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2012 • Drama • 138m

Flight

"Some miracles are not what they seem."

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6,473 critic reviews

70%

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Commercial airline pilot Whip Whitaker has a problem with drugs and alcohol, though so far he's managed to complete his flights safely. His luck runs out when a disastrous mechanical malfunction sends his plane hurtling toward the ground. Whip pulls off a miraculous crash-landing that results in only six lives lost. Shaken to the core, Whip vows to get sober -- but when the crash investigation exposes his addiction, he finds himself in an even worse situation.

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Top Cast

Denzel Washington
Denzel Washington
Whip Whitaker
Don Cheadle
Don Cheadle
Hugh Lang
Kelly Reilly
Kelly Reilly
Nicole
John Goodman
John Goodman
Harling Mays
Bruce Greenwood
Bruce Greenwood
Charlie Anderson
Brian Geraghty
Brian Geraghty
Ken Evans
Tamara Tunie
Tamara Tunie
Margaret Thomason
Nadine Velazquez
Nadine Velazquez
Katerina Marquez
Peter Gerety
Peter Gerety
Avington Carr
Garcelle Beauvais
Garcelle Beauvais
Deana
Melissa Leo
Melissa Leo
Ellen Block
Adam C. Edwards
Adam C. Edwards
Father on Plane
Charlie E. Schmidt
Charlie E. Schmidt
Tiki Pot
Boni Yanagisawa
Boni Yanagisawa
Camelia Satou
Adam Tomei
Adam Tomei
Fran
Dane Davenport
Dane Davenport
Derek Hogue
John Crow
John Crow
Field Reporter
E. Roger Mitchell
E. Roger Mitchell
Craig Matson
Producer: Robert ZemeckisProducer: Steve StarkeyDirector: Robert ZemeckisProducer: Jack RapkeProducer: Walter F. ParkesProducer: Laurie MacDonaldExecutive Producer: Cherylanne MartinWriter: John Gatins

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Reviews

T
tmdb15435519
2021-04-15
80%

With Robert Zemekis at the helm, it has to be good, right? Pretty much. Not the strongest performance by Cheadle, but otherwise the cast is great. John Goodman is a welcome surprise half-way through and really brings this home. With a feel good ending, what more do you 1-3 star people want?? It's Denzel!!

T
tmdb28039023
2022-09-13
60%

The title Flight is a perfect illustration that brevity really is the soul of wit. Its six letters describe not only the protagonist's occupation (flying), but also what he spends most of the film doing (fleeing), and if we only added a seventh letter (-y), it would describe the character himself. The film itself could stand to be shorter, but overall it's no exception to the rule that no good movie is too long. In addition to illustrating the aforementioned Shakespearean principle, director Robert Zemeckis inverts a famous Simpsonian maxim; in this case, alcohol is first the solution and then the cause of all the problems. One can identify a compulsive smoker when he lights a cigarette with the butt of the previous one; Similarly, one can spot an alcoholic when he soothes his hangover with leftover beer from the day before — and that’s just the start of commercial pilot William 'Whip' Whitaker's (Denzel Washington) breakfast of champions. Whip is still drinking in the cabin of Flight 227 bound for Atlanta, making himself a screwdriver, or several, before taking a nap. He wakes with a start when the plane begins to nosedive. Unable to regain control, Whip is forced to make a controlled crash landing in an open field, saving most of the "102 souls" on board. This includes a maneuver where Whip flies the plane upside down, and it's not just him but also Zemeckis who takes a huge risk and lives to reap the reward. The scene avoids becoming unintentionally funny because part of its purpose is precisely to provide some much-needed humor to ease the almost unbearable tension; at the same time, it manages to stretch the audience's suspension of disbelief without breaking it for two reasons: 1) it has real precedent, and 2) it's exactly the kind of thing someone flying under the influence would do. There’s no doubt that Whip has the expertise to pull off this maneuver successfully; the question is whether he would have dared to execute it while sober. Moreover,, the cause of the accident is a mechanical failure completely unrelated to Whip's sorry physical state. But Flight is not, like Druk, an apology for alcoholism. In an inferior film the vehicle, be it a plane or a car, would crash as a direct result of the driver/pilot's drunkenness, and the driver/pilot would be the only or one of the few survivors, making him feel even guiltier. Flight instead debunks the myth of invincibility that every alcoholic invokes by leading us to believe, practically to the end, that Whip might very well be literally invincible. "Maybe I'm a fool," Whip muses, "because if I'd just told one more lie, I might have walked away from the whole mess." But he knows as well as we do that after that “one more lie” there would be another lie, and another, and another, and that eventually his lies would have caught up with him, because ultimately there is no escaping the negative effects of addiction. Like the similar Clean and Sober, Flight loses momentum with a Romantic Subplot that a nearly two-and-a-half-hour film doesn't need; on the other hand, I really liked Washington’s and Zemeckis's attention to detail — for example, when in the middle of crash landing Whip has the presence of mind to make a flight attendant tell her son that she loves him so that the box black can record it (in case they don’t make it), or the way his facial language unequivocally expresses the world of difference, the passage from hell to paradise, that exists before that first line of cocaine — supplied by John Goodman in a pair of hilarious cameos, each one heralded by the presence of “Sympathy for the Devil” on the soundtrack — and after.

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Details

Status
Released
Origin
US
Languages
English
Studios
Paramount Pictures, ImageMovers, Parkes+MacDonald Image Nation
Budget
$31,000,000
Box Office
$161,772,575

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