+ 3rd Best Movie of the Year
+ Best Drama of the Year
Denzel Washington at his very best, in Robert Zemeckis' Flight |
Captain Whip Whitaker lands a crashing airplane so that only 6 of the passengers die. His drug- and alcohol abuse, however, is against him, while he desperately steers his lie-clouded life onwards in the aftermath.
Great American director Robert Zemeckis (Back to the Future (1985)) has here made his best film yet, his first actual masterpiece. Flight impresses by moving from one outstanding scene to the next, unpredictable to the last one. The film is like a shark in the water and not, as the old Woody Allen joke continues, a dead shark.
An Oscar-nominated Denzel Washington (Training Day (2001)) gives the performance of a lifetime, commanding his character spectacularly, and everyone else follows his lead: John Goodman (The Big Lebowski (1998)), Bruce Greenwood (Star Trek Into Darkness (2013)), Don Cheadle (Hotel Rwanda (2004), Kelly Reilly (Me and Orson Welles (2008)), James Badge Dale (The Departed (2006), Tamara Tunie (Wall Street (1987)) and Melissa Leo (Frozen River (2008)).
The flight crash is especially spectacular and real edge-of-your-seat-exciti. For anyone with anything resembling discomfort or fear of flying, that scene is sheer terror.
The photography is eminent (by Don Burgess (Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003)). Several scenes are held for a long time, building a fierce intensity, in the Oscar-nominated script by John Gatins (Coach Carter (2005)).
Flight is a film about alcoholism, existential flight - and flying. It is thought-provoking and rock-solid.
As we re-watch Flight over and over again, we can also look forward to Washington's next movie, a more traditional vigilante actioner titled The Equalizer (2014) and Zemeckis' next, a period drama about the Twin Tower high wire artist of 1974 played by Joseph Gordon-Levitt called To Reach for the Stars (2015).
Related posts:
Robert Zemeckis: 2012 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED V]
2012 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED IV]
2012 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED III]
2012 in films and TV-series - according to Film Excess [UPDATED II]
2012 in films - according to Film Excess
Back to the Future Part III (1990) or, The DeLorean Time Traveler's Last Adventure
Back to the Future Part II (1989) or, The DeLorean Time Traveler Returns
Back to the Future (1985) or, The DeLorean Time Traveler
Watch the trailer here
Budget: 31 mil. $
Box office: 161.7 mil. $
= Big hit
What do you think of Flight?
What other movies command the subject of alcoholism as powerfully in your opinion?
No comments:
Post a Comment