Titled "Project Almanac," the film from famed producer Michael Bay appears to leverage footage of the incident, which occurred at Fairchild Air Force Base in Washington state. All four men on board the B-52H Stratofortress were killed when the aircraft plunged into the ground and exploded, the result of a risky maneuver gone disastrously wrong.

Officials with Paramount Pictures told Air Force Times on Tuesday that the film, scheduled for release Jan. 30, does not use that footage. Katie Martin Kelley, executive vice president for publicity at Paramount, said in an email that the filmmakers used licensed footage of a March 2009 crash at Narita International Airport in Tokyo. That incident involved a plane owned by the commercial shipping firm FedEx.

Col. Robert Wolff

Photo Credit: file

ID=22064753One clip in the time-travel movie's first trailer — an overhead shot revealing the burned-out husk of an airplane — may indeed show that 2009 crash in Tokyo. But families of two of the victims in the 1994 crash say they are certain a clip in the film's second trailer depicts the tragedy that killed their loved ones.

A publicist there, Paramount Senior Publicist Michelle Rydberg, said the studio is certain sure the filmmakers used stock film of a different crash that took place sometime in the 2000s, which it licensed from a stock-footage company.

But Paramount, however, refused multiple requests from Air Force Times to analyze provide the raw video of the crash it says the filmmakers used for "Project Almanac." Rydberg It would not, or identify the stock-footage company or which year and where the crash took place.

Meanwhile, The families of two of the victims of the 1994 crash say they are certain the clip shows is of the crash that killed their loved ones.

"I have no doubt," said Sarah Wolff, whose father- the daughter-in-law, Air Force Col. Robert Wolff, who was killed in the crash June 24, 1994, crash at Fairchild Air Force Base in Washington. "That footage. You see it once, and it gets ingrained in your head."

"It's the actual footage," agreed Pat McGeehan, a member of West Virginia's House of Delegates and a former Air Force intelligence officer. McGeehan's father, Lt. Col. Mark McGeehan, was also died killed in the crash while serving as co-pilot.

ID=22060797Pat McGeehan Pat said in a Jan. 16 interview he is disappointed upset the filmmakers have exploited imagery of what he believes are his father's last moments alive in this context in which what he believes fatal footage is being used. "It's unfortunate that they would have to utilize that particular footage of a real-life aircraft tragedy, especially in this age of computer animation and computer-generated special effects," he added. "It's even more disappointing that they're utilizing it for a science fiction movie, versus maybe a documentary or a nonfiction-type film. The direction they went in placing my father's accident into the movie is upsetting."

Sarah Wolff said she is upset also angered that the video is apparently being used to depict a passenger plane crash, not a military crash as it actually was. "I understand it's public footage, but the way they're using it ... not even portraying it in a true fashion is an extra insult to injury," she said.

"Project Almanac" is about a group of teens who build a time machine and use it to change their pasts. Their alterations start to have unintended consequences, including inadvertently causing a fiery airplane crash. The film's second trailer, posted online in November, shows the characters looking at computer screen showing video of the incident crash on a computer screen.

Producer Michael Bay's other credits include "The Transformers" franchise, "Pearl Harbor" and "Armageddon."

Photo Credit: Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP

During the Gulf War, B-52s flew 35-hour nonstop combat missions aided by aerial refueling as they took off from Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana, launched cruise missiles at Iraqi forces, and flew back to the U.S. B-52s delivered 40 percent of all weapons dropped by coalition forces during that conflict.

The B-52's lengthy 56.4-meter wingspan and eight Pratt and Whitney engines give the aircraft an unmistakable silhouette.

There are many similarities between the movie trailer and to video of the 1994 crash, which is widely available online. Among them:

  • The plane in the trailer appears to also be a B-52 and comes in at a seemingly identical angle as the B-52H in the 1994 video.
  • Like in the 1994 video, the crashing plane in the trailer appears to strike power lines, causing a shower of sparks right before impact.
  • In the trailer, the plane's left wing hits the ground first, and the rest of the plane crumples into the ground immediately afterwards. The 1994 video shows a seemingly identical impact.
  • The crash in the trailer causes a fireball that erupts from right to left, just like the fireball in the 1994 video.
  • The trailer's crash shows buildings nearby that are seemingly identical to the buildings at the 1994 crash site.

ID=22050481There is one major difference between the two. The movie's crash site shows an SUV or some other vehicle parked in the foreground that is not in the original video from 1994. The clip in the movie also contains graphics that make it look like a news broadcast whereas the original was shot like a home movie, complete with a date stamp.

Since 2000, there have been three accidents involving B-52s, according to the Air Force's accident investigation records, but none is that are likely to be the crash depicted in the movie trailer. In July 2008, a B-52 crashed into the ocean 30 nautical miles northwest of Guam, killing all six members of the aircrew. But that was at sea, whereas the movie trailer shows a plane crashing into land.

In November 2012, a B-52H lost inbound wing flap sections shortly after taking off from Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma. The accident caused considerable damage to the aircraft, but no crew members were injured, the plane made a safe emergency landing and there was no fiery crash.

A December 2001 incident involving a B-52H crash at an undisclosed location overseas in an Air Force Central Command location remains classified, according to the Air Force. That occurred someplace in the Middle East, and it is unlikely video of such a classified incident would end up in the hands of a stock footage company and sold.

Sarah Wolff said she first learned of the movie when she saw a commercial for it in mid-January last week while watching Nickelodeon with her 8-year-old twin daughters.

"To say I was shocked," Wolff said, "to see the footage is an understatement." Wolff said.

She called to her husband, Robert Wolff Jr., into the room, who agreed confirmed that it was the video of his father's fatal crash.

What happened to Czar 52

The B-52H carrying Wolff and McGeehan video of the Stratofortress, which went by the call sign Czar 52. The sight of it stalling, crashing and exploding in a massive fireball is still horrifying more than two decades later.

The plane took off on a bright summer afternoon, amid what appeared to be perfect conditions. According to the crash report, there was no significant weather in the area, cloud cover was virtually nonexistent, and the pilots could see an estimated 10 miles away. The wind was blowing less than 13 mph — nothing that should have presented any complications for an experienced pilot. amid what appears to be gorgeous summer conditions: bright sunshine, nothing out of the ordinary.

The flight was a practice run for an airshow scheduled two days later. Flown The B-52, flown by Lt. Col. Arthur "Bud" Holland, the bomber made a low, slow pass above a runway before banking sharply to the left. When its bank hit 90 degrees, the plane stalled and plunged wing-first into the ground. The pilot's flight manual said the plane should have banked no more than 30 degrees, according to the Air Force's accident investigation report. The flight was a practice run for an airshow scheduled two days later.

Investigators The report placed the blame on Holland, who was described in the report as an "excessively aggressive" pilot with whom some airmen simply refused to fly. In fact, two months before the crash, Lt. Col. Mark McGeehan, then commander of the 325th Bomb Squadron, asked his superiors to revoke Holland's flight privileges.

Tragically, his request was not granted.

Wolff, -- who was was vice commander of Fairchild's the 92nd Bomb Wing, at Fairchild -- was on board the aircraft observing the flight. The fourth airman killed was Lt. Col. Kenneth Huston, who was the radar navigator.

McGeehan's son Pat said in a Jan. 16 interview he is upset at the context in which what he believes is his father's fatal footage is being used.

"It's unfortunate that they would have to utilize that particular footage of a real-life aircraft tragedy, especially in this age of computer animation and computer-generated special effects," McGeehan said. "It's even more disappointing, utilizing it for a science fiction movie, versus maybe a documentary or a nonfiction-type film. The direction they went in placing my father's accident in the movie is upsetting."

Sarah Wolff said she is also angered that the video is apparently being used to depict a passenger plane crash, not a military crash as it actually was.

"I understand it's public footage, but the way they're using it ... not even portraying it in a true fashion is an extra insult to injury," Wolff said.

McGeehan's son spoke to Kelley, the Paramount executive, and said he was "disturbed" that she continued to insist the footage is of the crash in Japan, not of the B-52 at Fairchild.

"I was pretty floored after I got off the phone," Pat McGeehan said. "It's completely distasteful."said he intends planned to call Paramount Pictures and to ask some questions, but he's not confident doesn't think it'll do much good.

With the movie scheduled to come out Jan. 30, Wolff thinks it's too late to remove the footage in question. possible images of Czar 52's crash. She wishes the studio had told the families last year, so they could have registered their displeasure in time to get the movie changed.

Instead, Wolff is encouraging people to boycott the movie.

"Just don't go see it, if they have that much disrespect for the military," she added. "That's the way I feel about it at this point."

Stephen Losey is the air warfare reporter for Defense News. He previously covered leadership and personnel issues at Air Force Times, and the Pentagon, special operations and air warfare at Military.com. He has traveled to the Middle East to cover U.S. Air Force operations.

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