Oh
wow! Wow! Those were the words in my head as I watched veteran film maker Robert Zemeckis’ Flight.
Flight starring two time Academy
Award winner Denzel Washington, tells the story of Captain William
"Whip" Whitaker, an alcoholic and recreational druggie, who
successfully crash lands a passenger jet while under the influence of drugs and
booze. Whip saves 96 out of the 102 passengers and crew members on board. Unfortunately,
one of the dead is his flight attendant and occasional girlfriend, Katerina
Marquez (Nadine Velasquez), who had been out partying with him the previous
night.
The
film follows the subsequent investigation into the remote and immediate causes
of the plane crash and the heroics of Whip Whitaker whose unconventional method
of flying the plane upside brought it out of its nose dive; a move which
undoubtedly saved the 96 lives. Hired by the airline to control the situation
are Charlie Anderson (Bruce Greenwood) an old friend of Whip’s, and lawyer Hugh
Lang (Don Cheadle). This is a tough task as the toxicology report on Whip shows
that he was intoxicated at the point of the crash. However, Hugh uses his
skills to quash the report and assures that it would not see the light of day. With
a hearing by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) a few days away,
he approaches his co-pilot for the day Ken Evans (Brian Geraghty) and regular
attendant on his flights, Margaret Thomason (Tamara Tunie) and coerces them to
testify that that the SouthJet flight 227 was just like “any ordinary day”.
They agree.
Whip
retreats from the spotlight and befriends Nicole (Kelly Reilly) an addict he meets
at the hospital. Now while they try to draw strength from each other on the
road to the recovery, Whip slips back into his ways as he finds it hard to deal
with the attention, the pressure from the media, his lawyers, the airline and
his ex-wife’s refusal to let him see his son. Before long, Nicole abandons him
telling him that his refusal to get better is not good for her own recovery. He
hits rock bottom and has to move in with Charlie so as to stay clean into the
hearing. However, the night before the hearing, having been checked into a
locked and mini-bar-free hotel room, he takes advantage of an unlocked door to
an adjoining room and proceeds to empty its mini-bar. The next morning Charlie
and Hugh are furious when they find him drunk with the hearing an hour away.
Harling Mays drug dealer and friend of Whip’s, played by John Goodman is called
in. He brings some cocaine which straightens Whip out in time for the hearing.
At
the hearing he scales through all the questions asked by lead investigator Ellen
Block (Melissa Leo). It is revealed that the plane crash was caused by a
mechanical malfunction. Whip is in fact praised for his heroics echoing the sentiments
of the media. Ms. Block asks a final question as to the presence of two empty
bottles of vodka found in the crashed plane. The presence of the bottles is
contentious as Whip had ordered that drinks not be served during the flight due
to turbulence. And since Katerina’s report was the only one that showed alcohol
in her bloodstream, Ms. Block asks Whip if he thinks Katerina may have been
intoxicated at the time of the crash. Whip replies in the negative admitting
that he was the one that drank the vodka (which was true), that he was
intoxicated at the time of the crash and that he was currently intoxicated. The
hearing erupts with an angered Hugh and Charlie. Whip gets convicted of
manslaughter and serves a five year sentence.
Phew!
I just had to write that long plot synopsis to sort of help put the rest of the
review in perspective. Flight is one
powerful film, one that would have been talked about for days if it had come out in
the 80s or 90s - a classic. But in today’s film terrain is it so easy for a film
like Flight to get lost in the crowd.
Acting was very good all around. There was no over-acting as the STORY was the
star of the film. However, Denzel Washington’s performance was painfully
convincing bearing in mind that we could only see the outsides of who the man
Whip was. Can anyone really adequately evince the internal conflict that Whip
was going through? I sense this was deliberate by director Zemeckis (Back to the Future I-III, Forrest Gump, Cast
Away, Beowulf, A Christmas Carol) and writer John Gatlins (Coach Carter, Real Steel).
A
hero to many, a damaged person to himself and those who knew him, Whip Whitaker
was a bit of an anti-hero. I found myself not caring whether or not he was
drunk, crunk or freaking asleep! He did
save 96 lives! He saved 96 lives when everyone could have died! The mechanical fault
was not his, he was in control and he executed a move he probably would not
have thought of had he been sober. This was confirmed when simulations of his
flying the plane upside down by other pilots all ended in crashes.
But
the truth was that Whip was an addict; the kind of drunk and junkie that laymen
would not recognize his type required a trained eye. Whip was also a survivor:
he had survived his childhood, his failed marriage and was trying to survive
his condition when the plane crashed. Heck he was even trying to survive the
investigation! But he was doing that in the wrong place. The scene where he goes
around the farm house removing stashes of beer and bottles of alcohol had me
with my mouth open. Dude was an alcoholic! Booze was within easy reach in EVERY
room of the house!
Whip
was shown sometimes winning the fight against his addiction but always
eventually giving in to it. Even Nicole’s presence could not help him as he threatened
to drag her down too. The hotel room scene where he opens the mini-bar and sees
what could best be described as a “drunkard’s heaven” was classic. He opens the
mini-bar, and slowly takes in its contents. He picks up and fingers a miniature
bottle of vodka, opens it and inhales the all too familiar essence. With each movement
taking him a step closer to yielding into temptation, he seems to finally win the
battle by screwing the cap on tight and placing the bottle on the closed table
top and walking away. The optimists among us are all about to cheer but alas,
in a brilliant twist he reaches out to grab the bottle. Even the cynics are a
little sad.
Consequently,
Flight is a story about addiction and
what is sometimes required to end it – a big ass stage! For Whip he had coasted
on a drug and alcoholic wave and would have coasted into the books as a hero
but just at the last minute, just as he could have put the issue behind him
forever, he spills his guts. What is remarkable is that he could have done it
privately, in rehab or even at Nicole’s AA meeting where no one would have
judged him. But at the risk of tarnishing a defenceless Katerina’s memory, he
instead chose to spill at the one place where everyone was sure to hear. Ms.
Block gave him two outs and he opted for the significantly more painful one,
but one that would save him. He must have feared that if he missed this chance
to repent, he would not have gotten another. Flight shows us that sorting ourselves out is most times a very
painful process; we have to be willing to fight our very nature or the person
that we have become. We can lie to everyone, gloss over our lives but in the
end we cannot really lie to ourselves.
I
liked Flight a lot. It was a good
story where you do not know whether to root for Denzel Washington’s Whip or not.
In the end you seat back and hope that the right thing is done. In the end, it
is.
Awesome work as always.
ReplyDeleteTush mbeke
Thank you for reading! Pls share! (I just added the share buttons)
DeleteMy thoughts exactly! Excellent analysis.
ReplyDeleteThank you sir! I look forward to reading your books. :)
DeleteBravissimo. I only hope that means bravo. Lol. On point as per usual.
ReplyDeleteThanks bro!
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