Plot Summary (Air Force One) Air Force One
Marshall declares a new American doctrine in Moscow
President James Marshall (Harrison Ford), a Vietnam veteran and Medal of Honor recipient, attends a diplomatic dinner in Moscow celebrating the joint U.S.-Russian capture of General Ivan Radek, a fascistic Kazakh dictator. In a speech that departs from his prepared remarks, Marshall announces a new hardline American posture toward terrorism: "Never again will I allow our political self-interest to deter us from doing what we know to be morally right." The speech thrills the room and terrifies his political advisors — it commits the United States to interventionism with no exit clause. Marshall, his wife Grace (Wendy Crewson), daughter Alice (Liesel Matthews), and his senior staff board Air Force One for the flight home. (wikipedia)
Six Radek loyalists hijack the plane from the inside
Six ultranationalist terrorists loyal to Radek have infiltrated the plane disguised as a Russian news crew, led by Egor Korshunov (Gary Oldman), a former political commentator for Moscow Radio turned militant nationalist. Their boarding is enabled by a mole: Secret Service Agent Gibbs (Xander Berkeley), who has been bought. After takeoff, Gibbs disables the onboard security systems and provides the terrorists access to their hidden weapons. In a sudden, violent takeover, Korshunov's men kill multiple Secret Service agents and military personnel before seizing control of the aircraft and taking the remaining passengers hostage — including the First Lady and Alice. (wikipedia)
Marshall hides in the cargo hold instead of escaping
The Secret Service protocol calls for the president to evacuate via an escape pod in the belly of the aircraft. The pod launches — but Marshall is not inside. He has hidden himself in the cargo hold of the lower deck, a dark, cramped space that production designer William Sandell deliberately designed as a nod to Wolfgang Petersen's submarine film Das Boot. The White House and the Pentagon assume the president has escaped safely. Vice President Kathryn Bennett (Glenn Close) begins managing the crisis from the Situation Room in Washington. (wikipedia)
Korshunov demands Radek's release and starts killing hostages
Korshunov's demand is simple: release General Radek from prison, or he will execute a hostage every thirty minutes. His ideology is not pure villainy — he articulates a genuine political grievance about the chaos that followed the Soviet collapse and what he sees as American interference in the region. "When Mother Russia is whole again," he tells Marshall's national security advisor, the killing will stop. To prove he is serious, he begins executing hostages, starting with members of the president's staff. The executions are methodical, not theatrical — Korshunov treats each one as an operational step rather than a performance. (wikipedia)
Marshall fights back alone through the lower decks
From the cargo hold, Marshall covertly kills two of Korshunov's men and obtains a satellite phone to contact Vice President Bennett, letting the White House know he is alive and still aboard. He begins a one-man guerrilla campaign through the aircraft's lower levels — sabotaging fuel lines, redirecting the plane, and improvising weapons. The scenario is explicitly a Die Hard structure transposed onto the most famous aircraft in the world: one man, one confined space, many hostages. Marshall's military training makes his competence plausible; Ford's physicality at 54 makes it convincing. (wikipedia)
Bennett holds the Situation Room together against internal pressure
On the ground, Vice President Bennett faces a different battle. Secretary of Defense Walter Dean (Dean Stockwell) pushes to invoke the Twenty-Fifth Amendment and remove Marshall from power, arguing that a president held hostage cannot exercise command authority. Attorney General Andrew Ward (Philip Baker Hall) supports the maneuver. Bennett refuses, insisting that Marshall is not incapacitated — he is fighting. Her refusal to capitulate is the film's second front: while Marshall fights terrorists with his fists, Bennett fights the political establishment with constitutional law. (wikipedia)
Marshall kills Korshunov and delivers the line
The confrontation between Marshall and Korshunov culminates in a hand-to-hand fight in the cargo bay. Marshall wraps a strap around Korshunov's neck and opens a cargo door. "Get off my plane," he says, and deploys a cargo parachute that yanks Korshunov out of the aircraft, breaking his neck. The line became one of the most quoted in 1990s action cinema. Screenwriter Andrew W. Marlowe later admitted he was never entirely sure about it: "I was always concerned that the line was a little cheesy, so I was like, 'Okay, I'm gonna think of something better.' But I never did." (syfy, wikipedia)
The rescue sequence and Gibbs's betrayal
With Korshunov dead, the remaining terrorists are neutralized, but the plane is critically damaged and losing altitude. An MC-130E Combat Talon arrives and a midair rescue begins via zip line, transferring survivors from Air Force One to the rescue aircraft. During the transfer, Gibbs reveals himself as the mole — he has been working for the terrorists the entire time. Marshall fights Gibbs on the zip line; Gibbs falls. Marshall is reeled to safety just before Air Force One crashes into the Caspian Sea. With the president safely aboard the rescue plane, the call sign "Air Force One" transfers to the new aircraft. (wikipedia)