First thing, the movie aircraft IS NOT a Boeing 727! Geesh, it only has two engines.
It is a McDonnell Douglas MD-80 or a DC-9-50.
The Airline I work for can't even give them away, their being sold for scrap (MD-80's).
As far as rolling 727, you need to ask a couple of TWA pilots that one. It's an Airline legend - TWA Flight 841
Captain Hoot Gibson and the 727; They didn't roll, it had an autopilot malfunction at max altitude and rolled off to around 110 degrees and the nose went down to 70 degrees. They couldn't disconnect the autopilot using any of the usual means and the airplane exceeded Mach 1. At this point they were getting low and fast and put the gear down in an attempt to slow the airplane, at this point the gear doors and gear actuators tore off from air loads and this evacuated both hydraulic systems, this disconnected the auto pilot. Hoot landed the airplane and it was a heavy 727-100 that was a popular airplane for freighters and it was later bought by fed Ex and up until the late 90's was still operated by them.
The trial of the crew was not over as American, United and TWA as operators as well as Boeing and the autopilot manufacturer (can't remember who it was) had a lot of dough at stake and the crew is the best entity to blame it on, even though the airplane had a history of difficulty in autopilot disconnecting (which was very uncharacteristic in my much later experience in the airplane, it'd disconnect by snapping the wheel mounted chart holder hard) so the Flight Engineer was targeted to testify that he re-entered the cockpit after a rest room visit and found all of the slat and leading edge flap circuit breakers pulled. Seeing this he was told to say he reset them all without telling the Captain or FO. The story being that the Captain and FO pulled them in his absense, selected flaps 2, which would move the fowler flaps rearward only and increase the wing area enough to allow a higher altitude in cruise flight thus enabling a non-stop flight to destination westbound into the prevailing westerly winds. This was known as the "west coast technique" by American Airlines crews, but no one at TWA I knew had done it, or ever knew anyone that did do it.
The Fight Engineer quit after the hearings, the FO never upgraded to Captain before he retired early and the Captain was a colorful character and he did retire as an International Captain.
The crew was hung out to dry by the industry.
Chris...
P.S. I just read the Wiki article, it describes a lot of the intrigue involved, but the two rolls is in direct opposition of my training about it at TWA and my father and Hoot's stories. Hoot did say the airplane rolled in the TV Hearing and since then the instructions by all pilot unions is to NEVER make a public statement and they protect the pilots from such a circus by threat of legal action against the airlines. Works like a charm, no BS statements under stress, etc.