It celebrates the courage of the rescue teams and the fortitude of their families while giving you a visceral sense of what it was like to be among them.
World Trade Center (2006)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:220
Fresh:153
Rotten:67
Average Rating:6.7/10
Consensus: As a visually stunning tribute to lives lost in tragedy, World Trade Center succeeds unequivocally, and it is more politically muted than many of Stone's other works.
Runtime: 2 hrs 8 mins 58 secs
Genre: Dramas
US Box Office: $70,236,496
Synopsis: The events of September 11 left an indelible mark on most Americans, and certainly on those in the New York City area. Yet as fresh as the images seem, it's easy to forget the actual grit,... The events of September 11 left an indelible mark on most Americans, and certainly on those in the New York City area. Yet as fresh as the images seem, it's easy to forget the actual grit, sacrifice, and uncertainty of that day. Director Oliver Stone captures the essence of 9/11 by focusing on the true story of two Port Authority Police Department officers who were trapped beneath the wreckage of the fallen World Trade Center. Veteran officer Sergeant John McLoughlin (Nicholas Cage) and his team, including rookie Will Jimeno (Michael Pena) are gathering equipment to enter the burning Twin Towers when the concourse comes crashing down around them. Twenty feet below the surface, pinned by debris and unable to reach anyone by radio, the officers must rely on their own will--and on each other--to survive. Above ground, their families watch the towers fall, uncertain whether or not McLoughlin and Jimeno are there, since they are normally assigned to the Port Authority Bus Terminal. Like so many that day, Donna McLoughlin (Maria Bello) and Allison Jimeno (Maggie Gyllenhaal) wait for news at home surrounded by their families, fearing the worst and praying for the best. Stone's film depicts the horror and heartbreak of the victims, survivors, and their families with an understated, subtle touch. From the ash and dust covering everyone and everything to the dazed expressions of the workers leaving the towers to the steaming twisted metal remains of the World Trade Center, attention to detail is exceedingly realistic. Rather than being political or sensationalistic, this is a film about everyday heroes--men and women doing their best in the face of an unspeakable event. It may be just one story of many from September 11, but it represents the efforts, emotions, and reactions of so many on that fateful day. [More]
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Michael Pena, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Maria Bello
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Michael Pena, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Maria Bello, Stephen Dorff, Jay Hernandez, Michael Shannon, Jude Ciccolella, Patti D'Arbanville, Frank Whaley, Donna Murphy
Director: Oliver Stone
Director: Oliver Stone
Screenwriter: Andrea Berloff
Producer: Michael Shamberg, Debra Hill, Stacey Sher, Moritz Borman
Composer: Craig Armstrong
Studio: Paramount Pictures
Reviews for World Trade Center
There are no histrionics, simply strong storytelling, involving us in the lives of two men, their families, and by default, the many whose lives were touched by this unforgettable tragedy
World Trade Center is not a great film. It barely passes as a good one. For a film that should have hollowed out its audience, I walked out strangely unmoved.
Everyone leaving the theatre will be reminded we are at war, the enemy is real, we are not out of danger and there are far too many sympathizing with the enemy.
Collapses under its own weight of jerrybuilt melodramatics ... In Stone and Berloff's emphasis on "uplifting" survival, the momentous 9/11 attacks are reduced to an innocuous event, complete with a happy ending.
Oliver Stone has taken a public tragedy and turned it into something at once genuinely stirring and terribly sad.
Underscored by the fragility of a plinking piano and well-timed flourishes to uplift, this heroic heartstring-tugger is...unexpectedly affecting, so much that it's able to hide its true face as a glorified movie-of-the-week.
The movie's real mistake is to take as its focus the single least unusual aspect of September 11--the fact that the murdered and wounded loved their families and were loved back.
There's been talk of World Trade Center bringing people to tears. After seeing the film, it's hard to believe that they're not tears of boredom.
It displays optimism, patriotism, emotional frankness and faith. Detractors might call it sentimental. Most of all, it exhibits no political slant whatsoever, injecting only heartfelt empathy for the day's many victims and heroes.
isn't just a fitting tribute to the specific people involved, it's also a celebration of grace under pressure, and what is worth preserving from the chaos
[World Trade Center] doesn’t pretend to encompass the entire catastrophe of 9/11, and that is its great negative virtue.
...in muting his personality, Stone has ended up with a TV movie %u2026 a particularly well-made, moving TV movie, but a TV movie nonetheless.
With so many lives affected, and so recently, by the tragic attack on New York's twin towers, there are the obvious questions of taste and timing, as well as the notion that you can't possibly pay tribute to so many people. Yet it is precisely these obsta
There's an over-earnestness at work here that's beneath Stone and that this story is powerful enough to do without.
There's no questioning the importance of this story, but it is a shame that Stone has chosen to be so manipulative with our emotions.
In fact...World Trade Center is one of the few cinematic efforts that wants to accurately recreate the confusion and chaos that derives from unexpected disaster.
With this unflinching account of that day, Stone has made the most important film of his long career.
World Trade Center is a movie packed with emotion. Guaranteed, no one will leave the theater dry eyed.
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