A Mangled 747
The scene was chaotic, yet eerily quiet.
As we rolled-up to the wreckage, the fuselage of the huge aircraft suddenly surrounded us, scattered all over the neighborhood.

Some small sections were smoldering. Other large sections were torn apart, revealing rows of seats, cavernous cargo holds and personal effects soaked in hydraulic fluid.
Hundreds of miles of avionics wiring loosely threaded the broken jumbo jet together, with one of the engines planted firmly on a nearly front lawn.

From the signature double-aisle 3-4-3 layout in the economy cabin, I knew immediately this was a Boeing 747. And with the tail section still in tact, the livery told me it belonged to All Nippon Airways.

There were no signs of life. No passengers. No rescue crews. Just us. About 200 people, snapping pictures, wondering just what went wrong.
“Folks, what you see here is a real aircraft used in the 2005 Steven Spielberg film War of the Worlds,” the smiling Universal Studios tour guide announced over the tram PA.
It was one of several stops on the famous back-lot tour, and it was instantly the most memorable for me.
An actual 747, trucked in and torn apart to form an unforgettable movie set only aviation buffs could truly appreciate.
For a moment, I thought of myself as an NTSB investigator arriving on the scene of a terrible catastrophe, ready to go to work figuring out where the accident chain began and ended.
But unlike Tenerife, Lockerbie, or Long Island, this 747 scene didn’t come with the worst part of any investigator’s job. No death. No remains. No families to notify.
Just an up-close view of the massive destruction inherent to a 900,000 pound machine that suddenly stops flying.
And as the tram slowly pulled away to its next studio set, I felt a new found respect for those charged with the massive task of putting these pieces back together.
A critical responsibility to find a cause, and closure, after the worst case scenario.
For information on how to get up close to this amazing movie set, go to the Universal Studios Hollywood website.








