Bloody Sunday director Paul Greengrass marks the five-year anniversary on the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States with this largely speculative meditation on the events that took place onboard the fourth hijacked plane, and the heroic actions of the passengers who gave their lives to ensure the safety of others. Told in real time and acted out by a cast of unknowns who were provided with detailed studies of their real-life counterparts, United 93 attempts to reconstruct the airborne tragedy from the view of the ground and flight controllers, the passengers, and their nervous families awaiting word on the fate of their loved ones. As the terrified travelers and crew gradually become aware of the historical events taking place on the ground so far beneath them, the 90 minutes in which a random collection of strangers realized their fate and came together to confront an unthinkable threat are re-created. (AMG)
AMG Review: If nothing else, Paul Greengrass' docudrama United 93 details with journalistic precision exactly what happened on the ground during the events of September 11, 2001. The director effectively presents how air traffic controllers, the military, and the FAA all pieced together what was going on as the hijackers executed their plan. Greengrass achieves remarkable verisimilitude thanks to his relentlessly handheld camerawork, outstanding use of file footage combined with special effects, the use of no-name actors, and the casting of some of the real people playing themselves. The faux cinéma vérité style helps underscore the facts of the situation. However, when dealing with the events on the title flight, Greengrass' approach is somewhat problematic. Since every person aboard the plane perished, there is no way to truly figure out what happened and how it happened. To be sure, these sequences are as well-researched as the rest of the film, but the film's cinéma vérité style here is used not to enforce facts but to force the audience into an emotional corner. If Greengrass were pushing audience members' fear buttons in order to make a political point, if this were propaganda, that might be easier to accept. The film, however, is resolutely apolitical. This means that Greengrass' overriding concern during these sequences is to make the viewer experience the emotional horror of the passengers without giving any release to those feelings. The director simply wanted to show what happened, not to comment on it, and in this regard the film is an unquestionable success. However, one has the right to ask if showing horror devoid of catharsis accomplishes anything.
Disc 2 Bonus Feature: United 93: The Families and the Film
Discover the Real-Life Stories Behind the brave Passengers and Crew Aboard United Flight 93 Through Interviews With Their Families.
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J.J. Johnson | Captain Jason M. Dahl |
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Gary Commock | First Officer LeRoy Homer |
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Polly Adams | Deborah Welsh |
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Opal Alladin | CeeCee Lyles |
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Starla Benford | Wanda Anita Green |
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Trish Gates | Sandra Bradshaw |
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Nancy McDoniel | Lorraine G. Bay |
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David Alan Basche | Todd Beamer |
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Richard Bekins | William Joseph Cashman |
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Susan Blommaert | Jane Folger |
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Ray Charleson | Joseph DeLuca |
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Christian Clemenson | Thomas E. Burnett / Jr. |
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Liza Colón-Zayas | Waleska Martinez |
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Lorna Dallas | Linda Gronlund |
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Denny Dillon | Colleen Fraser |
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Trieste Kelly Dunn | Deora Frances Bodley |
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Kate Jennings Grant | Lauren Catuzzi Grandcolas |
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Peter Hermann | Jeremy Glick |
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Tara Hugo | Kristin White Gould |
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Marceline Hugot | Georgine Rose Corrigan |
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Cheyenne Jackson | Mark Bingham |
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Joe Jamrog | John Talignani |
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Corey Johnson | Louis J. Nacke / II |
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Masato Kamo | Toshiya Kuge |
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Becky London | Jean Hoadley Peterson |
| Director | Paul Greengrass |
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| Writer | Paul Greengrass | |
| Producer | Mairi Bett, Tim Bevan, Michael Bronner, Liza Chasin, Eric Fellner, Paul Greengrass, Debra Hayward, Lloyd Levin, Kate Solomon | |
| Musician | John Powell | |
| Photography | Barry Ackroyd | |
| Packaging | Keep Case |
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| Nr Discs | 2 |
| Screen Ratios | Anamorphic Widescreen (2.35:1) |
| Audio Tracks | ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 SPANISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 |
| Subtitles | English | French |
| Distributor | Universal Studios |
| Layers | Single side, Single layer |
| Edition Release Date | Sep 05, 2006 |
| Regions | 1 |