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Flight 2012 Full Movie Review

Starring: Denzel Washington, Don Cheadle, et al. 
Directed by: Robert Zemeckis 
Runtime: 2 hrs 18 mins 
Go Here to Watch >>> Flight 2012 Full 
  
Flight is a 2012 American drama film directed by Robert Zemeckis. The film stars Denzel Washington as Whip Whitaker, an airline pilot who miraculously crash lands his plane after it suffers an in-flight mechanical failure, saving nearly everyone on board. Immediately following the crash, he’s hailed a hero, but an investigation soon leads to questions that puts the captain in a different light. Flight was the first live-action film directed by Robert Zemeckis since Cast Away and What Lies Beneath, both released in 2000, and his first R-rated film since Used Cars in 1980. It was the second collaboration of Denzel Washington and John Goodman, who had previously worked together in the 1998 film Fallen. It was also a box office success grossing over $160 million worldwide and received mostly positive reviews. The film was nominated twice at the 85th Academy Awards for Best Actor (Denzel Washington) and Best Original Screenplay (John Gatins). Airline pilot captain Whip Whitaker (Washington) uses cocaine to wake up after a night of very little sleep in his Orlando hotel room. He pilots SouthJet Flight 227 to Atlanta which experiences severe turbulence at takeoff. Copilot Ken Evans (Geraghty) takes over while Whip discreetly mixes vodka in his orange juice and takes a nap,. He is jolted awake as the plane goes into a steep dive. Unable to regain control, Whip is forced to make a controlled crash landing in an open field and loses consciousness on impact. Nearby, heroin addict Nicole Maggen (Reilly) is on the verge of being evicted. After visiting a drug dealer, she overdoses and has to be wheeled out of the house by a paramedic. SouthJet Flight 227 flies overhead in the midst of its emergency landing. Whip awakens in an Atlanta hospital with moderate injuries and is greeted by his old friend Charlie Anderson (Greenwood), who represents the airline’s pilots union. He tells Whip that he managed to save 96 out of 102 people on board, losing two crew members and four passengers, and that his copilot is in a coma. Whip sneaks away for a cigarette in the stairwell and meets Nicole, who is recovering from her heroin overdose in the same hospital. The next morning, his friend and drug dealer Harling Mays (Goodman) picks him up from the hospital. Having retired to his late father’s farm, he meets Charlie and attorney Hugh Lang who explain that the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) performed a drug test while he was unconscious, and it showed that Whip was intoxicated during the flight. The results could send him to prison on alcohol, drug, and manslaughter charges. Hugh promises to get the toxicology report voided on technical grounds. Meanwhile, Whip visits and soon becomes intimate with Nicole, but Whip’s drug habits clashes with Nicole’s attempts to stay sober. Later at a crew member’s funeral, he attempts to persuade a flight attendant who survived to tell the NTSB that he was sober on the flight. Whip hears on the news that co-pilot Ken Evans has come out of his coma and pays him a visit. He learns that Evans has a slim chance of regaining his ability to walk unaided and won’t be able to pilot an airplane again, yet Evans has no intentions of telling the NTSB that he knew Whip was drunk. Nicole, who was staying with Whip, decides to leave him after he was unable to break his habits. Hounding Whip, the media catches him drunk when he spontaneously drove to the home of his ex-wife and son, both of whom resent him. He drives to Charlie’s house begging to stay until the NTSB hearing, vowing not to drink. The night before the hearing, Charlie and Hugh move Whip to a guarded hotel room to prevent him from drinking. Although his minibar contains no alcohol, he finds the door to the adjacent room unlocked and raids its minibar instead. Charlie and Hugh discover him the next morning, passed out and still drunk. They call Harling, who revives him with cocaine. At the hearing, Ellen Block, the lead NTSB investigator, explains that a damaged elevator assembly jackscrew was the primary cause of the crash. She commends Whip on his valor and skill, explaining that no other pilots were able to land the plane in trial simulations of the crash. She then reveals that two empty vodka bottles were found in the trash of the plane, but none were served to passengers. She goes on to say that two of the crew members’ toxicology reports were positive for alcohol, but one was excluded from the hearing and the other was from a deceased crew member, Trina. Block asks Whip if he believes Trina drank it. Rather than lie and permanently taint Trina’s good name, Whip admits that it was him, and that he flew intoxicated. He also admits he’s intoxicated at that moment. Thirteen months later, an imprisoned Whip tells a support group of fellow inmates that he’s glad to be sober and doesn’t regret doing the right thing. Whip is seen looking at pictures of Nicole, family and friends on the wall of his cell, along with greeting cards congratulating him on being sober for a year. He is working to rebuild his relationship with his son, who visits to talk with him about a college application essay on “the most fascinating person that I’ve never met.” His son begins by asking, “Who are you?” As a plane flies overhead, Whip replies, “That’s a good question.”

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