Chattanooga Times Free Press

Real-life investigat­ors object to portrayal in ‘Sully’ movie

- BY JOAN LOWY

WASHINGTON — The world knows Chesley “Sully” Sullenberg­er as the pilot who managed to land an airliner full of people in the Hudson River without the loss of a single life after the plane lost thrust in both engines. But in the movie “Sully,” about the “Miracle on the Hudson” ditching of US Airways Flight 1549, the pilot’s ordeal doesn’t stop there.

Accident investigat­ors are soon grilling the airline captain and first officer Jeff Skiles.

Could the plane have made it back to LaGuardia Airport if Sullenberg­er, portrayed by actor Tom Hanks, had turned it around? Did the thrust in both engines quit after the plane struck a flock of geese or was there still some power in one? Was the pilot’s performanc­e affected by other factors? When was his last alcoholic drink? Was he having problems at home?

Only it didn’t happen like that, said the former government accident investigat­ors involved in the real-life investigat­ion into the 2009 accident. The public, as well as pilots and others in the aviation industry who see the film, may get the wrong impression investigat­ors were trying to blame the pilots, they said.

“We’re not the KGB. We’re not the Gestapo,” said Robert Benzon, who led the National Transporta­tion Safety Board’s investigat­ion. “We’re the guys with the white hats on.”

It’s true that those questions were asked, and many more, over the course of the 18-month investigat­ion, but that’s just part of NTSB’s meticulous investigat­ion process intended to find all possible flaws that contribute to a crash, investigat­ors said. That way the board can make safety recommenda­tions to the government, industry, labor unions, aircraft makers and others in an effort to prevent future accidents. Thirty-five safety recommenda­tions were ultimately issued as a result of the Flight 1549 investigat­ion.

The film, scheduled for release in theaters today, portrays investigat­ors as more like prosecutor­s looking for any excuse to fault Sullenberg­er for the mishap. But the real investigat­ors recalled Sullenberg­er and Skiles, portrayed by actor Aaron Eckhart, as comfortabl­e and cooperativ­e. Pilot union officials representi­ng them were present during all the interviews and at later public forums.

“These guys were already national heroes,” said Benzon, who now is retired. “We weren’t out to embarrass anybody at all.”

But that’s not how it comes across in the film, directed by Clint Eastwood.

“Until I read the script, I didn’t know the investigat­ive board was trying to paint the picture that he [Sullenberg­er] had done the wrong thing. They were kind of railroadin­g him into ‘it was his fault,’” Eastwood said in a publicity video for the Warner Bros. film.

Hanks told The Associated Press in an interview that a draft script included the names of reallife NTSB officials, but Sullenberg­er — who is an adviser on the film — requested they be taken out.

“He said, ‘These are people who are not prosecutor­s. They are doing a very important job, and if, for editorial purposes, we want to make it more of a prosecutor­ial process, it ain’t fair to them,’” said Hanks. “That’s an easy thing to change.”

Malcolm Brenner, a human factors expert who was among the investigat­ors who interviewe­d Sullenberg­er the day after the ditching, said he recalls being extraordin­arily impressed at the time with both pilots and how well they worked together in the midst of the crisis. He said he’s also been impressed since then with how Sullenberg­er has used his fame to promote aviation safety.

“I think there is a real integrity there,” said Brenner, now an aviation consultant. “I happen to be a big fan of the man.”

Tom Haueter, who was the NTSB’s head of major accident investigat­ions at the time and is now a consultant, said he fears the movie will discourage pilots and others from fully cooperatin­g with the board in the future.

“There is a very good chance,” said Haueter, “that there is a segment of the population that will take this as proof of government incompeten­ce and it will make things worse.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Passengers in an inflatable raft move away from an Airbus 320 US Airways aircraft that went down in the Hudson River on Jan. 15, 2009.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Passengers in an inflatable raft move away from an Airbus 320 US Airways aircraft that went down in the Hudson River on Jan. 15, 2009.

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