Los Angeles Times

Long obsession with hijacker

Our enduring obsession with D. B. Cooper says much about America.

- LORRAINE ALI TELEVISION CRITIC

HBO’s “The Mystery of D. B. Cooper” is best when it dissects why we still care about this sky pirate.

It was Thanksgivi­ng eve, 1971, when a mystery man known only as Dan Cooper hijacked a commercial airliner out of Portland Internatio­nal Airport. He sat in the last row of seats on the plane, where he slipped a note to the f light attendant, informing her he had a bomb in his attaché case. He demanded a $ 200,000 ransom and four parachutes, which were delivered to the craft on the tarmac. Once in the air, he instructed the pilot to fly low, at 10,000 feet, then jumped from the 727 somewhere over the rugged Pacific Northwest, leaving behind one of the most enduring whodunits in modern history. Who was D. B. Cooper? And did he make it out alive?

The only unsolved airline hijacking in American history is the subject of HBO’s new documentar­y film “The Mystery of D. B. Cooper,” which premiered Wednesday — 49 years to the day since the high- flying heist. The film constructs a compelling narrative from a story that’s been told, retold, scrutinize­d, picked apart and sewn back together with new bits of real and imagined informatio­n ... hundreds if not thousands of times.

Spoiler alert: This film by director John Dower (“Thrilla in Manila,” “My Scientolog­y Movie”) does not break the case wide open like, say, “The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst” did the death of Susan Berman, for which Durst now stands trial in Los Angeles. In fact, it doesn’t reveal much of anything new for investigat­ors or true Cooper enthusiast­s to chew on.

“The Mystery of D. B. Cooper” instead dissects an equally fascinatin­g slice of the story: why we still care about this unidentifi­ed criminal, his bizarre scheme and every minute detail of that night, right down to the cigarette brand he smoked ( Raleigh filtered) and his seat number ( 18C, 18E, or 15D, depending on who’s spinning the tale). Cooper first jumped into the nation’s psyche when regular folks were watching their chances at the American Dream slip away. The postrecess­ion unemployme­nt rate was hovering around 6%. The Vietnam War raged on. A drop in airline production, a. k. a. the “Boeing bust,” was in the process of decimating Seattle’s aerospace industry and its workforce. People were war- weary and hurting for money — and The Establishm­ent didn’t appear to care.

Cooper tapped into that disillusio­nment, capturing America’s collective imaginatio­n after a massive manhunt failed to find him. Many believed he beat a system that was beating him, or at least died trying. He became a hero for cynical times, a symbol of sticking it to the man. No wonder we’re still fascinated.

Coming on the heels of multiple podcasts and History’s “D. B. Cooper: Case Closed?,” HBO’s treatment of the evergreen saga remains fresh, fun and all- consuming. The film delivers a prismatic retelling of the Cooper saga through four of the case’s prime suspects, all of whom are now deceased. They include a transgende­r pilot, a charismati­c grifter, a beloved uncle and a supposed copycat criminal. Some people claimed they were Cooper on their deathbeds. Others were suspected by friends and family. One was killed by an FBI agent.

Acquaintan­ces and relatives of the suspects spin fascinatin­g tales about these people of interest. The stories are woven together into a larger narrative that includes interviews with several members of the original airline crew of Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 305, a passenger who sat near the hijacker, multiple former FBI agents, and plenty of amateur sleuths who’ve spent the better part of their life trying to solve the riddle of Cooper.

These obsessives search for shreds of parachute in the dense forests of the Northwest, remnants of buckles or metal from his harness and, of course, any trace of the money. The last gripping clue was discovered in 1980 by a 9- year- old boy on the banks of the Columbia River. He found what amounted to $ 5,800 in $ 20 bills, bound by rubber bands and badly decomposed. The serial numbers matched those from the ransom money. There’s been nothing as concrete since. Pop culture has stepped in where investigat­ors have fallen short, filling in the blanks with true and fictionali­zed accounts about the fate of D. B Cooper.

Nearly half a century’s worth of books, TV shows, comics, films, songs and festivals have been devoted to completing the puzzle or have played off the myth of Cooper, a phantom who’s enthralled since Nixon was in office. Leonard Nimoy’s “In Search Of ” TV series took on Cooper in the ’ 70s, right alongside episodes devoted to the Bermuda Triangle and the Loch Ness monster. Treat Williams played Cooper, and Robert Duvall the insurance investigat­or who pursued him, in 1981’ s feature film “The Pursuit of D. B. Cooper.” In the 1990s, “Twin Peaks” knowingly flicked at the mystery while Kid Rock rapped about Cooper.

Staring back at us the whole time, almost mockingly, is the FBI’s original facial composite sketch. Cooper is the picture of a ’ 70s businessma­n on the go: He wears a dark suit, black tie and white button- down shirt. His thinning hair is combed neatly to the side. His thickrimme­d, dark sunglasses look like something out of a Tarantino film.

That aesthetic might explain why some “Mad Men” conspiracy theorists, bloggers and fans came to believe that Don Draper ( played by Jon Hamm) would be revealed to be D. B. Cooper, and pointed to clues in the series as evidence. ( Creator Matthew Weiner dismissed the idea.) But it wasn’t that much of a stretch considerin­g that real- life witnesses to the hijacking recalled the perpetrato­r chain- smoking, drinking whiskey, and possibly flirting with the stewardess.

The FBI officially put the case to bed in 2016, which of course ignited a new wave of interest in the 20th century outlaw who dropped from the sky. With HBO’s new film, the mystery continues — as does the need for something or someone to believe in when the system has got you down.

 ?? Associated Press ?? THE MYSTERY MAN known as D. B. Cooper is shown in sketches created from recollecti­ons of passengers and crew aboard the jet he hijacked on Nov. 24, 1971.
Associated Press THE MYSTERY MAN known as D. B. Cooper is shown in sketches created from recollecti­ons of passengers and crew aboard the jet he hijacked on Nov. 24, 1971.

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