REVIEW

Movie Review: United 93

Written by Duke De Mondo
Published January 11, 2007
page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6

Similar sentiments mouthed by angry punters stompin' out The Wind That Shakes The Barley. "Has Ireland not suffered enough?" says one. "First the potatoes wither and rot 'side the turnip, then the civil war, then the troubles, and now, maybe worst of all, Ken Loach."

"Aye," nods the lass beside him. "It's more than any nation should be asked to tolerate."

"It'd be a braver man than me," says the young lad crawling on hands and knees behind them, "Could put up with a quarter of it."

Bravery. It's something United 93 has a man considering long into the following Thursday.

III

Early January 2007 and I'm watching United 93 for the fifth time, sat in the living room with an old blanket strewn about me and a bent cigarette dangling out the maw.

Every viewing, a whole new set of questions rises out the murk of the mind.

What would I have done in that situation? Would I have fought, would I have stormed up the aisle with the fire-extinguisher thrust this way and that, or would I have sat weeping into an in-flight magazine chewing on rosary beads and whispering Hare Krishna?

How many of the folks who died on that unholy morning did so whilst rejecting with all their hearts the counter-measures taken against the hijackers? How do we feel about those individuals? Are they heroes also?

Are there any heroes here?

Why is a film about the most horrendous, terrifying, tragic situation a man might imagine so exhilarating, so stirring, so life-affirming?

Part of the answer to the last, of course, is that no answers whatsoever are provided for any of the others.

United 93 is the best film of 2006 and the best of Greengrass' career thus far. It's probably the bravest, also.

"Oh aye?" says an ol' queen stood jabbing at the buttons of a poker machine in the far-end of the tavern later that evening. "And what's so brave about it, at all?"

"What's not brave about it?" says I, closing the notebook a moment. "That it goes out of its way to present the hijackers as human beings is in itself a fairly brave move."

"Human beings, is that right? Funny now, for all I saw were a bunch o' screeching yahoo's racin' about the place with red headbands on. They were caricatures."

"No they weren't, and here's why. For all of the Hard Man posturing they might've employed once they'd gained control of the plane, United 93 never once suggests that these people aren't fucking terrified, at least as terrified as the people they're bent on killing. They're terrified but they go ahead anyway, and why? Well, for any number of reasons. That it was too late to do anything else may be one. That death by that stage was a lot more welcoming than the consequences they'd face should they decide to abandon the whole wretched plot, no doubt that played on their minds. But at the bottom of it all, see, is the belief that what they were doin' was right. Greengrass refuses to present these people as monsters, I'd wager, for at least two reasons. One of them is that they weren't, at least as far as they were concerned. What they did may be evil, and surely you and I both agree on that. But were they evil? To be evil, does a man not need to be consciously acting against the notion of goodness? They didn't think that for a second."

page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6
The Duke (Aaron McMullan to his parents and the clergy) is a Northern Irish writer, performer and insomniac currently residing in London. He is the creator of Mondo Irlando, wherein his scribblings and hollerings can be found. He is currently working towards the completion of his first novel, and his debut "punk / country / folk / whatever" album has recently been released by Ex Libris Records . You can also pop by His MySpace Page and maybe have a coffee and a biscuit.
Keep reading for information and comments on this article, and add some feedback of your own!
Movie Review: United 93
Published: January 11, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Historical, Video: Drama, Culture: History, Video: Thriller
Writer: Duke De Mondo
Duke De Mondo's BC Writer page
Duke De Mondo's personal site
Spread the Word
Like this article?
Email this
Submit to del.icio.us Save to del.icio.us
RSS Feeds
All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
BC articles by Duke De Mondo
Video: Historical
Video: Drama
Culture: History
Video: Thriller
All Video Articles
All Review articles
All BC articles
All BC Comments

Comments

#1 — January 11, 2007 @ 11:37AM — Iloz Zoc [URL]

Superb.

#2 — January 11, 2007 @ 11:41AM — Roger Choate

More than amazing!

#3 — January 11, 2007 @ 14:41PM — Melita Teale [URL]

Louiiiiiiiiise. That's the review of 2007, so far.

#4 — January 11, 2007 @ 15:18PM — Duke De Mondo [URL]

Folks, thank you. I'm glad you liked it. I should add that the names in the first section there have all been changed.

#5 — January 11, 2007 @ 22:21PM — Mat Brewster [URL]

Great stuff as always Duke. I'm not sure I could watch this film five times. I mean I loved it, but it was so gut wrenching emotionally speaking, that I don't think my cry like a baby glands could handle it.

I just watched Bloody Sunday the other day too. Gesum, Greengrass sure knows how to punch a guy in the emotional balls.

#6 — January 12, 2007 @ 01:03AM — Duke De Mondo [URL]

Thanks, Sir Brewster. I dare say i won't watch it again for a while. It's just such a damn good film, even as it's harrowing the hell out of me i can't help but be in awe of Greengrass' technique.

And on a side-note, Jimmy Nesbitt, star of Bloody Sunday, was in a flick last year which also starred... my good self! imagine that. me and Jimmy. like THAT. (links fingers to some degree by way of illustrating closness twixt himself and jimmy nesbitt, star of Bloody Sunday and the last Woody Allen, which, sadly, was shite.)

#7 — January 12, 2007 @ 13:18PM — Jon Sobel [URL]

Most excellent, sir. Sheesh, five times!? I could see watching it maybe once more... and then maybe showing it to my kids when they grow up, if I were to have any kids. But then I was just over the river, not the ocean, when it happened...

The discussion of which movie to see made me laugh. Just the other day my lady and I thought about seeing Letters from Iwo Jima but I wasn't in the mood for a war pic, so we saw Pan's Labyrinth instead - which turned out to be partially a war pic. (But one of the best films of the decade, I say.)

#8 — January 12, 2007 @ 13:55PM — Duke De Mondo [URL]

thank you, Jon! And it's interesting, the across the ocean thing; maybe that's why Greengrass, who is British after all, was able to make such a film. compare his work with the very different World Trade Center by Oliver Stone, for example. If Greengrass had been American, perhaps United 93 would have much more resembled Flight 93, the TV movie?

Then again, 9/11 is a curious one because, in the UK, we were pretty much led to believe that it was ours as much as anyone elses. this is a very curious thing altogether. If, (NOTE! HYPOTHETICAL, I'M NOT ADVOCATING!) for example, buckingham palace or something had been attacked in such a way, i very much doubt that the reports in the press and on television, with the black banner headings and 24-hour coverage and what not, would have been different in any significant way.

but, now; Pan's Labyrinth. That one, any other year, would probably have been my Best of 2006. If you've yet to see The Devil's Backbone, Del Toro's previous civil war-based young person encounters fantastical things drama, i highly reccomend it. It's not as good as Pan's..., but it's not a kick in the arse off it.

#9 — January 12, 2007 @ 15:35PM — duane

Duke, excellent. Unique. And I should add, not intending to imply that it is a routine matter, "as always." Damn.

#10 — January 12, 2007 @ 16:52PM — Jon Sobel [URL]

The general sense here in the States was what you suggest - that United 93 wouldn't have been as good if it had been made by an American. It makes intuitive sense, although there's no way to prove it.

#11 — January 12, 2007 @ 20:38PM — Ray Ellis [URL]

Don't be calling yourself a critic, Duke. Your writings put the rest of us to shame. Well done!

#12 — January 13, 2007 @ 21:40PM — Duke De Mondo [URL]

Jon, that makes sense, as you say. Mind you, there were folks whom i know in this town who were FAR more affected by 9/11 than certain American friends of mine. It's worth looking into, i think, the effect of these things on folks oceans removed from the area afflicted. It can't JUST be human potential for empathy, although that plays a part. it seems very selective, what we feel for and what passes by as another disaster or attack. And of course a lot of THAT has to do with coverage of the event.

Duane and Ray, thank you very much, i'm glad you liked it. And Ray, i write the way i do partially becuase i'm not GOOD enough to be a critic. i don't have the discipline for it, or the tightness. a clear, informative, informed review is a lot harder to write than some sprawl like that up yonder. again, thank you no end.

#13 — January 15, 2007 @ 02:40AM — Howard Dratch [URL]


The movie managed to take the normally boring, sappy and melodramatic story of tragedy and not make a TV pap bowl out of it. Some people stood up and it is those souls that shine especially, then all the martyrs on the plane. But it is our side that were martyrs and there is no way the people who would kill thousands can be the wretched of the earth. They were young, scared, stupid terrorists fighting to bring down a world. If they are too filled with mindless hate to remember the nature of good and evil they were surely not martyrs.

Greengrass refuses to present these people as monsters, I'd wager, for at least two reasons. One of them is that they weren't, at least as far as they were concerned. What they did may be evil, and surely you and I both agree on that. But were they evil? To be evil, does a man not need to be consciously acting against the notion of goodness?


As usual Sir Duke, I like your review, I like your thoughts. I surprisingly liked the movie. But they were evil. To be that kind of mass murderer a man needs only to do evil whether or not he happens to consider it evil for some bizarre religious hatred. There is a notion of goodness and there is good & evil and, religious or not (I am not), evil still describes the murderer of innocents.

Terrific review.



#14 — January 15, 2007 @ 12:39PM — Scott Butki

Another great job, Duke.

#15 — January 16, 2007 @ 10:48AM — Jon Sobel [URL]

i'm not GOOD enough to be a critic. i don't have the discipline for it, or the tightness.

Maybe so by some standards, but the way you present your thoughts on the film in question by creating settings and dialogues between characters is original (although cf. Plato and the ancient Greeks) and makes your form of criticism more fun to read than the usual!

Any plans to put out a collection in the form of a book?

#16 — January 16, 2007 @ 21:40PM — Duke De Mondo [URL]

Scott, thank you!

Howard - those are legitimate, worthwhile thoughts, and I've considered it at great length (partly the reason why I never wrote about this film 'till now). Personally, i think the true evil resides in the hearts of the bastards who brainwash these violent extremists in the first place. I don't know that I can think of the ones who hijacked the planes, for example, as being 100% evil, although, as i said up yonder, the action most certainly was. But it's the ones who coaxed them towards it, who first filled their heads with such detestable, warped, sickening ideologies and worldviews that i feel most angry about, and feel are most deserving of the term. To be taught such vile, wretched pish is bad enough, to be doing the TEACHING, standing back and watching whilst the brainwashed are going out to "matryr" themselves, before moving on to the next group of impressionable, impassioned young men and women is truly abhorant and disgusting and, yeah, evil.

I don't know if i'm right in saying that or if i'm being overly niave or, i dunno. But it's what sticks in my gut, anyhow. And thank you for the kind words, and for reading and commenting.

Jon - I've considered putting together some kind of compilation book thing, but at the minute i'm goin mad writin a novel and screenplay. what i did consider though was doing that once the novel was done, maybe self-publishing it as a kind of in-between whilst the terrible process of finding folks willing to publish the novel goes on. It's somethin i've thought about a lot, at any rate.

#17 — January 19, 2007 @ 02:45AM — GL Hauptfleisch [URL]

And I thought I was the only one "staggering out the cinema like a hobo just pulled a bungalow out his urethra." In the midst of stealing phrases from you again, I garnered a fine review of a stunning movie.--Gordon

Want comments emailed to you? No spam, promise! Address:

Add your comment, speak your mind

(Or ping: http://blogcritics.org/mt/tb/58081)

Personal attacks are not allowed. Please read our comment policy.





Remember Name/URL?

Please preview your comment!

Fresh
Articles
Fresh
Comments