Earlier than it lit up the large display in a fiery explosion, a now-famous Boeing 727 film prop had a way more patriotic goal.
Initially painted by American artist Alexander Calder to have fun the US Bicentennial in 1976, this plane—registered as N408BN—was as soon as a flying piece of artwork for Braniff Worldwide Airways.
Its transformation from an airborne tribute to a Hollywood icon is considered one of aviation’s most surprising plot twists.
Right here’s a short historical past of Calder’s special-edition plane.
Braniff’s Creative Aspirations
Braniff Worldwide Airways (BIA) was an airline based in Dallas, Texas, that served vacationers worldwide for over 5 a long time. The airline even leased a Concorde briefly for home operations earlier than closing its doorways in 1982.
Through the Seventies, Braniff launched a extra trendy fleet and embraced eye-catching design. Plane donned hanging two-tone schemes utilizing vivid blues, greens, and oranges, paired with yellow or light-blue underbellies.
The dramatic model shift was pushed by Chairman Harding Lawrence and Mary Wells, an promoting government who later turned his spouse.


However the service’s inventive imaginative and prescient didn’t cease there. In 1973, promoting government George Stanley Gordon elevated the thought additional by commissioning artist Alexander Calder to create a wholly hand-painted livery. The outcome was Flying Colours of South America, a vibrant Douglas DC-8 that includes streaks, waves, and different accents in daring main colours.
The plane commemorated Braniff’s 25 years of service to South American cities and was used completely on routes between North and South America.
A Star-Spangled Boeing
In 1975, two years after his first airline collaboration, Alexander Calder was once more commissioned by George Stanley Gordon—this time to have fun America’s upcoming 1976 Bicentennial. The outcome was Flying Colours of the US, a hanging pink, white, and blue design hand-painted onto a Boeing 727-200.
The plane was delivered new to Frontier in 1968 and later bought to Braniff in 1972. Previous to Calder’s work, it wore a stable blue Braniff livery. Calder’s patriotic model featured flowing ribbons and swirls in pink and blue on a predominantly white background.
The plane debuted its new livery throughout an organization occasion at Dallas Love Area and was later used primarily for routes between the US and Mexico.
Sadly, the particular version livery was short-lived. As soon as the Bicentennial festivities concluded, Braniff repainted N408BN in a stable shade as soon as once more — this time, in ‘chocolate brown.’
Flying Colours of the US was the final special-edition livery commissioned from Braniff. Calder sadly died from a coronary heart assault on 12 November 1976 in his daughter’s residence in New York Metropolis. He was 78.
Life After Braniff and the Journey to an Iconic Boeing 727 Film Prop
N408BN remained in Braniff’s fleet till the airline ceased operations in Might 1982. The plane sat in storage till the launch of Braniff II in 1984 when it was repainted within the new airline’s white and blue livery.
In 1985, N408BN was bought to Delight Air and finally handed by the fingers of a number of smaller home and worldwide carriers. Its flying profession got here to an finish in June 1990, when it was retired in Opa-locka, Florida. The plane was dismantled, and its elements had been bought by Worldwide Air Leases.
However N408BN had one final second within the highlight.
In 1993, the plane was bought to Columbia Footage for the climactic closing scene of Dangerous Boys, starring Will Smith and Martin Lawrence.
The movie’s villain, Fouchet (performed by Tchéky Karyo), makes an attempt to flee aboard the jet till the movie’s heroes blow up the hangar (and the plane). N408BN’s registration is clearly seen all through the scene, which was filmed at Miami-Opa Locka Govt Airport (OPF).
Australian photographer Frank Schaefer took the final identified picture of N408BN in March 1993, shortly earlier than manufacturing of Dangerous Boys started:
‘Unhappy finish, however at the least with a little bit of fame,’ Schaefer wrote.


