KPH Wrote:
Quote:
"United 93 is a smash hit!" - Earl Dittman, Wireless Magazines
"United 93 is a wild ride!" - Pete Hammond, Maxim
"United 93 is an up-and-down roller coaster that will leave you breathless!" Shawn Edwards, FOX-TV
"United 93 is a scorched-earth, take-no-prisoners thriller!" - Jeff Craig, 60 Second Preview
These are real review phrases? If these are true, this seems way worse than making a movie about it. What horrible puns about this tragedy. That is awful.
I will probably go see this. It's much like going to see films about the holocaust or something. I don't expect that this movie was made or was intended to be made as an "action flick". From my understand, those who made it were doing it to honor those on that flight that stood up and did something.
I think there is some benefit in reminding ones self of the horror and the severity of such a situation so we don't "forget". I think this is why there are so many documentaries and hollywood films that continue to come out about the holocaust. To constantly remind people that this should never happen again.
I think you can over-remind, for sure. In my college years I used to work in North Carolina during the summer. One summer in particular one of my friends, a beach lifeguard, had a side job and a pilots license. In his free time he used to fly those planes with the ads attached to them. Apparently, when you go to land, you descend like you are landing and then you unhook the sign, circle around, and then come in for the actual landing. However, when he pulled up from unhooking the sign, the plane stalled and flipped upside down crashing on the top killing my friend. We were all deeply saddened and horrified that this 24 year old guy died like this. However, we were even more outraged by the fact that all the local stations in the area were repeatedly playing the last radio communication with the tower which said, "oh my god, I'm gonna die". It was so unnecessary and rude to do this, IMO. All this to say, there is a hard line to distinguish about what is ok and what is not in relation to events like these. If I felt like United 93 was made as strictly a money-maker and for entertainment value only, then I would never go see it. However, I haven't gotten that impression. It's just like when I watched that Documentary made by those brothers that were documenting the Fire house that actually was one of the first places inside the towers after the planes hit. They obviously are trying to make money, it's their job, their profession. But just because you make money from something does not mean it is necessarily an exploitation of the particular thing.
Anyway, I am rambling.