Video: Alaska Airlines.ย Alaska Airlines “Spirit of Disneyland II” and “Adventure of Disneyland Resort” photographed over Washington State and Arizona from a Clay Lacy Aviation Astrovision-equipped Learjet.
Alaska Airlines (Seattle/Tacoma) posted this on their blog today:
In the world of aviation photography, the money shot looks like this: Alaska Airlinesโ bright-blue Disney plane soars through billowy white clouds, perfectly spotlighted by midmorning sun. The Boeing 737-900 banks slightly to showcase its colorful fuselage painted with the โFab Fiveโ โ Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Pluto and Goofy โ along with the cheerful words, โWeโre going to Disneyland.โ
In an age of computer-generated everything, the surreal scenes look animated. But this magic is real.
โThatโs why we do the air-to-air filming, so we donโt have to use computer-generated images,โ said Elliott Pesut, integrated marketing manager for Alaska Airlines.
Alaskaโs โAdventure of Disneyland Resortโ flies above Monument Valley.Alaskaโs โAdventure of Disneyland Resortโ flies through Monument Valley.
Above Photo: Alaska Airlines. Boeing 737-890 N570AS (msn 35185) “Adventure of Disneyland Resort” flies through Monument Valley.
In another video sequence, Alaskaโs โAdventure of Disneyland Resort,โ lovingly referred to as the โCarsโ-themed airplane, cruises past the pillars and buttes of Monument Valley near the Arizona-Utah state line, returning characters Lightning McQueen and Mater to the landscape that inspired their fictional hometown. The red rocks serve as a perfect backdrop for the cloud-colored aircraft.
The videos are the product of a carefully choreographed air-to-air ballet involving skilled pilots, an expert camera crew and a modified Learjet equipped with an aerial cinematography system. Itโs all coordinated under the watchful eye of Clay Lacy, a National Aviation Hall of Fame pilot who has been at the center of more than 3,000 air-to-air film projects, including the famous air-to-air shots in โTop Gun.โ
โThis is like three-dimensional chess,โ said Brad Burger, manager of video communications at Alaska. โYou have the camera plane, the โtargetโ plane and the background, and these objects are being balanced in real time moving at 220 knots, so thatโs really different from anything else youโd do in film.
โThe Monument Valley shoot was eye-popping. I think itโs the most stunning photography that Iโve seen in my 25 years with Alaska.โ
Above Photo: A Learjet equipped with cameras flies ahead of an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737-900 to film air-to-air video of the plane. (Photo by Cole Cosgrove)
Alaska hired Clay Lacy Aviation to film two of the airlineโs four Disney-themed planes. The shots will be used by Alaska and the Disneyland Resort to promote their partnership and Alaskaโs kid-friendly amenities โ and serve as a reminder that Alaska has the most nonstop flights between the Pacific Northwest and Southern California.
โWeโll shoot five hours and probably use five seconds for the next five years,โ Pesut said.
Months of planning preceded the two days of filming.
โFrom โTop Gun,โ we learned to maneuver with other airplanes,โ Lacy said. โDealing with an airliner, thereโs better planning and better communications. There are no surprises.โ
Attention to detail is key. The โtargetโ plane would fly north to south to get the best morning light on the left side of the plane, so the word โAlaskaโ would be most readable from nose to tail. All the window shades were up and no customers were onboard. Pilots were instructed to โlook like pilotsโ โ hands on the yoke, perfect uniforms.
โWeโll be able to count the freckles on your nose,โ said photographer Chad Slattery.
Above: Air to air Flight Aware 9820 flight map from FlightAware shows the flight path of the Alaska Airlines Spirit of Disneyland II during the air-to-air video shoot.
Lacyโs pioneering Astrovision camera system uses patented periscopes on the top and bottom of the Learjet, which allow for a full circle of rotation during filming. Nearly 40 years of aerial coordination and filming experience translates to safe, efficient filming sessions, Lacy says.
โI love Alaska Airlines,โ Lacy said. โIโve flown them a lot through the years, and weโve done a hell of a lot of filming with them over the years.โ
On the first morning of filming, the โSpirit of Disneyland IIโ departed Seattle-Tacoma International Airport to scout for perfect white clouds to serve as a backdrop for the dark plane. This โtarget planeโ was piloted by Alaska Airlines Capt. Scott Sander and Capt. Bruce Patterson, who served as first officer on the flight.
โWe want our shoot to be epic, Bruce,โ Sander said. โNone of that gray wispy stuff.โ
The pair coordinated with air traffic controllers as they sought the best stretches of sky over Eastern Washington. Meanwhile, the Learjet departed Boeing Field packed with camera gear, a cinematographer, an Astrovision tech, a photographer, Clay Lacy and another pilot. A member of the Alaska Airlines video communications department rode along in the Learjet to oversee the project.
For the next few hours of filming, the Learjet hovered above, below, beside and behind the 737.
โThis deck of clouds is perfect,โ Patterson said. โThey couldnโt have picked a better day.โ
Above Photo: Alaska Airlines. Alaska Airlines has four Disneyland-themed planes, including the pictured Boeing 737-990 N318AS (msn 30018) โSpirit of Disneyland II.โ
Alaskaโs Disneyland-themed planes:
Spirit of Disneyland II (Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Pluto and Goofy)
Adventure of Disneyland Resort (Lightning McQueen, Mater, Guido and Luigi from the DisneyยทPixar film โCarsโ)
Magic of Disneyland (Tinker Bell)
Spirit of Make-A-Wish (Genie from โAladdinโ)
Alaska Airlines aircraft slide show:
http://airlinersgallery.smugmug.com/Airlines-UnitedStates-1/Airlines-UnitedStates-1/Alaska-Airlines




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