It really brings in despair

Melba 2022-04-20 09:01:32

At the beginning of the film, a passenger plane flies in a thrilling flight between high-rise buildings in New York, the wing rubs against a house, and then it crashes, and Captain Sully wakes up from his nightmare. This is the first time the film flashes back to the landing process of flight 1549. The first perspective and virtual scene describe the urgency of the situation and the seriousness of the consequences from the side of the captain's nightmare. What can the audience receive from the sudden nightmare? How terrifying it would be to fail a forced landing, and the pressure the captain would be under before and after. In the first flashback, I told the audience that although there were no casualties in reality, the incident itself was very critical. Here is the standard Hollywood narrative, and the perspective switches to the most exciting picture presentation at any time, just to tell you how terrible the crash is.

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Extended Reading
  • Kylee 2022-01-27 08:05:09

    3.5 The Republican spokesperson, Dong Mu, would be able to imagine what it would be like to shoot this theme, personal hero + loneliness-so, he has acted and filmed all his life, they are all Westerns, and the protagonists are such heroes. In fact, at the beginning of the movie, it was good to stop at accident analysis and even the captain’s psychological ups and downs, but in the end it turned into a connection between professionalism and high morals. It’s not necessary. After all, the captain’s experience and technology saved everything.

  • Tiara 2022-01-27 08:05:09

    Combining Capra's American conscience with Ford's far-right westerns, the censorship is a reproduction of "McCarthyism."

Sully quotes

  • Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger: [New York late at night and both men can't sleep so they decide to go for a walk. It's cold outside and both are bundled up] It's all so unreal. I guess I'm just having a little trouble separating reality from whatever the hell this is.

    Jeff Skiles: This is two men freezing their asses off.

    [They both laugh]

    Jeff Skiles: Sully

    [pause]

    Jeff Skiles: don't worry. You did a great thing and it's going to be remembered for a very long time.

    Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger: Funny thing is, I've delivered a million passengers over 40 years in the air and in the end I'll be judged on 208 seconds.

    Jeff Skiles: Come on. Tomorrow's going to be a good day. Computer SIMS will prove you were right and we can all put our wings back on.

    Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger: Do you want to run?

    [Both men go jogging on down the street]

  • Jeff Skiles: I'm hoping six months from now we'll just be laughing about how we got to meet David Letterman.

    Chesley 'Sully' Sullenberger: We're going on David Letterman?

    Jeff Skiles: Yeah, right after the next NTSB interview. I'm guessing David's going to be slightly funnier.