sully

So… the Sully movie. Most Americans are passingly familiar with the plot as it was a national news story.

In 2009, Captain Sully, pilot of a passenger jet, gets engine trouble right after taking off from New York. There’s no time to turn around and land on the airstrip. He stays calm and lands the plane in the Hudson River. Ferries and emergency services respond immediately and everyone is rescued with no significant injuries.

Seems pretty simple which leads to the question I heard most people ask about this movie, “How does it fill up an hour and a half of time?”

While we see the crash in flashbacks twice, most of the film’s focus is on Sully’s experiences afterwards. The central conflict being the airline wanting to blame Sully for not attempting to return to the airport.

Sub-plots include Sully experiencing some minor PTSD from the incident, the media attention placing stress on him, the copilot, and their families, and Sully’s general discomfort with the amount of attention for doing something that seemed natural to him.

I did not follow these events as they occurred in reality seven years ago. I was still in high school, lived on the West Coast, and had a disdain for all current event related topics.

That said, I do feel like Tom Hanks was a good cast to play Captain Sully. Aaron Eckhart played a pretty convincing Copilot Stiles as well (and I appreciated seeing the both of them with moustaches).

The movie bounces around in time A LOT. Way more than I expected going into it.

I feel like this non-linear method of storytelling was definitely the right choice, but I could also easily see it be confusing and difficult to keep up with for some audience members.

The movie tells the real story and it tells it well. I enjoyed it, but I had a nagging thought in the back of my mind.

The 2012 film, Flight, starring Denzel Washington tells essentially the same story, but everything is turned up to 11.

Sully is a great guy who saved a lot of people by landing a plane in a river. He’s great and he’s REAL.

Washington’s character in Flight is an alcoholic, a cocaine addict, is sleeping with his stewardess, and the best part of all, he saves the plane by doing an aileron roll during an uncontrolled dive to lose momentum. The central conflict is the pilots union’s attempts to cover up the fact that Washington’s character was drunk and high on cocaine at the time of the crash.

You can imagine that all of that adds a little excitement to the story.

The crash scene is intense and you can watch in on YouTube here.

If you want to see a movie that stays close to the true story, go see Sully. If you want to see an exciting thriller that is a bit further removed from reality, then you should go rent Flight. Both movies are tense and entertaining, Flight just has more of whatever Sully has except for the truth.

-GoCorral

 

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I’m Isaac

Welcome to the GoCorral website! I’m Isaac Shaker and this is a place for me to write about D&D and occasionally other topics. I host a podcast called Setting the Stage that interviews different DMs about their campaigns. I’m currently focused on completing the Cimmeria campaign setting and turning it into a book.

Setting the Stage Podcast

71 – Aaron Ryan and Dissonance/The End Setting the Stage, Campaigns for D&D and Other RPGs

I talked with Aaron Ryan about two of his book series, Dissonance and The End.Dissonance is a near future world where aliens have attacked, killing most humans and animals on Earth and driving humans into hiding underground. Humans finally develop technology to fight back and the war enters a new stage while the characters also struggle to determine the motivation for the alien invasion and nefarious actions of the government.The End is a Christian End Time series based loosely on the events described in Revelations. A man calling himself Nero has risen to rule over the world and he has outlawed Christianity. Robots called Guardians hunt Christians throughout the world, murdering them on the spot if they don't recant their faith. A resistance movement works in the shadows against Nero, but things aren't looking good for them.We talked about the basics of those settings along with how they could be adapted for RPG campaign settings. My main recommendations were Ashes Without Number, Spire, and Blades in the Dark.If you're interested in reading Aaron's books you can find them at most any bookstore or library. Both of the series are also being adapted into movies, but aren't publicly available yet. Aaron's website is https://authoraaronryan.com/ for the latest updates on his work. Next up for Aaron is the Talisman series that covers events within the "Aaronverse" in the decades between Dissonance and The End.Our website: https://gocorral.com/stsWant to be on the show? Fill out this survey: https://forms.gle/U11TbxtAReHFKbiVAJoin our Discord: https://discord.gg/Nngc2pQV6CSupport the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/SettingtheStage Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  1. 71 – Aaron Ryan and Dissonance/The End
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