Word: flightplanã
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Dates: during 2005-2005
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...modern Hitchcockian thriller with style and grace, “Flightplan?? is set in a not-so-distant future ruled by streamlined aesthetic minimalism. The film begins in a stark, frozen Berlin where Kyle Pratt (Foster), an emotionally drained aeronautical engineer, boards a luxurious double-decker airplane. Accompanied by her traumatized young daughter, Julia (Marlene Lawston), Kyle is traveling to New York to return the body of her husband, who died unexpectedly under suspicious circumstances...
Skillfully directed by Robert Schwentke, “Flightplan?? is most memorable for its lovely, long shots and overall elegant framings that recall the sort of compositions Hitchcock often favored...
...aesthetic unity alone cannot answer the obvious question—mainly, how can you pull off a fast-paced thriller when almost all of the film’s action occurs in the claustrophobic confines of an airplane? The suspense in “Flightplan?? lies in its subtleties—in its application of fast-moving cuts and disjunctive editing. The quietest moments of stillness, soft cues of music and whispers, and Foster’s restlessness project as much tension and charged anxiety as any proliferation of explosion-powered chase sequences might...
Artistic poise aside, you can’t help but ask if “Flightplan??—a film that dares to incorporate the association of airplanes and terrorism in a post 9/11 world—has some underlying agenda of social commentary? After an entire summer of allegory-laced big-budget action features with socio-political subtext, it’s refreshing to find a smart movie with no aspirations to social relevancy...
Following quickly on the heels of another aeronautical thriller, “Red Eye,” “Flightplan?? represents a new incarnation of the in-flight thriller, one that must contend with the public’s knee-jerk connections to recent historical realities. But “Flightplan?? works so well precisely because it refuses to get bogged down in prevailing American biases...
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