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10 Essential Cinematic Antiheroes“In the end, it's not a movie about anything else but one person,” said Zemeckis, who spoke to us in Los Angeles in between Q&As across town. “This guy could've very well been a school bus driver; it just turns out that an airplane is more identifiable and dramatic. Pilots are normal people, and some are probably also somewhat broken people. But no one wants to go into heart surgery knowing that your surgeon had an argument with their kid the night before. No one wants to know that the owner of a power plant just found out their mother had a stroke. So I think that's one of the interesting complexities of the piece, that we project our ideals onto these people, and we sometimes don't want to face the fact that they're human.”
While the film does reveal itself as an intimate character study from the opening frames, the aspect that likely brought people into theatres is the 20-minute crash scene near the beginning. Gripping and by turns surreal and meticulously sustained, it captures the audience early on and holds them. Even with his similar setpiece with Tom Hanks in “Cast Away,” Zemeckis made sure to approach “Flight” with a different goal. “They're two separate things. In 'Cast Away' it was this horrific catastrophic malfunction that no one knew the problem to, and in 'Flight,' the audience had to understand what Denzel's character did, so I directed it from two separate points of view completely.”
Much emphasis has also been placed on the fact that “Flight” represents Zemeckis' first R-rated effort since 1980's “Used Cars,” but for him the classification is entirely meaningless. Denzel's story is a grim one, and while Zemeckis says the actor “brings a lot of charm and goodwill to everything that he does, for the story to be redemptive it's gotta go to the dark place or it doesn't have any power. So what you're seeing is someone who is very self-destructive and alienating everyone in his life, which I never thought of throttling back at all. I went for the R-rating in 'Flight' the same way I went for the G-rating in 'Polar Express.' "
“When I made 'Forrest Gump,' they gave it an R.” he adds. “I didn't cut anything, but we kept appealing everything. They gave it an R because some woman straddled Lt. Dan in his wheelchair, and because Jenny snorts a line of coke. So whenever you have a rule that says, 'Any on-screen depiction of drug use means an automatic R' then there's nowhere to go. They don't take everything into account. So the defense in our case was 'What about the repercussions? It's a cautionary thing, not exploitative in any way.' And they finally said, 'Oh you're right.'
And with any return to producing horror films (“Thirteen Ghosts,” "Ghost Ship”) alongside Joel Silver a dashed prospect (“He's doing his own version of whatever Dark Castle is but we're not doing those William Castle remakes anymore.”) and the rumored Barefoot Bandit film entitled “Taking Flight” simply just that (“It's sounds like a good story,” he chuckled), it would seem Zemeckis is left without an immediate gig. However, that's exactly how the director would want it. “I try really hard not to react to what I just did, and not do what is traditional wisdom in Hollywood which is before your movie comes out you should have your next project lined up.” With the massive success of “Flight” for Paramount though, you can bet that he won't be short of potential movies to jump to next.
“Flight” is in theatres now.
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