Wishaw Press

Hanks soars in true-life tale

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selfless hero (“we all did it”) suffering from PTSD–like nightmares; his eyes are frequently riddled with tension and reflection and his masterclas­s peaks with the internal emotion he produces when Sully is told everyone has survived the crash.

Eckhart does accomplish­ed, likeable work too as Sully’s loyal, straight-talking friend and partner and the strong acting across the board is only let down by Laura Linney, playing Sully’s wife Lorraine.

It’s not really the talented Mystic River star’s fault; she’s saddled with miniscule material from Komarnicki that sees her spout concern on the phone during barely any screen time – and never share a scene directly opposite Hanks.

But if not every character is fully fleshed out, the miraculous river crash itself is shot with precision and style by Eastwood. The re-enactment is shown from pre-take-off to post-impact rescue and Eastwood has every angle covered; cockpit, passengers, onlookers, external air shots.

While there’s no escaping the lack of dramatic tension as we know beforehand that everyone survives, Eastwood never leaves us in any doubt how terrifying the experience must have been for everyone on-board.

The river rescue is arguably even more scary as the plane fills with water and passengers jump into the ice-cold water below.

Sully is well-made filmmaking that’s faithful to its remarkable source material with another top turn from Hanks – but falls short of vintage Eastwood.

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 ??  ?? Pilot problems Tom Hanks stars as Sully in Eastwood’s 35th film
Pilot problems Tom Hanks stars as Sully in Eastwood’s 35th film

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