Surely you can’t be serious: There’s an unreleased director’s cut of “Airplane!” and you can soon see it in Upstate New York.

“Airplane! Live with Julie Hagerty and Robert Hays!” is coming to the Kodak Center in Rochester on May 29 and The Oncenter Crouse Hinds Theater in Syracuse on Oct. 8. Both events will begin at 7:30 p.m. with a special screening of the 1980 movie, followed by a Q&A with stars Julie Hagerty and Robert Hays.

Tickets for both “Airplane! Live” events go on sale Friday, Jan. 16, at 10 a.m. via Ticketmaster. Tickets for the Syracuse event can also be purchased in person at the Solvay Bank Box Office at The Oncenter(760 S. State Street, Syracuse, NY 13202).

A limited number of “First Class” VIP meet & greet tickets will be available as add-ons for a photo with Hagerty and Hays, as well as a tour poster signed by the pair. (Just don’t call them Shirley.)

Airplane!” is a highly quotable comedy classic written and directed by Jim Abrahams, David Zucker and Jerry Zucker. Hays stars as Ted Striker, a former fighter pilot who must safely land a commercial airplane with help from flight attendant Elaine Dickinson (Hagerty) after the rest of the plane’s crew becomes sick with food poisoning. The cast also includes Leslie Nielsen, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Lloyd Bridges, Lorna Patterson, Jonathan Banks, and an inflatable “autopilot” named Otto.

It’s considered one of the greatest comedy films of all time and was a landmark for the parody/spoof genre. The Zucker brothers also went on to make “The Naked Gun” movies with Nielsen (recently rebooted with Liam Neeson as Frank Drebin Jr.), while David Zucker also worked on “BASEketball” (with “South Park” co-creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone) and three “Scary Movie” sequels.

Hagerty and Hays are expected to share behind-the-scenes stories and memories from the making of “Airplane,” which will be shown on the big screen as a director’s cut. David Zucker told Cinema Blend that this version is actually shorter to improve the pacing.

“Jerry, Jim and I recut ‘Airplane!’ but it’s three minutes shorter,” Zucker said. “It’s the only director’s cut where it’s actually shorter than the original. But we cut it. We trimmed it because of pace. In the 45 years since it’s been released, we’ve shown it all over the world. We got it in our heads, well, this joke goes on too long. We gotta trim this, and we did.”