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Flight 93
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Directed by Peter Markle.
Although al-Qaida terrorists hijacked four commercial airliners on September 11, 2001, only three reached their intended targets. United Airlines Flight 93, a Boeing 757 that departed late from Newark to San Francisco, crash-landed near Pittsburgh instead of becoming a weapon against the White House or the United States Capitol. This speculative cable-TV docudrama imagines how the flight might have played out for the flight's passengers, who are believed to have risen up against their hijackers after being alerted to the other terrorist attacks via cell phone. Unfolding in more or less real time, Flight 93 depicts the hijacking from the viewpoints of those on the flight and those on the ground. Tom Burnett (Jeffrey Nordling), Mark Bingham (Ty Olsson), Todd Beamer (Brennan Elliott), and many of the flight's other, posthumously famous passengers are portrayed, as are their families, law-enforcement agents, air-traffic controllers, United employees, and cell-phone company personnel. Flight 93 originally aired in January 2006 on the A&E cable network, several months after the Discovery Channel debuted its documentary The Flight That Fought Back and several months before the feature film United 93 premiered. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
This tight, no-frills TV docudrama bears many similarities to United 93, the feature film that reached theaters a few months after its premiere. It unfolds in real time and splits its focus between the passengers and crew of the doomed aircraft, their families on the ground, the air-traffic and airline personnel who watched the hijacking unfold, and the rural Pennsylvanians who saw the crash. Unlike the later film, however, Flight 93 uses professional actors rather than unknowns and benefited from less access to previously withheld source material. Nevertheless, the film sensitively and compellingly depicts September 11, 2001, as it might have played out for those aboard the only hijacked plane that did not reach its intended target. The drama is so built-in -- and so etched in the minds of pretty much everyone on the planet -- that writer Nevin Schreiner and director Peter Markle wisely let it speak for itself. This isn't an action movie, it's a tragedy -- one that doesn't need to be oversold, and isn't. Images of the World Trade Center falling have taken on a Zapruder-like cultural resonance, but the crash landing of United 93 has no such visual associations. Flight 93's filmmakers make the most of this opportunity, turning the airplane's descent into a restrained, hauntingly minimalist montage. The 2006 release of several TV and movie treatments of 9/11 prompted predictable media debate about whether it was appropriate to "go there" less than five years after the event itself. Flight 93's narrow focus on individual lives may not add much to our understanding of the terrorist attacks or their aftermath, but it does make for an affecting, cathartic drama. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
 



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