and get them rescued. And it was his use of a piece of broken mirror that he flashed up at the sky that resulted in him being spotted and a rescue posse coming to get them (all that stuff has been used for years since in team building exercises, where a group are put into an imaginary situation and told to decide their course of action). Len told me all this way back in the 1980s when I met him, now flying model airplanes after retiring from BA on health grounds. He was a modest man and not given to bragging, and was reluctant to let me write his story up for a magazine. The story did eventually get unearthed and a documentary was made about it, although the facts seem to have been altered a bit from what I know from both Len and my Dad. Probably this was because Len still wanted to keep out of the limelight. I asked Len back then how he wanted to keep on flying after such close shaves (he'd also been chief steward n a BOAC Comet 1 that caught fire in Singapore and they got all passengers off in under 2 minutes). He said well, I was just doing my job. What had eventually got to him though, he said, was being moved up to senior management. He lasted 2 years there before having a heart attack and having to retire! Here's a link to more info: www.bbc.co.uk/history/ancient/archaeology/gallery_desert_rescue_02.shtml The Wellington crash details are wrong though, from what my Dad and Len told me. The crash happened on a UK navex training flight when the plane developed engine trouble. With cloudbase very low, the plane unable to climb, and knowing they were headed for hilly territory, my Dad spotted an airfield (later identified as Castle Donnington) and made an immediate decision to put the plane down wheels up on the grass (as Wellingtons caught fire very easily if a hard runway created sparks, wheels up I imagine as there wasn't time to lower it safely plus it would have added drag to an already ailing aircraft). They all walked away without a scratch, and my Dad's reward was to be bawled out by the station commander for having wrecked one of His Majesty's aircraft. This was in 1944, and I don't think Wellington's were even flying ops over Europe by that time.
@thresher4Ай бұрын
WOW, awsome facts.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Wow! Great story! Thanks so much!
@Dive-Bar-CasanovaАй бұрын
The Lancaster is an amazing aircraft. Genius and the right smart design for the job it had to do.
@DalesmanableАй бұрын
Wonderful story. To quibble, Bomber Command stopped using Wellingtons operationally in 1943 but they continued to operate in Europe well into 1945, as bombers over Italy and, flying from the U.K., as anti-submarine and anti-mine aircraft in Coastal Command.
@mikeonb4cАй бұрын
@@Dalesmanable Yes indeed. It was BC ops over Northern Europe (which my dads crew started flying in late 1944) that I was musing about. Unless they were flying those, the BBC version of story about the Wellington crash doesn't hold up.
@anthonyiocca5683Ай бұрын
Thanks for the actual film footage of the crash. I wondered why the ending of the movie didn’t show a landing. It was unfortunate learning about the crash, but now we see just how it happened…
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
My pleasure! It is a sad story.
@charlesmcgee364Ай бұрын
I stumbled upon this video, I saw the movie decades ago and I am a private pilot, so completely enjoyed this. I intend to read more about Paul Mantz. Thank you. Chuck
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@Bigfoot14000Ай бұрын
Hi Bill, very interesting video. Back around 1969-71. as a young guy, one of my best friends was the son of an executive of the Robert Aldrich production company. Aldrich of course was the producer/director of The Flight of The Phoenix. He also created other iconic films, including The Dirty Dozen. He was a real character and my buddy's dad related many stories about the producer's unusual business practices and life. I always suspected my friend's father could have made a better living for himself elsewhere in the movie business but that he admired Aldrich's tenacity and quirkiness so much that he held in there with him, even though the traditional big studios offered more security. Robert Aldrich was one or a kind .
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
I appreciate that you shared your experience with Robert Aldrich and his production company.
@HongyaMaАй бұрын
My Dad had the daily pined to his tool box for decades, The rear was cracking and was repaired multiple times. Steward Davis supplied the Box Car and He was there for the shooting , Paul had a habit of undoing his seat belt, he was found outside the wreck and the guy seated behind him had a broken hip. Dad said when they found Paul he still had his cigar clenched in his teeth. Frank Tallman & Paul Mantz had a nice Museum. Movie Land of the Air where they parked their planes, Including the B-25s P.S. The Phoenix had a plywood fuselage
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Wow! Thanks for sharing this, that is fascinating!
@krazmokramerАй бұрын
"The Flight of the Phoenix" and "It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World" were two of my favorite movies as a kid growing up in Wichita Kansas. The Beechcraft Super H18 in "IaMMMMW" was built in Wichita at the plant many of my friends' dads worked at. I had no idea Mr. Mantz was killed while filming (I was too young to sit through the end credits), or that he was the pilot in both films. THANK YOU for this video!
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
My pleasure
@donaldbest1295Ай бұрын
Thanks for your most entertaining and historically valuable work William. Merry Christmas from Cochrane, Ontario Canada
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks so much for the kind words and Merry Christmas to you too!
@timgearing5121Ай бұрын
Thank you for filling in a piece of film history for me. It’s been a while since I’ve watched it,but remember the tribute in the closing credits and wondered what happened.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
You’re welcome, I appreciate you watching!
@skitownstreetcredАй бұрын
What a fantastic documentary! As a videographer myself, it's these types of stories that truly motivate me behind the camera. Telling history is important. Subscribed!
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Great to hear!
@davidtaysom3592Ай бұрын
Fascinating, this was a favourite film of mine also when growing up.thanks so much for the effort you made in sharing this with us.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
My pleasure!
@Marco-lv8coАй бұрын
Bill the filter you found, was not a filter, it was the inside of a motorcycle silencer. Absolutely not a air plane part.😂 trust me I know.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thank Marco!
@taylorhappe8026Ай бұрын
Yup The inner core of a spark arrestor for a dirt bike
@associatedblacksheepandmisfitsАй бұрын
A baffle out a silencer from a motorbike
@cokvandenheuvel4769Ай бұрын
Guess what. It is indeed part of the damper in an outer muffler of a suzuki gt 750... lol.
@PhilscbxАй бұрын
Absolutely True, retired tech for Honda, also restoring WWII crashed aircraft 20 years, including B-25, that is in fact a baffle from dirtbike muffler, still has fragments of fiberglass caught in hardware. Good Eye Captain, Cheers
@JonMarinelloАй бұрын
I saw Paul Mantz fly some aerobatic maneuvers at Orange County airport when I was a kid circa 1965. He was pretty impressive.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks! I will correct that in a follow up! Have learned some new thing from all the great comments!
@AlvinUseltonАй бұрын
Thanks for all the hard work you put into this project; definitely a needle in a haystack situation! The parts you mentioned probably aren’t connected to this tragedy I doubt there’s anything left to find, but you never know. You were right there where it happened and gave us a chance to see it thanks 🙏
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thx
@stanleyjay1114Ай бұрын
Bill loved your post. Loved the movie. I have seen other KZbins on Paul's accident but never one on a travel there. My brain assumed the accident was halfway around the earth. The magic of Hollywood!! Happy Holidays
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@TheFlightLevelАй бұрын
Great video! Great detective work and excellent use of the drone for the overhead video segments! Cool to be able to drive the truck over a vast area! The Phoenix would be a cool airplane in Flight Simulator!
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@Mrdsmith500Ай бұрын
Anyone who knows me well, knows that the original Flight of the Phoenix was my all time favorite movie. In fact I have the movie poster hanging in the office I am currently sitting in. Nice detective work. Amazing to me how little is known about the exact location of this terrible accident.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for the pat on the back!
@mkt6060Ай бұрын
I saw the movie on TV several years after it came out. Excellent movie and probably the best plane crash movie ever made. But I didn't know about the life and death of Paul Mantz, until seeing this video. So thanks for telling his story. And as a bonus this video also represents a couple of other video genres: finding stuff in the desert, and visiting old plane crash sites (desert or otherwise).
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks
@deqimagesАй бұрын
Yes, agree with your thoughts about this story. As a young person I happened to read the book first, and thought it was a really terrific, engrossing and gritty story, and then saw the film later and was impressed with it's handling of the story. It had great actors and was well directed and totally captured the essence of the book - a usually difficult job to transition from pages to film. After seeing in the credits the passing of Paul Mantz in this accident, it really brought home how dangerous it must have been to even try to emulate what was written. Today of course it would be all CGI, but back then it was very much 'real' stuff. So great respect here to Paul (and many more) who did/do nearly impossible stunts in film, both back then and even today, and thank you for having the interest and perseverance for taking the time to follow this up.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Agreed!
@sylviaelse5086Ай бұрын
I saw this movie a long time ago - long before the internet made research easier. At the end of the movie, the appearance of the crew over a ridge, with no footage of the aircraft landing, was quite jarring. With the "In memory of" credit of someone working on the film, I wondered at the time whether the plane had crashed while the movie was being made. I was, of course, saddened to learn, much later, that this had indeed happened.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
I'm glad you brought that up! It's fascinating how the film reflects real life, isn't it?
@teammuncyАй бұрын
My wife and I are 80s kids and the 2004 Flight of the Phoenix with Dennis Quaid is one of our favorite movies we've watched as adults. We have our own copy and watch it regularly. We've shared it with our nephews and nieces and they love it as well. I had no idea until seeing your video that there was an original version from 1965. No idea. It was so bizarre seeing this footage because it looks so similar to the newer version in regard to the build of the airplane, the crew situated on the wings, the pulling of the airplane through the desert, etc. We are certainly going to have to go back and watch the 1965 version now!
@MakitaizationАй бұрын
Me too. I thought the 2004 one was the only one.
@bishbashbosh-j6zАй бұрын
wow, I'm an 80s kid from the UK and the original movie was always on UK TV and is one of my all time favourite movies, with a high quality cast and memorable music. Didn't think much of the Denis Quaid one if I'm being honest. Wasn't aware of the crash though....
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
I hope you enjoy the original movie as much as we do!
@tomswift3835Ай бұрын
No comparison. The remake is just annoying.
@teammuncyАй бұрын
@@bishbashbosh-j6z, I knew when I shared the comment that I'd probably get original version fans that would not think much of the newer version. It's funny because I'm usually on the other side of that conversation having seen an original and not much liking the newer version of this or that movie. I totally get it. On music, I do love the opening Johnny Cash number on the 2004 version -- "I've Been Everywhere" goes pretty well with that gorgeous flight scene. And the pilot/co-pilot banter at the next takeoff is pretty fun. Lots of memorable moments.
@johnwood551Ай бұрын
Thank you. I was. 15 when this movie came out and it’s always been one of my favorites .They made you feel like you were there. Much more real and suspenseful than the remake.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Agreed!
@toml.1408Ай бұрын
I actually saw the Phoenix at the Tallmantz hangar in late June of 1965. It looked completed. No one was around, and the plane looked great. I was 9 years old. About 2 weeks later, my mom informed me that Paul Mantz had been killed in that plane out in the desert. Wow!!! Myself and my brother saw the film in a theater in late 1965. The 2nd movie was "Our man Flint".
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for sharing that! Very cool!
@toml.1408Ай бұрын
@@WilliamBerryDesertAdventures The accident film did not see the light of day until about 1970. There was a afternoon Public Affairs program in Los Angeles that the topic was Paul Mantz, and the producers somehow had gotten a copy of the crash film, and either got permission from 20th Century Fox to show it, or, showed it under the umbrella of "valid news reporting". I never heard they got in trouble.
@Corielle6115Ай бұрын
Fascinating video. I too liked Flight of the Phoenix...I saw it probably sometime around 1971-72 as a teenager. I also lived in Yuma from July of 1992 to October of 1993 and visited the Algodones Dunes a couple of times from Interstate 8. I found ti a very inspiring movie as, at the time, I probably needed to watch something inspiring as a wayward teenager. During the time I lived in Yuma I worked for Arizona State Parks. We removed parts from a F4 Phantom crash in a project in conjunction with the US Bureau of Land Management in the Gibraltar Wilderness Area outside of Parker AZ. It involved pack mules and a climb up a slope accessible from a paved road. You might want to look for it. My understanding is that the Marine Corps airlifted what was left of the fuselage after we did what we could by manual labor. If I remember correctly the plane was from NAS Yuma and the pilot ejected but was killed when his parachute wrapped around the vertical stabilizer.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for that!
@Corielle6115Ай бұрын
@@WilliamBerryDesertAdventures NCAS Yuma might have records of that crash. I haven't been up in that area for years. Gibraltar Wilderness is not exactly what one who is more familiar with California or Colorado Wilderness might expect.
@ChoadOnTheHillАй бұрын
As a boy in mid-late 1960s the father of neighborhood kids was a firefighter at Nevada Test Site. He told us kids about a gang of them each with bucket in hand combing the desert for bits of meat after fatal aircraft mishaps. Not for identification but to keep the critters from a free meal. Respect includes.
@papabits5721Ай бұрын
I watched this movie a hundred times and grew up with it and I never knew about this accident until this month.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for letting us know.
@donpardew1349Ай бұрын
When i was 14 my dad flew for Steward & Davis Aviation in long beach Ca and delivered one of 3 C82's for the movie , I got to go along and met Paul and James Steward , , later after awhile my dad told me about Paul getting killed trying to fly that junk of a Airplane , Dad was a Hat , A&P , A&E , A&I , CFI , and said that the plane that Paul built was a death trap !! When dad told me that Paul got killed , it realy hit me, after watching him and Art Shol flying at air show most of my life and seeing all the movies , that he flew in . Don A. Pardew
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for sharing that. That’s a powerful story.
@triggerpointtechnologyАй бұрын
Paul Mantz and Frank Tallman were Hollywood aviation, if you exclude Howard Hughes, and I don’t know why you would. Mantz flew the Fairchild (?) in the incredible uncut scene from “Only Angels Have Wings” where he lands on a mesa. The cinematography from that flight has never been matched in movie history. I saw Frank Tallman, prosthetic leg and all, do aerobatics in his iconic Grumman Duck at Reno Air Races. Both of these guys were legends.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for the great info!
@edwardestes8038Ай бұрын
I have hade tis movie in every form there could be.Jimmy was my favorite older actor back in the days.And me and my dad watched this many times together.The re-make was not even worth buying and was quite stupid and un believeable.Ive seen this 65 version over 100 times and to this day still tops my list of favorites.I am almost sure this was featured on Family Classics with Fraisier Thomas.years ago on Froday nights.Thanks for posting William.!
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
My pleasure! Thank you!
@williamkaono1239Ай бұрын
6:14 is a exhaust tip from a four wheeler sorry to say. Not an aircraft part
@mikesumner5129Ай бұрын
Thats what I came to say. Its the internal baffel/ spark arrestor of a motorcycle or quad muffler.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for that!!! Big help!
@1flstcАй бұрын
the second item is a silencer for a dirt bike, sorry
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Damn! Glad you helped me. I still think the first part has a good chance of being from the crash. Thanks much!!
@miaohmya92Ай бұрын
Great video love your format and clean content. Subscribed. ❤
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thank you! I'm glad you like it!
@navynuc1Ай бұрын
I am with the crowd, love the original movie and watched the remake. The original was absolutely captivating and a true classic. I had no idea that that a man's life lost to the making of the movie. So sad. Neat video on this topic, thanks for making it.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Couldn't agree more!
@kurtbilinski1723Ай бұрын
Other than triangulating the distant mountains, I don't think it's (now) possible to find the actual spot. Sand dunes drift, the sand shifts. Regarding Mantz flying through the billboard, that was in Orange County CA as part of the film "It's a Mad Mad World." From my reading, a portion of the sign partially clogged the air inlet in one engine, greatly reducing its power. He planned for something like this to happen and had enough airspeed to reach Orange County Airport (now John Wayne Airport) which was only a few miles away. BTW, several trees in the area are still there, making it possible to find where the billboard stood.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventures25 күн бұрын
I agree, the location is now very hard to find. Thanks for the extra detail!
@robst247Ай бұрын
As a boy growing up in Warwickshire, England, in the sixties, obsessed by aviation, I loved that film, and as a Stuart I had to like Jimmy Stewart (even though his surname was spelt the 'wrong' -- i.e. unroyal -- way) and thought his strange accent funny but appealing. Thanks for reminding me of a gem of that great era of cinema.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks
@d0zxАй бұрын
Thanks, Bill, for this video/research on Paul Mantz life. I have worked with his grandson for the past 25 years and have talked many times about his grandfather. I have forwardyour video to him. Will be fun to see what he things of it
@lauramantz1963Ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing this!
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
@dougbrown8331Ай бұрын
When I was in the Army my first sergeant was Paul Manz son Paul Manz jr. he talked about his dad a little bit and had some really interesting stories about growing up with Paul as his father. This story aside.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Wow! Thanks for that!
@bretwills4602Ай бұрын
Frank Tallman flew the scenes in "It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World" including the Beech 18 stunts. He and Paul were partners.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks! I will correct this in an update soon!
@davidmangold1838Ай бұрын
TalManz aviation, it was called.
@taproom113Ай бұрын
Thanx for the informative video, Bill. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from Florida! Carry on ... 🥳🍾🥂 🎉
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Appreciate that! Same to you!
@yumagawlersАй бұрын
Well, now I need to watch that movie. I live in Yuma and enjoy seeing videos showing the history from this area. Thanks for making the video!
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
It’s a great movie!
@calsurflance5598Ай бұрын
Nice work tracking down the site.👍 I always assumed it was filmed in North Africa .👌
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@jjreddog571Ай бұрын
First of all, this was a great video. I was near there the day it happened, I was working my last day for L.M. McLaren Produce Co in a melon field with a bunch of Mexican Bracero`s. At the end of the day on the way back to Yuma our bus passed a flatbed truck with the remains of a plane on it and we heard later someone was killed doing a stunt for a movie. I also remember hearing the temperature out at Gordons Well that day was 126 degrees. On the next day I headed for the U.S. Coast Guard boot-camp & did not see the film with Jimmy Stewart and cast for several years later. R.I.P. Paul Mantz.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
@chrisingram940Ай бұрын
Also a favorite film of mine. Grew up in Yuma and knew of the crash in Buttercup Valley which I’ve crisscrossed many times, but never triangulated the exact spot like you did. Nice tribute to Paul Mantz.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thx
@MrMartini1960Ай бұрын
The video was suggested to me and I watched it with great interest. Thank you very much for this impressive documentary. For me, too, The Flight of the Phoenix was and is one of my absolute favorites. Unfortunately, the remake in no way comes close to the quality of the original - as is often the case with remakes. Paul Mantz is surely now flying a few laps of honor in the sky with Jimmy Stewart, Hardy Krüger and the others...
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@LarryDeSilva64Ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. I always wondered how Paul Mantz put the phoenix together but also flew it and I never saw a video of the crash. He definitely was one very smart individual and his death was a real loss. Thanks again. Oh and I subscribed to your channel.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks l!!!
@bobbyricigliano2799Ай бұрын
I’d never heard of Paul Mantz. Now I have, and I’m better for it. Fascinating man, thanks for sharing that.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
My pleasure!
@dave9351Ай бұрын
Liked, Subscribed and shared ! Paul Mantz's story is amazing sir and thank you for sharing ! Los Algadones is a great town as well !
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thx
@paulvirginia8788Ай бұрын
My father was on the film crew. He knew both Paul Mantz as well as Frank Tallman. Frank was the lead stunt pilot on "Catch 22" filmed in San Carlos, Mexico. I was cast as an extra while my dad was in the art department. I was 12 years old at the time.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
How cool is that!
@roadstercm6Ай бұрын
Very interesting to see your interest in this crash. I was at an airport in California as a kid and saw this strange aircraft so my dad and I went to get a closer look. That’s when we met Paul. He was painting the plane and told us it was for a movie. He went on to say he was the pilot and did not like the airplane because it was nose heavy. To solve this issue they poured concrete in the tail. When I saw the movie I was sad not to see the plane land and later found out he was killed in a crash landing. I will always remember my father telling me “ that’s a Corsair and that’s a P51 and I don’t know what that is. Let’s go see”
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for that great personal account!!
@rumplestilskin5776Ай бұрын
Great movie, thanks for bringing it much deserved interest.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thank you
@AreDee-vo6yqАй бұрын
Jimmy Stewart, John Wayne. "Flight of the Phoenix", "Island in the Sky". My Top-4 favorites! 😉 Thank you for this video, William! Quite fascinating...
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@andykerr3803Ай бұрын
Great video! As for the comments about the air filter... 😂 Watched that movie as a kid, had no idea of the crash. Thank you, next time I watch it will be special 👍👍
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks
@wr134Ай бұрын
I too, am a fan of the movie, Flight of the Phoenix (the original, mind you). I did a book report on Paul Mantz in the 8th grade, many years ago, and learned he had died in the production of this movie. He and Frank Tallman were renowned for their flying and formed a company to do aerial photography and stunt flying, TallMantz Aviation. Frank Tallman was also killed in an aviation accident in 1978.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Great detail!
@stevenvicino8687Ай бұрын
Paul was an amazing pilot. The aerial footage is incorrect though. Paul did crash-land the B-17 in 12 O'Clock High. The Beechcraft D-18(color footage) was Frank Tallman, a good friend of Pauls, in It's a Mad,Mad, Mad, Mad World. Nice documentary.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for the correction.
@nickaxe771Ай бұрын
Wow Fantastic video bill.....amazing film watched it several times over the years.....still remember how spellbound I was first time I saw it many many years ago. I remember seeing the note at the end of the film mentioning that somebody had lost there live making the film and did wonder how. Very Very Sad. The line....You behave as if stupidity was a virtue.....what an amazing line. Thank you for your video.....and merry Christmas from the UK.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks Nick!
@frankjones4094Ай бұрын
I believe (and may be mistaken) the first item is a universal tailpipe hanger. As you mentioned with 60 years of OHV use it's more probably from one of those. Thanks for the research. I never new that there was a accident during the filming.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Agreed! Will correct in upcoming follow up!
@bobbyb.1743Ай бұрын
Thank you for your excellent video and tribute to Paul. Sparked my curiosity about his Army Air Corps time😊
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventures25 күн бұрын
Thanks! I am working on another video about his career.
@Follett2121Ай бұрын
Great video! Regardless of where there are any parts there or not. Great job finding that location.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks, it was a fun search!
@leroycharles9751Ай бұрын
Fantastic, thanks for going out there. Thy must have scooped up all the parts.I certainly thought there would be more.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Yes, there is not much left.
@rogerpritchardАй бұрын
Interesting video. Thanks for explaining. One of my, and my fathers (Dennis Reginald Pritchard) favourite films, he was a pilot, ex RAF, from Biggin Hill, Kent.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Very cool!
@Robnord1Ай бұрын
Very interesting. I Love that movie, and re-watch it every few years to introduce a friend or relative to it and just to enjoy. I watched about 1/2 of the re-make and shut it off. Not even close to the epic classic I grew up with. Sad about Paul Mantz. I was unaware. With some years and a good GPR (ground penetrating radar) I think you could find the Phoenix, but what a monumental task.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks! I agree, the original is much better. Ground penetrating radar!! Great idea! I will need a sponsor.
@louislamboley9167Ай бұрын
You can see the fuselage is cracked along the seam at the top and breaking loose before he touches down for the third time, It was going to fall off even if he was airborn again. He might have realized that and tried to land.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
They added weight to the tail for control of the plane which contributed to the crack!
@louislamboley9167Ай бұрын
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventures I'm guessing that he might have heard some metal cracking and popping and although you don't see him look he knew what was going on. He was an exceptional pilot.
@EverydayWorkshop26 күн бұрын
Very interesting video. Thank you.
@9014jayvictorАй бұрын
Well I liked your Video ! No A I and I am so glad ! You seem to have a lot of respect for one of my favorite movies ! I like the way you spoke About Paul Mantz . The Accident clips seem diferent to any that I have seen before ! Thank you too for asking for subscrition likes at the end of your presentation ! So,... I subscribed and liked ! Waiting for your next Video Thank you !
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks so much for the feedback and support!
@9014jayvictorАй бұрын
@@WilliamBerryDesertAdventures Merry Christmas and Thanks again !
@ohger1Ай бұрын
Just a great movie. I was a kid when I first saw this and was very moved by the remembrance of Paul Mantz in the credits.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
👍
@Dive-Bar-CasanovaАй бұрын
The Bogie version Sahara was filmed in those dunes too.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks!!
@paulsegal8230Ай бұрын
William...I love this concept of history. I often do so myself around the San Diego Area....Thanks
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thank you!
@TUCOtherattАй бұрын
Flight of the Phoenix is one of my favorite old movies. This was very interesting!
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for that!
@bodieb.1239Ай бұрын
Love that movie. It's a great 'Watch Again' movie. Great yet sad story. Thanks for sharing.
@jerryoneil9230Ай бұрын
Great job! Love your search for the crash site. FYI, You might want to re-edit the part about Mantz doing the fluing scenes in "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World. His partner, Frank Tallman flew sll those stunts.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
You are absolutely right, my apologies!
@alangittner9666Ай бұрын
I knew about the stunt pilot who died but did not know his history. Thanks for the memories.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Cheers
@mt3311Ай бұрын
Mantz was the one that flew the plane following the train in the opening sequences of the movie, Bad at Blackrock. What is seen in the finished movie, is him flying forward, and then the footage reversed. A technological innovation in 1954
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Great info!
@eltamarindo28 күн бұрын
Paul Mantz was a hard working man. He was a three time winner of the Bendix Trophy race from Los Angeles to Cleveland, Ohio at an average speed of 460MPH (in 1947). He was also a pioneer of low level aerial firefighting in California, using his aircraft to make two drops on the Jamison Fire (near Lake Elsinore, CA) on September 1, 1954.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventures28 күн бұрын
That is amazing!
@tjmusaАй бұрын
wow. didnt know the story behind the movie. and all the real stunts in the biggest movies.. wow. thanks for your hard work and travels.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
You’re welcome!
@robertgeorge9720Ай бұрын
Hi Bill, Great video. I worked for Tallmantz Aviation 1973-74. It was actually Frank Tallman who flew the Beech 18 through the billboard and open hanger for Mad, Mad World. Paul Mantz was part of planning all of the aerial scenes as well for Catch-22.. During the filming of Catch 22, the scene with the L-5 Stinson decapitating the person on the raft in the ocean, it was a dummy but one arm and hand got caught in the horizontal stabilizer and Tallman nearly crashed but was able to land. Thanks again for the video of a movie we all grew up with.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for the update!
@airsearch9192Ай бұрын
Thank you. Great biography of the famous stuntman Paul Mantz.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
You’re welcome! I appreciate you watching.
@chrispartiАй бұрын
I loved that film as a child, its so sad to hear that someone lost their life during the making of the film. My other favourite childhood film was 'Ice cold in Alex'
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@GunnyFritzАй бұрын
Frank Tallman and Paul Mantz were both innovators in their field. I knew that Paul died in the filming of FoTP, but I’d never seen the actual crash footage.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventures25 күн бұрын
Thanks for the comment!!
@crystalr760217 күн бұрын
Flight og the Phoenix with Jimmy Stewart was also one of my favorite movies as well. I nominated it for one of the top movies showing mechanical design and engineering in a contest one of my trade magazines ran. It didn't win, but it went quite a ways towards the winning spot like the suggestion lasted 8 of the 10 weeks the contest ran. I even had a few other subscribers say it was a brilliant choice.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventures16 күн бұрын
Wow! That is cool!
@PreciouspinkАй бұрын
Dam ,you are into this. How lucky you be with the resources to fund your passions,God speed!
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
I appreciate the comment!
@4edward61Ай бұрын
Great search/hunt. Can't say those are a/c parts, but the adventure looks fun. Paul Mantz was a legend, and his collaboration with Frank Tallman made movie history!
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thx
@DavethresholdАй бұрын
I am so sorry to FINALLY hear this. If it was not for you I would be permanently in the dark. I LOVED that film, saw it about eight times, and intensely disliked the Hardy Kruger character. Why? Because he was right all of the time! It is close to a masterpiece and also there is a very good remake of it. May Mr. Mantz continue to teach those Angels what flying REALLY is. ❤
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Nice!! Thanks
@toml.1408Ай бұрын
It was written in the book about Paul Mantz that the stunt man who was seated behind Mantz knew something really bad was happening so he released his own seatbelt and instantly piledrived head first into the sand, breaking his shoulder blade, but surviving the accident. It is the stuntman falling seen in the films.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Yes
@bhaebe6671Ай бұрын
It's difficult to discuss the history of Paul Mantz without mentioning Frank Tallman. but you succeeded in doing so.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thx
@eltamarindoАй бұрын
It's also remarkable to make a video about one of the most famous airplane racers of all time without mentioning the air racing.
@adrianotero796326 күн бұрын
First time i see a video of the accident.....he hit hard.....RIP Paul, your legacy lives on.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventures25 күн бұрын
It sure does!
@SchlipperschlopperАй бұрын
The finest movie of its genre!
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Yep
@johnschofield9496Ай бұрын
YOUR SECOND " AIRPLANE PART" IS THE EXHAUST SILENCER FOR A 2 STROKE DIRT BIKE !
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thanks!
@phillipsher7945Ай бұрын
Great movie. Unbelievably funny when the Captain finds out the German engineer designs “model” aircraft.
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
No kidding!
@Electriceye1984bySamАй бұрын
Interesting channel, great subject matter in this vid, thanks!👌🏻🎄yes I subscribed
@WilliamBerryDesertAdventuresАй бұрын
Thank you!
@rconger24Ай бұрын
I remember seeing _Flight of The Phoenix_ in a Phoenix Arizona theater in the year 1966.