The Agency's Posts

NBC confirms Jimmy Fallon will replace Jay Leno in 2014: Ending weeks of gossip and speculation, NBC confirmed thatJimmy Fallonwill succeedJay Lenoas....
Read More>

'Game of Thrones' renewed for fourth season: While its future wasn't in much doubt, fans of HBO's lavish fantasy series"Game of Thrones&
Read More>

Justin Timberlake tops album chart with 968,000 copies sold: He didn't quite hit the million-sold mark, though he came awfully close. Capping a....
Read More>

'Croods,' 'Olympus' rise at box office. CBS eyes TV Guide Network.: After the coffee. Before the matzo ball soup. The Skinny:I'm in D.C. forPassover, and it....
Read More>

Review: 'Olympus Has Fallen' a remix of standard action fare: Antoine Fuqua's White House-under-siege thriller doesn't add anything new to the genre, and....
Read More>

'Phil Spector,' on trial: HBO's movie about the record producer's murder trials distorts the truth and serves only to....
Read More>

Review: Justin Timberlake's 'The 20/20 Experience': It’s not hard to figure out whyJustin Timberlakehas been pushing an old-school vibe in....
Read More>

MGM plans for a new Bond movie 'within three years': MGMStudios plans to send James Bond on his next mission sooner than later, announcing Wednesday....
Read More>

'Burt Wonderstone': Has Carell made the most of post-'Office' life?: Steve Carellleft “The Office” for the same reason most actors do: to concentrate....
Read More>

'Spring Breakers' has virtues in its vices, critics say: Despite the initial shock over alt-film provocateurHarmony Korineteaming up with....
Read More>

Gerard Butler on Sacrificing His Life, Declining the '300' Sequel and His ... Bar Mitzvah: Gerard Butlerhas seen these kind of odds before. The Scottish actor stars in the March 22....
Read More>

Comedian Dave Chappelle resurfaces and speculation begins anew: After joking with Chris Rock about a possible tour at a recent stop at New York's Comedy Cellar,....
Read More>
Review: Denzel Washington skillfully pilots ill-fated 'Flight'
Posted on: 11/02/12
Share/Save/Bookmark
 

Portraying a troubled pilot, the actor soars in a Robert Zemeckis film that impresses technically but is weakened by movie trope repetition.



A commanding performance elevates a film, but it can expose it as well, underlining that the surrounding material is not up to the standard it sets. That's the case with "Flight," a solid, often engrossing film that doesn't engage us overall the wayDenzel Washington's work does.

Unquestionably one of America's best actors, Washington has increasingly relished playing morally ambivalent characters, and in this film, "Forrest Gump" director Robert Zemeckis' first live-action effort in a dozen years, he gets to play one of the most intriguing, Whip Whitaker.

Tattooed, flabby and catastrophically hung over, Whitaker is introduced lying face down in an Orlando, Fla., hotel room bed after what has clearly been a dissipated night of sex,substance abuse and very little sleep. So it is dismaying to discover not only that this man is a pilot in good standing for mythical SouthJet airlines, but also that he is scheduled to fly 102 souls to Atlanta in a raging thunderstorm that very morning.

PHOTOS: Robert Zemeckis' cinematic innovations

It takes a brisk line of cocaine just to get Whitaker out of bed and a jolt of in-cabin oxygen combined with a clandestinely self-mixed pitcher of vodka and orange juice to clear his head. With so many intoxicants in him, it's amazing that seeing straight is so much as an option.

But even stoned out of his mind, Whitaker can fly like Sully Sullenberger if the need arises. When his aircraft inexplicably plummets into an uncontrolled dive and seems headed for unmitigated disaster, Whitaker puts his plane through some highly unorthodox maneuvers and saves the day.

"Flight" is at its best during these scenes of complete midair chaos. Not only is Washington completely convincing at the controls, but Zemeckis, working with visual effects supervisor Kevin Baillie and special effects supervisor Michael Lantieri, uses his familiarity with all things digital to create an edge-of-seat sequence capable of convincing the most zealous frequent flier to swear off air travel for life.

Not every single passenger, as it turns out, survives these heroics, and as pilots union representative Charlie Anderson (a well-cast Bruce Greenwood) tells Whitaker, death demands the assigning of responsibility.

With a full-blown National Transportation and Safety Board investigation on the horizon, the question becomes whether Whitaker's bravery will be overshadowed by his formidable blood-alcohol count, whether despite his lifesaving exploits he will face lawsuits and even prison time for criminal negligence because of his actions.

Washington, as always, is expert at creating a complex character who is both wary and worried, a man who not only flies airplanes but is in flight from his life. Unfortunately, the story that surrounds Whitaker is not as subtle or involving as his performance.

"Flight" gives the impression that it is going to concern itself with the nature of heroism, with the difficulty of reconciling heroic actions with fallible human qualities, but instead it heads in a more familiar and formulaic direction: Can Whitaker confront his demons and stop drinking long enough to avoid becoming his own worst enemy?

This is territory that movies have visited innumerable times before, and "Flight" reminds us that though he's adventurous on a technical level, Zemeckis (whose last dramatic film was "Cast Away") tends to be relentlessly mainstream in terms of drama.

As written by John Gatins (whose most recent screenplay was "Real Steel"), "Flight's" potboiler story line has a hard time rising above the ordinary once that plane hits the ground and Whitaker's life skids out of control. Given that Gatins has an acknowledged history of difficulty with alcoholism, it is perhaps inevitable that "Flight" plays at times like a feature-length infomercial for the powers of AA. Its portrait of the redemptive journey, however, is less involving than the individual who takes it.

Although none of "Flight's" characters holds us the way Whitaker does, some fine acting by the film's supporting actors helps bring them alive. Don Cheadle is appropriately spit and polish as attorney Hugh Lang, brought in to help Whitaker with his defense, and John Goodman is outrageous as only John Goodman can be as Whitaker's always available personal Dr. Feelgood.

More problematic is the role of Nicole Maggen, a young woman who faces an addiction crisis of her own. Because she's recovering from a near-fatal heroin overdose at the hospital that's treating Whitaker, it is movie-inevitable that her life and the pilot's will intersect. Capable British actress Kelly Reilly ("Mrs. Henderson Presents," "Sherlock Holmes") takes on Nicole, Georgia accent and all, but the character's ups and downs, like the plot's, are finally too schematic for the film's good.

Fortunately, when all else fails, "Flight" turns to Washington. His ability to convey the agony of a soul in torment never lets us down, even if the film that surrounds him never rises to his heights.

 



COMMENTS
Be the first to post a comment!


Post A Comment:




  • It's 2020! Start booking roles in commercials, fashion, films, theater and more with The Agency Online!

  • NEW WORKSHOP with Barbara Barna & Sean De Simone!

    Hi Everyone and Happy Summer! Sean at Sean De Simone casting and Barbara Barna are teaming up for a super informative and fun Hosting for Home Shopping workshop. A great opportunity for established or experienced TV Hosts and Experts interested in learning how to get noticed and how to get in....
  • MASTERCLASS W. Robin Carus & David John Madore

    A Special Offer for the Agency Community, from one of our favorite NYC Casting Directors! EMAIL FacetheMusicWithUs@gmail.com Or Eventbrite To Sign Up! Class Size is Limited.
  • Don't Fall Into The Comparison Trap

    Hi Everyone! As the second installment in an ongoing series of features by the Agency's amazing community, here's some sage advice from our own Regina Rockensies; a humble (& awesome)veteran we've had the pleasure of working with for a long time. Have an excellent week! : ) - The Agency....
  • One Model's Agreement

    Hi Everyone! As the first piece in an ongoing series of original articles by the Agency community, here's a short reflection on some of the values of professional acting & modeling that we can all keep in mind for our next casting. Good luck on your castings &shoots this week! : ) -....




 
home       castings&news       privacy policy       terms and conditions      contact us      browser tips
Official PayPal Seal