Monday 21 January 2013

Flight: Movie Review

Flight: Movie Review


Cast: Denzel Washington, Kelly Reilly, John Goodman, Don Cheadle, Bruce Greenwood, Nadine Velazquez
Director: Robert Zemeckis

Director Robert Zemeckis returns to his first live action film since Castaway back in 2000.

In this, which has seen Denzel Washington nominated for an Oscar, Denzel plays alcoholic and addicted pilot, Captain Whip Whitaker. When we first meet him, he's waking up from a heavy night of booze, drugs and sex with cabin crew member Katerina Marquez (Velazquez). Due to fly a little later that morning, Whip does a line of cocaine to remain centred before boarding his flight to Atlanta.

However, after some quite rough turbulence on take off, things seem to be going okay. That is until some time into the flight when the plane suddenly begins to nose dive. With equipment failing and his co-pilot beginning to panic, Whip has no choice but to flip the plane upside down and try and land it. But he can't completely save the day and the plane crashes in a field, killing six of the 102 onboard.

When Whip comes around in hospital, he finds an investigation into what went wrong is underway - and he realises, that despite the plane potentially being at fault, his addiction could squarely come into the spotlight and the blame could land on his shoulders....

Flight is an utterly compelling and non-showy portrait of addiction.

It's also Denzel's film from beginning to end - with a side of chilling plane crash to put you off flying forever. Washington has everything down pat, from a captain reassuring his passengers that everything will be ok while lacing an orange juice with 2 mini bottles of vodka to a scene in a hotel where a mini bar offers temptation and salvation in equal measures, and defies your expectations, it's a performance which is airborne from the minute it begins and stays at a stellar height all the way through, while carefully negotiating the line of agony for his character and anger at his actions.

It starts with a bang and charisma as Whip deals with his ex-wife while dealing with the remnants of a night before - and then thanks to a blistering and swaggering soundtrack - he hits the plane in a sequence which is grippingly real and will put some off flying for good. While Denzel's understated and peerless performance is to be commended, his story's interspliced with the relationship he forms with Kelly Reilly's Nicole, who's recovering from a heroin overdose. It's this pairing that really gives the addiction storyline its edge, with one wanting to turn their life around and another proffering up false promises to do the same. Throw in a great character performance from John Goodman, as Harling Mays, Whip's dealer and long time friend (whose two brief appearances simply blow anything else away on the screen) and solid support from Cheadle and Greenwood and it's clear Flight's set a course for acting masterclasses, with dry humour peppered therein.

But it's also the slow burn of the story which grips as it begins to play towards its horrifying and perhaps inevitable conclusion as Whip's web of denial begins to wind around him, choking him with the truth of what will have to happen. Zemeckis uses the time to build up scenes thanks to precision direction and a great leading man and the effect is mesmerisingly good. (The aforementioned mini-bar sequence shows how he's great at taking a scene, extending it out a little and never losing you in the final outcome - although the final sequence reeks of Hollywood cliche and while watchable, feels a little forced given the way the story's gone)

All in all, Flight stands on a towering performance from Washington's portrait of addiction - he's rightly been nominated for an Oscar (after all, Academy loves issues) but it's also a compelling story which avoids outright pity and simply dumps its hero in a situation where he has to take control of his life as it tells a fairly common Hollywood story of detox and life turn-around, but one which is definitely worth boarding.

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