I have very mixed feelings about Robert Zemeckis' (Back to the Future, Cast Away) return to live-action film-making after 12 years away making his trilogy of motion-capture (mo-cap) films – The Polar Express (2004), Beowulf (2007) and A Christmas Carol (2009). Mixed feelings – not because I miss the fact he abandoned it for so long (although frankly, I never understood his obsession with mo-cap even though I'm one of the few people I know who actually likes his dead-eyed “village of the damned” movie The Polar Express) – because his return to live-action film-making is such a mixed bag.
In the first few seconds of his new movie, Flight, Zemeckis makes sure we understand that he's abandoning “cartoons,” and PG ratings of any sort. Denzel Washington plays “Whip” Whitacker, an airline pilot of many years and our first shot of him is as he awakens with a hangover. A buck-naked airline attendant rolls out of bed beside him and she heads to the washroom (you can hear her peeing in the background). His cell phone rings. He picks up and immediately begins an argument with his ex-wife. During the conversation, he drinks the remnants of a bottle of beer, and he liberally drops F-bombs left, right and centre. The airline attendant, Katerina (Nadine Velazquez), returns from the loo, smokes the remainder of a joint and lets him know they are due at the airport within the hour to work on a flight from Orlando to Atlanta. He mumbles assent, does a line of cocaine and, with the soundtrack playing Joe Cocker’s cover of Traffic’s “Feelin’ Alright,” he dresses and heads to the airport: The confident cock of the walk.
Robert Zemeckis on the set of Flight |
It is now late in the flight. Whip is
snoring away as the co-pilot mans the aircraft when a loud noise awakens Whip.
The plane, at about 30,000 feet, suddenly pitches into an extreme nose-dive.
What Whip does to save the plane and the passengers is down-right astonishing.
(If you've seen the trailer, you know the one thing he does.) In the first
twenty minutes, and during the crash, Washington
has never been finer (and Zemeckis directs the crash and early scenes in the
hotel room with equal brilliance). Whip’s calm in the face of catastrophe is
completely believable, and only we know he's probably higher than a kite and
drunk as a skunk when he does it. He manages to bring the airplane down with
minimal loss of life. He is cheered as a hero because (as is revealed much
later in the film) 11 talented pilots could not successfully recreate what he
did in a simulator (in fact, they all “crashed” killing all aboard). Then the
big Ah HA! occurs. As part of procedure after any air accident, all crew
(living or dead) are routinely checked for alcohol or drugs. Whip was found to
be about four to five times over the legal limit, and so is the now-dead
Katerina.
The rest of the film examines Washington as an
alcoholic and drug addict who's in denial. His life is one big dodge as he
tries to avoid responsibility for everything. His fall-back line is always, “I
saved all those people, didn't I?” Of course he did, but what hangs over him is
the alcohol test. What also hangs over him is his clear addiction. For the
first thirty minutes, right up until Whip's released from hospital, Zemeckis
demonstrates he hasn't lost his touch directing people even though he's been
directing pixels for 10 years. The cast is uniformly strong, with Kelly Reilly
(Jude Law's wife in the Robert Downey Sherlock Holmes films) playing not only a
pretty credible American (she's British), but also a needy, desperate drug
addict and alcoholic who gets involved with Washington during the film. The sequences of
them enabling each other are generally quite effective. Don Cheadle as the
lawyer brought in to defend Whip (Whip's facing criminal negligence charges for
being drunk during the crash) is outstanding. The last time Cheadle and
Washington appeared on screen together was in Carl Franklin's great Devil in
a Blue Dress (1995). In that film, Cheadle played Mouse, the psychopathic
best friend to Washington's
Easy Rawlins. Here, demonstrating his immense range, he plays a button-down
lawyer who is doing whatever he can to keep Whip out of prison. It's a great,
'straight man' performance. Tamara Tunie (Law
& Order: SVU) is wonderful as the more-seasoned flight attendant on the
plane who has several very good scenes with Washington, none more so than the
one at a funeral home. Bruce Greenwood, as Whip's friend and union rep is, as
always, strong.
John Goodman as Harlan |
And speaking of music, that's one of the
film's failings. Zemeckis decided that Flight
should be peppered with Motown and other songs from the 1960s and 1970s,
such as Marvin Gaye's “What's Going On”, Bill Wither’s “Ain't No Sunshine When
She's Gone,” Lou Reed's (performed by The Cowboy Junkies) “Sweet Jane,” etc.,
to comment on several scenes in the picture. But, unlike the use of “Moon”-
titled songs in John Landis' An American Werewolf in London (1981),
such as The Marcels' “Blue Moon” and Van
Morrison's “Moondance,” which were utilized to very good comic effect, here the
songs are so on-the-nose that their use gives you no room to think. “Feelin’
Alright’ at the very beginning imaginatively underscores Whip's fake
confidence; throughout the rest of the picture these songs (including a Muzak
version of The Beatles “With A Little Help From My Friends” near the end)
basically tell you what to think.
Spoilers Follow
But the film's most basic problem is the
seen-it-a-thousand-times drunk-who-finds-a-way-to-redeem-himself scenario. You
keep waiting and waiting for his moment of “big revelation” and, of course, we
are not disappointed. If that is where all these films like Days of Wine and
Roses (1962), The Lost Weekend (1945), etc., are leading to, why was
this one even made? Flight doesn't really add anything new to this
well-worn plot. If it had been really
brave, this is what should have happened: Throughout the picture, the film
makes us not-so-subtly aware that pie-eyed, Whip was able to save the lives of
most of the passengers on a “broken” airplane. (The media continues to pursue
him and portray him as a hero. But another thought kept popping into my head:
Isn't there one reporter who manages to discover he was drunk?
But no.) Left unspoken is the tired idea of a gifted man who has wasted his
gifts. Just think what he could have done if he'd not become a drunk? When he
took reckless action during the turbulence, I kept waiting for the other shoe
to drop. I kept expecting someone, somewhere to uncover that Whip's
recklessness earlier in the flight actually broke something that
led, inevitably to the plane malfunctioning and crashing later. But no, again.
The script by unknown-to-me John Gatins (Real
Steel) was too caught up in the notion of fate. The crash was an act of
God. Whip saving the plane was an act of God. Whip finally seeing the light is
an act of God. This horse-feathers plot point – which is hammered home almost
as hard as the way the songs are used – would have been seriously derailed
(please forgive the mixed metaphor) if it turned out Whip's recklessness at the
start had caused the plane to break, so that even though he saved many many
lives, he was still responsible for the crash. There is no way in a mainstream Hollywood film with Denzel in the lead that they were
going to go anywhere near something that layered. Flight is about a man
being redeemed...period. Too bad about the six people he killed so he could get
there, but oh yeah, he saved 96 other people. The last film about a drunk that
dared to take its premise to its only logical conclusion was Mike Figgis’s
terrific Nicolas Cage-on-a-bender picture, Leaving Las Vegas (1995). But,
in Flight, redemption is the only goal. The movie lets both its
protagonist and the audience off the hook. This is not the kind of picture that would hold Whip accountable for the true cause of the crash. That would be too brave – a bravery
that is missing in far too many pictures today.
– David Churchill is a critic and author of the novel The Empire of Death. You can read an excerpt here. Or go to http://www.wordplaysalon.com for
more information (where you can order the book, but only in traditional
form!). And yes, he’s begun the long and arduous task of writing his
second novel, The Storm and Its Eye.
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