Upper Hutt Leader

Hanks the soul of excellent drama

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Tom Hanks, Hollywood’s favourite uncle, could not have been better cast for the role of Chesley ‘‘Sully’’ Sullenberg­er, the real-life pilot who made the call to crash-land a plane on the Hudson River with 155 people on-board.

He’s a straightfo­rward and likeable man – the type that Uncle Hanks plays best – confronted with a horrifying life-or-death scenario that demands extraordin­ary things from ordinary people. It may come as a surprise, then, that Clint Eastwood’s film starts immediatel­y after everyone is saved.

Faced with news reporters hailing him as a hero and crash investigat­ors that suspect he’s anything but, Sully’s actions are questioned. Did he make the right call or did he needlessly put all those passengers at risk? It’s a lot to put on a guy who’s decompress­ing from a traumatic experience, especially when the apathetic investigat­ive board grills him by comparing his perilous performanc­e to a computer simulation. By refusing to show the actual crash until it’s necessary, Sully’s uncertaint­y becomes the audience’s – and it’s intense. It’s a fantastic narrative manoeuvre that uses flashbacks with stern purpose.

The flight is seen more than once, but each time changes the perspectiv­e slightly to aid the current legal situation. Even more impressive is how the sequence still manages to be gutcrunchi­ngly intense despite knowing that everyone makes it out alive. But the soul of the film resides in Hanks’ flawlessly tuned performanc­e.

At one moment, Sully is completely confident in his decision. At another, he’s mortified at the thought of getting it wrong. His psychologi­cal swaying is hardly ever put into words, but Hanks says more with a hasty voice and a gloomy glare than lines of dialogue can.

When everything comes into focus, the conclusion rests its case with a calm clarity and humane conviction that is superbly satisfying to behold. – Liam Maguren

Review

Sully (M) Directed by Clint Eastwood Starring Tom Hanks, Aaron Eckhart, Laura Linney 96 mins

 ??  ?? Tom Hanks says more in Sully with a hasty voice and a gloomy glare than lines of dialogue can.
Tom Hanks says more in Sully with a hasty voice and a gloomy glare than lines of dialogue can.

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