Sully
It’s Thursday January 15, 2009 at 3:27 PM and it’s
a typically cold wintery day in New York City. And while 8 years have passed,
no one in that city will ever forget the tragic events of 9/11 regardless the
span of time. No doubt nerves were probably still raw and frayed from the emotional
devastation of seeing 3000 plus civilians being murdered by terrorists who had commandeered
two commercial jets in order to slam them into the World Trade Center Buildings.
The unforgettable smell of fuel and the sounds of jet engines flying slowly and
low over the skyline of NY City that day had indelibly etched their impact into
the collective hearts and conscience of everyone who lived and worked in New
York forever.
And yet on this day, this very specific new day
and time, citizens of NY looked towards the sky again to a familiar sight and sound
to wondered briefly were the horrors of 9/11 about to repeat itself when from the
direction of LaGuardia Airport a low flying jet with smoke coming from its
fuselage could be seen over the city’s skyline. An Airbus 320A US Airways jet to
be specific could be seen careening at very low altitude heading towards the city’s
population center to possibly cause death and destruction all over again. However
what little did anyone know in that brief moment was what they were actually seeing
was not a terrorist attack but instead the witnessing of what later became to
be called the “Miracle on the Hudson” where 40 year plus pilot Captain “Sully”
Sullenberger (Hanks) glided his terribly disabled commercial jet onto the
frigid icy waters of the Hudson River, saving all 155 lives aboard. And for that
one brief moment, the city collectively had something to cheer about and a Captain
named Sully Sullenberger to praise as a national hero. Or was he? Sully was
being heralded by the public and the media for his unprecedented feat of
aviation skill, while an investigation was unfolding that threatened to destroy
his reputation and his career. This is the story of “Sully”.
REVIEW: Director Clint Eastwood has a reputation just
like the Airbus jet in this film is to always pace his films story telling with
an effective and efficient easy slow and low approach. Meaning he never goes
for the cheap gimmicky scenes just to gas up his films. He lets the story tell
itself in its more actual reality of good people simply trying to do the best
they can under extremely difficult circumstances. And in that regard I found “Sully’
to very satisfying entertainment. But in his effort to getting the story just
right, I felt in the first 30 minutes the writing felt like nothing more than a bureaucratic
gottcha slog (a backstory surprise to me) of how higher ups at the NTSB, particularly
the investigators who were charged to finding out what happened that day, had
very high suspicions and grave doubts about Capt. Sully accounts of that day. Specifically
they believed from simulators and computer data Sully made terribly miscalculations
in his judgement and was negligent in his duties in those first two minutes or
he was just simply physically and or emotional ill-equipped to ever be a commercial
pilot again.
The film Sully itself overall is solidly strong, but
what makes the film even better is Tom Hanks. Once again Hanks captures (in my
mind) the real face of American heroism as he impressively achieves a portrayal
of a good man whose heroism was made of the right stuff on a day while facing looming
unprecedented peril. Hanks in my mind deserves another Oscar Nomination for
Best Actor as it is along with Jeff Bridges are two of the best performances I
have seen this year. My guess he won’t get it because the film a few times (with
the exception of the last 40 minutes) felt a bit dialog thin; overly stretched if
you will for its 96 minutes running time.
Still I highly recommend you see Sully on the
screen as Eastwood does make overall Sully one of the better mainstream films I
have seen this year. But the real star, the real reason the film soars, the
real reason I will remember this story is Tom Hanks.
4 times in Hanks career I believe he has captured
in my mind what truly an American hero really looks and sounds like. Whether it
was with Commander Jim Lovell in outer space , (“Apollo 13”), or on land with Captain John H. Miller (“Saving
Private Ryan”), or on water with Captain Richard Phillips (“Captain “Phillips”) or in air with Captain
Chesley “Sully” Sullenberger (“Sully”), Hanks always seems to inject the right
tone, the right look, the right expressive face and the right human emotion of
what leadership looks like under dangerous and trying circumstances.
You forget Hanks is actor when he is on the
screen, because he is more that his title. He is an American gift to our consciousness
that humanity and decency along with courage and self-sacrifice can co-exist in
the same body at the same time.
Bravo Tom Hanks, Bravo.
3 - 3/4 Stars
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