
Flightplan (2005) Movie Info
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Movie Name | Flightplan (2005) |
| Director | Robert Schwentke |
| Screenplay Writer | Peter A. Dowling, Billy Ray |
| Based on Novel by | — (Original screenplay) |
| Lead Actors | Jodie Foster, Peter Sarsgaard, Sean Bean |
| Cast | Jodie Foster, Peter Sarsgaard, Sean Bean, Erika Christensen, Kate Beahan, Michael Irby, Assaf Cohen, Marlene Lawston |
| Genre | Thriller, Mystery, Drama |
| Release Date | September 23, 2005 (United States) |
| Duration | 1h 38m (98 minutes) |
| Budget | ~$55 million |
| Language | English |
| Country | United States |
| Box Office (Worldwide) | ~$223.4 million |
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Summary
A woman (Foster) loses her daughter on a really, really big plane and will stop at nothing to track her down.
Review
It’s difficult to review this movie without giving away the ending does Foster’s character, Kyle Pratt, find her missing daughter or not? Is there even a daugher to begin with? Is Pratt crazier than those who think that Nick Lachey should actually move in with Matt Leinart? Check out the movie and you’ll at least receive responses to these pressing issues. Why a well-respected actress such as Foster would actually sign on to this inane project? That’s a question we may never know the answer to.
The premise of the film is simple enough Pratt and her daughter, Julia, are flying home to bury their recently deceased husband and father, respectively. When Pratt wakes up heaven forbid! Julia is missing. But she’s on a plane, how far could she have gone, right? This, however, is no ordinary airplane. It’s big. Really big. It’s like the size of George Bush’s ego. As the search for six year old Julia continues, passengers and crew members wonder if this intense lady has misplaced her child or if the strain of losing her husband has contributed to some serious hallucinations.
We won’t reveal the answer here. We will say the conclusion has more holes in it than the New Orleans Saints defense. In her defense, Foster’s eyes look particularly blue throughout the movie. Unfortunately, the audience’s mood will be pretty much the same once they realize they just wasted money on this nonsense.
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