Aurora: Operation Intercept

Aurora: Operation Intercept is a 1995 thriller film directed by Paul Levine and starring Bruce Payne, Lance Henriksen and John Stockwell.

Aurora: Operation Intercept
Directed byPaul Levine
Written byPaul Levine
StarringBruce Payne
Lance Henriksen
Corbin Bernsen
Release date
  • 1995 (1995)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The "Aurora" is a secret hypersonic military aircraft based at Groom Lake. It is very similar to what aviation experts assume to be the Aurora aircraft.[1] In the film, it is being stolen by a Russian terrorist who tries to destroy the White House. The propulsion system is a "combined cycle" conventional/scramjet engine.

Summary

Francesca Zaborszin (Natalya Andrejchenko) believes that the U.S. government murdered her father (Curt Lowens), a Soviet scientist and defector, and made it look like suicide.

Francesca sets up her own base in the deserts of Kazakhstan, wielding powerful electromagnetic pulses channeled through orbiting GPS satellites to attack and bring down civilian aircraft. She also captures the revolutionary high-altitude fighter-bomber Aurora One.

Summoned to strike back are Major Paul Gordon Pruitt (Bruce Payne) and Major Andy Aldrich (John Stockwell), who soar into action in Aurora Two. Forced down by Zaborszin, the pair are caught and tortured by her private army of sinister Slavs, but Pruitt escapes.

Eventually, things lead both Francesca and Pruitt to take to the skies in separate Auroras. She penetrates D.C. airspace to make a bombing run at the White House, but Pruitt's afterburners cause Francesca's jet to barrel roll and explode, killing Francesca.

Cast

Significance

Commentators have noted that since the making of the film, reality has imitated fiction, in that the September 11 attacks involved the crashing of planes into strategic buildings.[2]

References

  1. "Operation Intercept 1995 Movie Trailer". Youtube. Video Detective. 2012-12-21. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 2015-01-22.
  2. "Aurora: Operation Intercept (1995) recensie".


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