THE
CAPTAIN (2019)
Starring
Zhang Hanyu, Oho Ou, Du Jiang, Yuan Quan, Zhang Tian’ai, Li Qin.
Directed by Andrew Lau. (111 min)
ON
BLU-RAY FROM WELL GO USA
Review
by Tiger the Terrible😸
It’s
probably prudent to start this review by professing my love of
disaster movies. Ever since seeing the original Airport on TV
as a kid, it has been my favorite genre, even though I’m well-aware
a most of them aren’t exactly created to challenge the intellect or
compete for the Palme d’Or. With a few exceptions, I’ve enjoyed
every disaster movie ever made, good, bad and ugly. So yeah,
some might be inclined to take my review of The Captain with a
grain of salt. On the other hand, who better to assess the merits of
a new disaster movie than a guy who’s seen them all?
Okay,
not literally all, but enough to know some of the best recent
ones have come from overseas, such as Norway’s The Wave,
South Korea’s The Tower and the gloriously-bonkers Russian
hand-wringer, The Crew. The Captain is an air disaster
thriller that hails from China, and although it’s based on a true
incident that occurred just a year earlier, the film is a welcome
throwback to the genre’s Golden Age, the 1970s.
"Jesus, somebody open a window!" |
While
stoic Captain Liu Changjian (Zhang Hanyu) is the central protagonist,
the film features a large ensemble of
passengers and crew, providing just enough exposition about each for
the viewer to be concerned about their safety (or hope they get
sucked out a window). During a routine flight, Flight 8633’s
windshield implodes at 30,000 feet, incapacitating the co-pilot and
decompressing the entire plane. Because they are over a mountain
range, they are unable to descend to a level safe enough to equalize
the cabin pressure, meaning they’re forced to fly dangerously close
to the snowy peaks as a severe storm is approaching. Captain
Changjian must decide whether to risk trying to reach their destination
or turn back.
There
was once a time when disaster films weren’t driven entirely by
special effects. Though the CGI in The Captain is
certainly up-to-snuff, the film recalls such old-school classics as
The High and the Mighty, Airport and Zero Hour,
which emphasized drama and
suspense over spectacle. Similarly,
this one
efficiently establishes
the
setting and
players – in the air and on
the ground – before presenting a simple
crisis with ominous
implications. As such, the
film is gripping and
suspenseful, as
well as a bit melodramatic
and corny at times. In other
words, it’s the
kind of good old-fashioned
disaster flick that
Grandma used to make.
My
only complaint is the film goes on longer than it needs to, with an
unnecessarily extended epilogue after everything’s been resolved. Other
than that, The Captain
is director Andrew Lau’s first good movie in a long time and
an exciting ride for fans of the genre. Then again, I’ve always had
a soft spot for these things.
KITTY CONSENSUS:
PURR-R-R...LIKE A GOOD SCRATCH BEHIND THE EARS.
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