United 93 (Theatrical Film
Review)
Stars: Christian Clemenson, Cheyenne Jackson, David Alan Basche,
Peter Hermann, Khalid Abdalla
Director: Paul Greengrass
Critic's rating: 9 out of 10
Review by Chuck O'Leary
United 93 is the first major feature film dramatizing
events that occurred on September 11, 2001, with Oliver Stone's World
Trade Center scheduled to follow in August. However, some people are asking,
"Is it still too soon for any movie about the events of 9/11?"
My answer is a resounding no. It's not too soon.
Remember in the days after 9/11 that feeling of numbness, as it
seemed like the world would never be the same again? Well, unfortunately,
as Americans these days, we tend to have very short memories, and
less than 5 years later, some of us have already seemed to forget. But we
can never afford to forget and let our guard down. If we do, history
is bound to repeat itself. Yes, sitting through United 93
is painful, but it's a pain we all need to be reminded of every now and
then.
As most know, United 93 was the fourth flight hijacked
by al-Qaeda terrorists on 9/11, and it was probably headed for the
Capitol or the White House before a group of brave passengers tried to
overpower the four hijackers before the plane crashed in a Shanksville,
Pennsylvania field, killing everyone aboard, but clearly saving countless more
lives. It was the only hijacked flight that morning that failed to
achieve its objective because a group of ordinary Americans decided they
weren't going down without a fight.
Writer-director Paul Greengrass' United 93 is a
spellbinding, incredibly powerful docudrama that attempts to recreate
what happened from what is known from cockpit transmissions and phone
calls made by passengers aboard Flight 93 to loved ones after the plane had
been hijacked.
It starts early in the morning of September 11, 2001, with a group
of Middle-Eastern men reading the Koran in a hotel room. Clean-shaven and
wearing Western-style clothes so not to attract attention, they soon arrive at Newark
International Airport, keeping to themselves, occasionally whispering
to one another in Arabic and looking extremely intense. The bespectacled
Ziad Jarrah (Khalid Abdalla) is their leader.
We know that Mark Bingham (played by Cheyenne Jackson) arrived at
the airport late, just barely making the flight. Everything pointed to a
routine cross-country trip (to San Francisco) on a sunny and clear
September morning for the 37 passengers, two pilots and 5 flight attendants on
board. But four of those passengers seated in first class were al-Qaeda
terrorists on a deadly mission. Bingham, Todd Beamer (David Alan Basche),
Thomas Burnett (Christian Clemenson), Jeremy Glick (Peter Hermann), Richard
Guadagno (Daniel Sauli) and the others clearly had no idea of what
they'd be forced to eventually do, making them American heroes in the
process.
What began as a typical flight with an
in-flight breakfast being served and the usual chit-chat among
strangers suddenly turned horrific when the four intense Arab Muslims stood
up, stabbing one poor man, Mark Rothenberg (Chip Zien), in the neck with a box
cutter, before storming the cockpit, stabbing the pilots, Captain John Dahl (JJ
Johnson) and First Officer Leroy Homer Jr. (Gary Commock), to death, and killing
flight attendant Deborah Welsh (Polly Adams), who was trying
to assist a bleeding to death Rothenberg.
Some won't like United 93 because it shows the
true sneaky, vicious face of a cowardly enemy that yells "Allah
Akbar" as it brutally murders innocent people. Others won't like it
because it shows the totally inefficient reaction to the situation by the
United States government and the lack of proper communication all the way to
the very top. And it's a film that will remind people of how unbelievably
negligent two administrations were in dealing with the threat of Islamic
terrorism in the eight and a half years in between the first World
Trade Center bombing by Islamic extremists in February, 1993 and the
attacks on 9/11.
It's become increasingly evident that the U.S.
government was caught asleep at the wheel on the morning of 9/11
despite all the warning signs being there. It's enough to give conspiracy
theorists a field day, even though much of the blame can probably be attributed
to a false sense of security, political correctness and the special
treatment America gives to supposed ally Saudi Arabia. Do you know that
prior to 9/11, Saudi citizens were not required to obtain clearance from the
FBI to receive flight training in U.S. flight schools? As most
everyone knows by now, 14 of the 19 suicide hijackers on 9/11 were Saudis.
And furthermore, why were potentially deadly objects such as box
cutters and knives ever allowed to be carried aboard commercial airliners in
the first place? Who besides terrorists would have even guessed
those objects were permitted prior to 9/11?
Greengrass was smart to cast mostly unknown actors, which adds to
the feeling of authenticity. Big names would have been a distraction in a
film like this, but there are a few faces you might recognize
from other projects including Clemenson, who portrays Burnett, the
first passenger to hear about two other flights crashing into the
World Trade Center and one of the organizers of the revolt, John Rothman as
Edward P. Felt, who ran into a restroom to make an emergency call to
authorities shortly before Flight 93 crashed, and Gregg Henry as Col. Robert
Mahr at NORAD, where it took far longer than it should have to
scramble armed fighter planes and get a shoot-down order from
President Bush. All of the performances in the film are top-notch right
down to the actors of Arab heritage who have the thankless task of playing
the four terrorists.
From the confusion on the ground to the heartbreaking final
phone calls of passengers to their loved ones to the stirring
final moments of ordinary people finding extraordinary courage in the face
of overwhelming fear and probable death, this a superb piece of filmmaking
that transcends the normal moviegoing experience. There's not a lot of character
development, but Greengrass (Bloody Sunday, The
Bourne Supremacy) instead gives the audience a feeling of
how it must have felt to have been a passenger on Flight 93, one person amongst
a group of strangers who suddenly find themselves face to face with
death-worshipping evil.
One passenger travelling aboard Flight 93, Donald
Greene (David Rasche), was a former pilot, and another passenger, Andrew
Garcia (Peter Marinker), was a former flight controller. From the
evidence gathered, the plan was to try and overpower the hijackers and
have Greene and Garcia attempt to fly and then land the
plane. We may never know for sure how far they actually got, but God
bless them all for trying.
United 93 is one of the most gripping and deeply upsetting
films I've ever seen. I honestly left the theater shaking with a
combination of anxiety, anger and sadness I haven't felt since the days
immediately following 9/11.