The beauty of film lies in the point of entry

Milan 2022-04-20 09:01:32

I went to the movie after reading other people’s movie reviews, and after watching the movie, I went to watch the news reports at the time. I’m not a professional and I don’t know that landing on the water is a very risky thing. Only Captain Sally is so professional and calm. talent for this success.

But for the movie, the story itself is not about showing everyone a great hero who made a successful forced landing, but when the National Transportation Safety Board questioned Captain Sally's decision to make a forced landing after being hailed as a hero by the people, the captain was under tremendous pressure. Cope down.

The point of entry into the story is wonderful.

On January 15, 2009, flight 1549 was struck by a bird a few minutes after takeoff. The engines on both sides lost thrust. The captain was unable to make an emergency landing at a nearby airport with his own driving experience and professional judgment, so he decided to make an emergency landing at the nearest Hudson River. During the entire forced landing process, there was no crowd watching, there was no loud roaring, and there was no chaos in the cabin. The passengers bent over and held their heads under the command of the flight attendant. The captain calmly stopped the plane. To be honest, the scene was a bit boring, and there was no thrilling commercial film. , but the captain saved the lives of everyone on board.

A great act is to be calm and silent. If you want to tell this story well, it is too little to show the content in 2 hours. If it was me, what would I add? Everyone faces the dialogue before death, the memory before death, and the close embrace of their loved ones after returning home safely, um, is also an entry point. "Captain Sully" begins with the National Transportation Safety Board questioning Sully's decision to make a forced landing. The simulation results show that the plane can successfully land at the airport, which is inconsistent with Sully's original judgment, but Sully can't figure out why? Captain Sully would also be nervous, insomniac, and have nightmares, and he would also doubt whether he really made a mistake in judgment.

I saw persistence in Captain Sully. NTSB investigators say the crash was on the Hudson River, and Sally corrected it to be a forced landing because he knew exactly what he was doing; air traffic control recommended a forced landing at the airport, but Sally decided on his own that the landing could not be successful and decided to make a forced landing in Harder Xunhe; the simulation results were inconsistent with his judgment, and he tried to figure out where the difference was. A person is always on the road of believing in himself, and he will doubt himself in the face of doubts, but he will still believe in himself after repeated thinking.

Stick to what you think is right, even if you bump your head and bleed.

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Extended Reading

Sully quotes

  • LT Cook: A pilot never stops acquiring knowledge. You'll make mistakes, everyone does. Just learn from them.

    Sully (16 Years Old): Yes, sir.

    LT Cook: And never forget, no matter what's happening, to fly the airplane.

  • 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]