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Helicopter Pilot dialogue in films


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Hello all,

 

My name is Chris and I am a filmmaker and writer. I am currently writing and researching a script for a short film. It is a near future science fiction film with a helicopter battle with ground troops and other aircraft in an urban environment.

 

I quickly realized as I wrote this sequence that I have no idea how helicopter pilots would communicate with each other during a battle nor what terms they might use.

 

This is something that bothers me in films, when people get something so wrong when it could have been solved by doing some research.

 

My questions are as follows...

 

What movies do you feel got the dialogue correct? What movies portray helicopter battles accurately? Are there any good resources for proper "etiquette" and terms used by Helicopter pilots?

 

Any help would greatly be appreciated.

 

Thanks,

Chris

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The FAA publishes a reference book every year called the FAR/AIM. In the back is a section called the "Pilot/ Controller Glossary" It has a lot of acronyms, but the terms in bold are pretty common. You can find it on-line, I attached the PDF. Since it is published every year, old hard copies are pretty easy to come by. Try asking a local flight school if they have any old ones you can have. If your really desperate, I've got a few laying around I can send you!

pcg.pdf

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Black Hawk Down is probably the best example of modern crew coordination/communication I've seen in a film.

Good to know that the movie was pretty accurate, it's a great film.

 

I see you are based in Savannah, I went to SCAD and used to cycle around Hunter with a couple of rangers based there. That was back around 2003-2004. Do they still let civilians do that?

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The FAA publishes a reference book every year called the FAR/AIM. In the back is a section called the "Pilot/ Controller Glossary" It has a lot of acronyms, but the terms in bold are pretty common. You can find it on-line, I attached the PDF. Since it is published every year, old hard copies are pretty easy to come by. Try asking a local flight school if they have any old ones you can have. If your really desperate, I've got a few laying around I can send you!

That PDF is great! Really helpful, thank you. I'll just have to be careful not to include too many cool acronyms so the general audience can follow :)

 

Cheers!

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The FAA publishes a reference book every year called the FAR/AIM. In the back is a section called the "Pilot/ Controller Glossary" It has a lot of acronyms, but the terms in bold are pretty common. You can find it on-line, I attached the PDF. Since it is published every year, old hard copies are pretty easy to come by. Try asking a local flight school if they have any old ones you can have. If your really desperate, I've got a few laying around I can send you!

 

 

You will never find the terminology and phrasing between a military helicopter pilot and ground force in a FAA produced product.

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Hello all,

 

My name is Chris and I am a filmmaker and writer. I am currently writing and researching a script for a short film. It is a near future science fiction film with a helicopter battle with ground troops and other aircraft in an urban environment.

 

I quickly realized as I wrote this sequence that I have no idea how helicopter pilots would communicate with each other during a battle nor what terms they might use.

 

This is something that bothers me in films, when people get something so wrong when it could have been solved by doing some research.

 

My questions are as follows...

 

What movies do you feel got the dialogue correct? What movies portray helicopter battles accurately? Are there any good resources for proper "etiquette" and terms used by Helicopter pilots?

 

Any help would greatly be appreciated.

 

Thanks,

Chris

 

On a related note, if this ever goes to production, make sure you use accurate helicopter sound FX. Nothing is more annoying than almost every movie helicopter sounding like a Huey.

 

Mike

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