Turbulent ‘Flightplan’ is a dramatic ride
After Sept. 11, 2001, anything to do with an airplane tends to rattle
one’s nerves, especially in light of last week’s real drama over Los
Angeles International Airport. Thus the thriller “Flightplan” plays
on our fears effectively, thanks to star Jodie Foster and director
Robert Schwentke.
Like her role in 2002’s “Panic Room,” Foster again plays a mother
trying to protect her daughter from harm. Only this time, the enemy
is unseen and possibly even nonexistent.
Kyle Pratt (Foster) is a professional woman working in Berlin.
With the sudden death of her husband, she and 6-year-old daughter,
Julia, are returning to New York and taking his body with them. Their
trip is aboard a massive, state-of-the-art jet Kyle helped design.
Profoundly affected by their loss, Kyle has visions of her dead
husband, and Julia is afraid of even going out onto the street. So it
is very puzzling when, three hours into the flight, Julia is nowhere
to be found.
Kyle is tenacious and creative in her efforts to rouse the dubious
flight crew and captain (Sean Bean) into searching every inch of the
plane for her daughter. She doesn’t care if she disrupts, antagonizes
or endangers the other 400 passengers on board -- all she wants is to
find Julia.
Ultimately, the air marshal (Peter Saarsgard) must restrain her
and tells Kyle she will be arrested upon landing. Her credibility and
mental state come into question. The other passengers are now hostile
toward her and even each other.
Watching “Flightplan” is like a being on a very turbulent flight
-- it captures that feeling of claustrophobia and maneuvers our
reactions to Kyle from sympathy to fear, skepticism to anger, and
back to sympathy again. You’ll get caught up in the drama, even
though the plot does not completely satisfy all of your questions.
Foster gives another superbly convincing performance, but it is
Saarsgard with his sleepy-eyed deadpan who pulls off the unthinkable
by hijacking all his scenes.
* SUSANNE PEREZ lives in Costa Mesa and is an executive assistant
for a financial services company.
Tim Burton’s new film? Of corpse!
Only Tim Burton could come up with “Corpse Bride,” a film so
strange and yet so traditional.
He uses old-fashioned, stop-motion animation with puppets that are
extreme caricatures of real people. In a vaguely Olde English
setting, he creates a weird world of Victorian manners where the dead
and the living interact in a raucous Dance Macabre.
Johnny Depp voices Victor, who is about to enter a marriage
arranged by his father, a successful fishmonger. His future wife is
the daughter of upper crust parents who have a large estate, but no
money left from their family fortune. Neither of them wants this
forced union. But when they finally meet the day before the wedding,
love blooms.
Practicing his wedding vows in the forest, Victor inadvertently
chants a spell that raises a young woman from the dead and makes her
his unintended Corpse Bride. Helena Bonham Carter voices the once
lovely and still alluring corpse who is now the awkward bride of a
living man.
Victor is whisked into the realm of the newly deceased, who all
seem to party hard in the underworld. Whimsical musical numbers are
reminiscent of “Beauty and the Beast” on LSD. In contrast to the drab
gray world of the living, the morbid revelry features vibrant colors,
dancing skeletons and vivid images from another state of mind.
This bizarre premise sounds much too peculiar to be family fare.
But Burton weaves this quirky tale with classic themes of loyalty and
lost love. He creates a heartfelt romance tinged with just enough
melancholy to remind us how love sometimes unfolds in the real world.
Too outrageous to be taken seriously, this offbeat offering amuses
and entertains in a most unusual way.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
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