Can she escape his clutches, find her child and solve the mystery? And do we care?
Flightplan (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:167
Fresh:63
Rotten:104
Average Rating:5.3/10
Consensus: The actors are all on key here, but as the movie progress, tension deflates as the far-fetched plot kicks in.
Runtime: 1 hr 38 mins
Genre: Thriller, Theatrical Release
Synopsis: After 2002's PANIC ROOM, Jodie Foster took a three year break before deciding to take another leading role in a major motion picture. Three years is a lifetime in Hollywood, but Foster is one of... After 2002's PANIC ROOM, Jodie Foster took a three year break before deciding to take another leading role in a major motion picture. Three years is a lifetime in Hollywood, but Foster is one of the few stars who can afford to take such a lengthy hiatus from the industry and still command major roles on her return. Robert Schwentke's FLIGHTPLAN is the movie Foster chose as her comeback vehicle; playing the recently widowed Kyle Pratt, she sticks close to PANIC ROOM territory, delving further into fear and isolation as her character boards an airplane to escort her dead husband's body from Berlin to New York. Kyle brings her young daughter Julia (Marlene Lawston) on the plane with her, and they fly on a craft that was designed by the grieving widow during her tragic tenure in Berlin. But after a short in-flight nap, Kyle awakes to find Julia has disappeared. Her frantic search leads nowhere, and it seems no one on the plane can remember Kyle's daughter boarding the plane. An air marshal named Carson (Peter Sarsgaard) and the pilot of the plane, Captain Rich (Sean Bean), methodically ask Kyle some questions to determine where Julia could be, but she fails to produce any concrete evidence, not even a boarding pass. At this point, Kyle begins to doubt her own sanity, and Schwentke steers the movie through some surprising plot twists as his lead character teeters on the brink of madness. The second half of the movie drops the Hitchcockian intrigue (FLIGHTPLAN owes a sizeable debt to Hitchcock's 1938 thriller THE LADY VANISHES) and settles into a more straightforward action film, but Foster shines throughout. Credit is also due to cinematographer Florian Ballhaus, who unnervingly conjures up a palpable feeling of claustrophobia as the high-tech airplane endures a rocky journey through the skies. [More]
Starring: Jodie Foster, Peter Sarsgaard, Sean Bean, Kate Beahan
Starring: Jodie Foster, Peter Sarsgaard, Sean Bean, Kate Beahan
Director: Robert Schwentke
Director: Robert Schwentke
Screenwriter: Billy Ray
Producer: Brian Grazer
Composer: James Horner
Studio: Touchstone Pictures
Reviews for Flightplan
It's a profoundly stupid plot.... The amazing feat is that, while the film has you in its grasp, you barely notice. Genius.
As plane-based suspense thrillers go, Flightplan has a smooth take off and cruises along nicely for a while, but it hits a rocky patch of turbulence in the third act and goes into a fatal tailspin.
I was so annoyed with Foster’s character that I hoped the air marshal would put a bullet in her brain and thus end the misery for the audience.
Flightplan is sillier and more outlandish than Red Eye, and ultimately less effective, but it’s still fun and certainly not boring.
What starts out as a decent thriller soon winds up plummeting to the ground, brought down by its own improbable plot twists and illogical storyline.
Flightplan isn't the most intense thriller to roar down the runway, but provides its own sort of satisfaction.
When the movie was over, I stepped out into the daylight and felt a weird sensation. It was a form of relief. The suspense had gotten to me more deeply than I expected.
See Jodie worry! See Jodie run! And please don't ask why we don't tranquilize her for the safety of other passengers.
Foster is believable, but casting her is like entering a Maserati in the soapbox derby.
Not since William Shatner saw a thingie on the wing of his plane in an old Twilight Zone has a flight been thrown into such panic by one passenger.
While the hidden agenda that eventually surfaces does strain credibility, Foster's ability to reign in the improbable ... allows this flight to deliver the requisite thrills.
Latest News for Flightplan
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