Liam Neeson plays Bill Marks, a reformed alcoholic ex-NYPD officer who works as a Federal Air Marshal and handles his job as a regular desk job despite the fact that lives could be in danger on every flight, in the 2014 Jaume Collet-Serra film “Non-Stop.” When he receives a string of threatening texts from a passenger on a flight from New York to London, he realises that a killer is aboard on one of his seemingly routine workdays.
According to the texts Bill received, if the airline does not transfer $150 million into an offshore account, a passenger will die every 20 minutes. Along with Neeson, Julianne Moore, Scoot McNairy, Michelle Dockery, Nate Parker, and Corey Stoll are among the film’s superb ensemble cast. The majority of the plot takes place during the trip, raising the question of whether or not the movie was actually filmed inside an aeroplane. Let’s find out then, shall we?
Non-Stop Filming Locations
Filming for “Non-Stop” took place in New York, primarily in and around New York City. According to rumours, the Liam Neeson starrer’s primary photography began in early November 2012 and ended in late January 2013. So let’s get right to all the individual areas that served as stand-ins for the plane where much of the action occurs!
New York City, New York
The majority of the ‘Non-Stop’ filming took place in New York City, with the production crew mostly utilising the York Studios’ resources at 34-02 Laurel Hill Boulevard in the Queens borough. Being the first film to be filmed at the studio, it was necessary to build the plane’s set entirely from scratch and slightly larger than a typical passenger jet to account for Neeson’s height. Neeson claimed that this built plane was where most of the shooting took place.
The production crew even established a base within Terminal 4 at John F. Kennedy International Airport, often known as JFK Airport, in Queens, where they captured numerous crucial scenes for “Non-Stop” in December 2012. According to reports, the cast and crew travelled from New York City to Long Island to film significant scenes at the Long Island MacArthur Airport, also known as Islip Airport, located at 100 Arrival Avenue in Ronkonkoma.
Director Jaume Collet-Serra was asked about shooting on the same set for 40 days and if there were any benefits during a conversation with Collider in June 2014. No, it’s the reverse, he said. You’ve performed that scene in that identical seat before, and now you have to think of a new intriguing way to perform it. It seems like a challenge to me.
As experience would tell you, it’s fine, Jaume continued, “Yes, if you’re in the same spot, you can pick up bullets. What shots though? If it’s a shot you’ve already taken, you won’t choose it again. These days, returning to a place or inserting a scene is always an option in films, so this is no longer a problem. However, returning daily to the same plane throws your brain off.
In addition to “Non-Stop,” New York City has been a popular primary shooting location for a number of films and TV shows. The Commuter, The Warriors, John Wick: Chapter 2, and The Fate of the Furious are a few famous examples.