It's a straightforward, respectful, carefully upbeat survival story and tribute to the victims, survivors and rescuers of that day five years ago that changed our world forever.
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
Stone and Berloff give us time to meditate on this disaster, finding optimism in its aftermath. No filmmakers will put together the whole puzzle surrounding that dreadful day, but they've handed us a crucial piece.
Weighing in on "World Trade Center" is difficult; it's well-crafted, but it's also sluggish and meek.
I think they ought to just give Maggie Gyllenhaal the Oscar right now. She's that good.
Despite what you may have heard, World Trade Center isn't entirely apolitical, just understated in its commentary.
There is no Oliver Stone in "World Trade Center" with the exception of an ill-advised appearance by Jesus Christ in lieu of his usual Indian shaman.
World Trade Center is a film of hope set within a hopeless day. Stone treats it with sincere reverence ...
Although the conclusion is heavily sentimentalized, Stone finds the common ground Americans can rally around for relief from the devastation: We are, in the final analysis, good people.
World Trade Center feels like the respectful and tender beginning of a dialogue between filmmakers and audiences about a subject most would rather not revisit via their entertainment.
It looks at the tragedy on intimate, personal terms, with a sensitivity and restraint the macho provocateur has rarely revealed before.
Oliver Stone has taken a public tragedy and turned it into something at once genuinely stirring and terribly sad.
World Trade Center hits us where we live. And it reminds us how lucky we are to live, and love, and even struggle.
It is the humanistic approach of Andrea Berloff’s screenplay and Nicolas Cage’s powerhouse performance that determines the fate of this highly anticipated drama.
World Trade Center moves a little too slow - the pacing's not quite right - but otherwise it's a decent film and one that's a fitting tribute to the best in people during the worst of times.
Stone and his superb team make us feel the scale and 'body heat' of the event, the storm wave of panic, the enshrouding sense of a world gone lunatic. They have made an amazing visual and visceral homage to ground zero.
World Trade Center delivers to its audience a calculated dose of uplift and gooses us along to feel suspense here, compassion there and hope at the end.
World Trade Center is a commemoration of everyone who lost his or her life in the wreckage of 9-11, but also something more. It's a celebration of living, against all odds.
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