Flight – The DVDfever Cinema Review

Flight

Flight is the one about Denzel Washington playing Captain William “Whip” Whitaker, a functioning alcholic and drug addict who, after a heavy night with air hostess, Trina (Nadine Velazquez), he takes to the sky in Southjet 227, a 9am flight to Atlanta, which suffers chronic mechanical failure along the way, making the plane head into an inescapable dive, except for Whip’s quick-thinking plan to flip the plane upside down and then back around before crash-landing in a field.

On the basis of it, he’s a hero for saving the lives of the crew & every passenger on board…



Simulation tests show later that no other pilot could’ve landed the plane and saved any lives, so they at least have him to thank for that. However, he still has the matter of his personal demons to deal with, and after waking up in hospital, he eventually meets with lawyer Hugh (Don Cheadle), who tells him that a toxicology report was carried out while he was spark out in the hospital… and it proved not only he was drunk, but also that he was high on cocaine. And if the authorities prove he caused the death of six individuals on the plane, instead of being the hero of the hour, he could go to jail for manslaughter.

Of course, we know that the fact the crash wasn’t his fault, it was down to the plane “falling apart”, as Whip describes it.

Whilst in hospital, he meets Nicole (Surrey-born Kelly Reilly), which is not a new idea – two drink/drug abusers finding common ground – and after setting that sub-plot up, you find it doesn’t really go anywhere.



When it comes to the cast, I still maintain that I don’t think Denzel Washington can act his way out of a paper bag; John Goodman turns up a couple of times as Harling Mays, Whip’s dealer; Don Cheadle is fine but doesn’t have anything too stretching to deal with here; and there’s precious little of Robert Zemeckis’ touches to set this apart from any other film.

Beyond a couple of minor twists and turns, not least with the plane, this is a fairly standard drama, but doesn’t particularly drag, so it has that in its favour. However, it runs for 138 minutes and really doesn’t need to last longer than two hours.



Cert:
Running time: 138 minutes
Year: 2012
Released: February 1st 2013
Widescreen: 2.35:1 (Redcode RAW (5K))
Rating: 6/10

Director: Robert Zemeckis
Producers: Laurie MacDonald, Walter F. Parkes, Jack Rapke, Steve Starkey and Robert Zemeckis
Screenplay: John Gatins
Music: Alan Silvestri

Cast:
Whip Whitaker: Denzel Washington
Hugh Lang: Don Cheadle
Nicole: Kelly Reilly
Harling Mays: John Goodman
Ken Evans: Brian Geraghty
Katerina Marquez: Nadine Velazquez
Camelia Satou: Boni Yanagisawa
Margaret Thomason: Tamara Tunie
Kip: Conor O’Neill
Gaunt Young Man: James Badge Dale
Whip’s Dad: Timothy Adams
Deana: Garcelle Beauvais
Ellen Block: Melissa Leo
Tiki Pot: Charlie E. Schmidt


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