Menu
7500 Poster

7500

The distress code is only the beginning.
2019 | 94m | English

(35795 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

When terrorists try to seize control of a Berlin-Paris flight, a soft-spoken young American co-pilot struggles to save the lives of the passengers and crew while forging a surprising connection with one of the hijackers.
Release Date: Dec 26, 2019
Director: Patrick Vollrath
Writer: Patrick Vollrath
Genres: Thriller
Keywords islam, kidnapping, pilot, airplane, flight, airplane hijacking, terrorism, airplane pilot, hijacked flight, islamic terrorism, religious extremism
Production Companies SWR, BR, ARTE, Novotny & Novotny Filmproduktion, FilmNation Entertainment, Augenschein Filmproduktion, Endeavor Content
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 10, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Joseph Gordon-Levitt Tobias Ellis
Omid Memar Vedat
Aylin Tezel Gökçe
Carlo Kitzlinger Michael Lutzmann
Murathan Muslu Kenan
Paul Wollin Daniel
Aurélie Thépaut Natalie
Max Schimmelpfennig Student
Simon Schwarz Alexander Franz (voice)
Mario Klischies Bremen Radar (voice)
Denis Schmidt Ramp Agent
Passar Hariky Kalkan
Hicham Sebiai Hip Hopper
Cornel Nussbaum Peter
Christoph Wielinger Businessman
Anna Suk Female Student
Name Job
Patrick Vollrath Writer, Director
Sebastian Thaler Director of Photography
Senad Halilbasic Co-Writer
Philipp Stendebach Line Producer
Anja Dihrberg Casting
Thorsten Sabel Production Design
Christine Zahn Costume Design
Samira Gassabeh Key Makeup Artist
Fabian Kucper Boom Operator
Jonas Pauquet Boom Operator
Patrick Busse Visual Effects
Jakob Ballinger Gaffer
Erik Seifert Sound Mixer
Daniel Iribarren Sound Designer
Simone Weber Sound Editor
Matthias Lempert Sound Mixer
Friedrich Noltmann Assistant Director
Peter Kreutz Unit Production Manager
Martin Rascher Original Music Composer
Hansjörg Weissbrich Editor
Name Title
Franz Novotny Co-Producer
Alexander Glehr Co-Producer
Jonas Katzenstein Producer
Maximilian Leo Producer
Ellen Goldsmith-Vein Executive Producer
Lindsay Williams Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 18 21 15
2024 5 19 27 11
2024 6 17 30 12
2024 7 23 41 13
2024 8 18 37 9
2024 9 12 18 10
2024 10 14 24 9
2024 11 17 28 10
2024 12 13 17 8
2025 1 13 19 10
2025 2 10 18 3
2025 3 5 13 1
2025 4 2 3 1
2025 5 2 4 1
2025 6 2 3 1
2025 7 1 2 1
2025 8 2 3 1
2025 9 2 3 2
2025 10 3 3 2

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 9 619 807
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 394 615
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 431 601
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 367 437
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 675 711
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 883 933

Return to Top

Reviews

msbreviews
5.0

If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog @ https://www.msbreviews.com I'm a hardcore fan of one-location, claustrophobic thrillers. If the atmosphere is suspenseful and tense enough, it can elevate the film in unimaginable ways. I'm also easily entertained by movies se ... t on a plane like Non-Stop or the classic Snakes on a Plane. 7500 spends pretty much its entire runtime inside the cockpit of a hijacked plane, going for a more realistic depiction of the point of view of the pilots. It combines two aspects that I deeply appreciate in film, making it a really captivating subgenre. However, is it any good? Story-wise, it doesn't truly create anything extraordinarily unique. Although I appreciate that it doesn't follow the over-the-top, absolutely crazy action sometimes displayed in this type of movies, which can be way too exaggerated, defying all laws of physics and reality. In this case, the viewer gets to see how things develop solely through the eyes of Tobias as well as his cockpit screen and audio. So, don't expect an action-packed flight because 7500 is far from that. It's a technically unusual take on a story told several times in many different ways. The best aspect of the film is the one I was looking forward to the most: the atmosphere. Patrick Vollrath, debutant writer-director, can generate enough tension and suspense to grab viewers for the first hour. Tobias finds himself with extremely challenging moral dilemmas, where there's no right answer, and all have severe consequences. Watching this part of the screenplay play out is the most exciting component of the movie, which is elevated by the fact that all occurs inside the claustrophobic cockpit. Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who has been away from the central spotlight since 2013's Don Jon, delivers one of the best performances I've ever seen from him. He keeps the film flying by continuously acting the hell out of his script. Without his emotionally convincing display, 7500 would crash into a thousand pieces. Omid Memar is also really good as Vedat, even though I find him a bit over-the-top during a few dialogues. Everyone else is kind of dispensable, having in mind this is a protagonist-centered piece. Technically, as I wrote above, it's different from the ordinary hijacking flicks. Besides the exclusive cockpit POV, it plays out very close to real-time, meaning that even though the movie has the common editing cuts, it feels like the ninety minutes are indeed ninety minutes. There aren't any long takes that I noticed, but the editing (Hansjörg Weißbrich) is so seamless that it creates a real-time environment, which helps to give the film a quite realistic vibe. Despite all of these qualities, 7500 struggles to stay above ground. The pilot's POV isn't captivating enough for a feature movie, at least not in the way 7500 tries to do. For a film focused mainly on the titular character, the latter lacks depth. Tobias's backstory is as generic as it could be, which doesn't help me care that much about him. The narrative follows a formulaic, predictable path that packs a couple of supposedly shocking moments, but these are so foreseen from the get-go that they lose some of the impact. It's a premise that allows for some nerve-wracking suspense, but overall the screenplay lacks a more profound exploration. In addition to this, the "Islamic terrorists" stereotype deeply hurts Patrick Vollrath's intent. It's been 19 years since 9/11. There's no need to make the hijackers constantly yell "Allahu Akbar". The biggest sin of 7500 isn't the lack of character development, but their superficial, stereotypical representation (not only the hijackers). Hopefully, it won't get online backlash because it's far from being a bad movie… All in all, 7500 needs an impressive Joseph Gordon-Levitt to keep its cruising altitude, but it still goes through too much turbulence. Debutant writer-director Patrick Vollrath delivers an unusual take on the subgenre, by depicting the hijack of a plane exclusively through the pilot's POV. The claustrophobic, suspenseful, tense atmosphere of the cockpit allows for some genuinely nail-biting scenes, but its lack of character depth diminishes the otherwise emotionally compelling moral dilemmas the protagonist has to deal with. Despite the excellent technical effort, the narrative still falls into a predictable path, possessing the conventional plot points, which reduce the level of interest. The "Islamic terrorists" stereotype deeply hurts the film since there's no need to make the hijackers belong to that religion for the hundredth time. I might recommend it to anyone who's looking for an airplane thriller. Just don't expect a brilliant execution. Rating: C

Jun 23, 2021