The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, May 2, 2006 -13 Powerful tribute offers no insight By Imran Syed the flight where the terrorists were Daily Arts Writer overpowered by a determined group of heroes. It is, by its very being, a story to be cherished, one to be remembered and recounted; natu- Ready or not, here it comes. The rally, it is also one for Hollywood most horrific to explore. moments of United 93 And explore is what Greengrass America's most ("The Bourne Supremacy") does. He horrific day have At the Showcase investigates real-life facts and ascer- played out over and Quality 16 tains as much of the truth as can be and over in news Universal found. This is not a stylized account, coverage, books, and certainly not merely "based on" Congressional hearings and even or "inspired by" real events. For bet- TV movies. ter or for worse, for harm or for heal- But now they finally move to the ing, this film is real events. big screen. Writer/director Paul Slowly, almost methodically, the Greengrass's "United 93" - the film unravels the events of Sept. I1 as story of the events on board the they happened in real time. Viewers last flight hijacked are subjected first on Sept. 11 - is the A-hand to the confu- first in what is sure to As endearing a sion and mayhem be a long line of mov- tribute as (the faced by air traffic let dealing directly controllers in New with the events of film) is, it fails York City, Bos- that tragic day. For ton, Washington the tribute it pays to to consider D.C. and Cleve- the fallen, and the land. They see the precision with which the nations uncertainty faced it captures the ter- e today by officials at ror and confusion emo ions the Federal Avia- that prevailed on tion Agency and that infamous day, the film is to be the lack of orders that hold back applauded - even if it is lacking on NORAD. And, of course, the viewer other fronts. is on board for the terror of flight United Airlines flight 93 was - 93, the desperate cries of injured from piecemeal accounts taken from passengers, the tearful goodbyes recordings of the ill-fated plane's hushedly relayed to loved ones on last moments and from accounts of plane phones and ultimately, the victims' relatives who received cell determined resolution to defeat the phone calls during the hijacking - hijackers. "No, seriously guys, there are snakes on this plane." "United 93" masterfully handles the emotions America faced on Sept. 11 and tactfully tightropes between telling the story and exploiting it. But, it borders on inept at under- standing or evaluating America's emotions following that day. Then again, perhaps that's not its pur- pose. The movie, it seems, is simply a reminder of the day - straight, undiluted, uneditorialized and uncontextualized. But film is a powerful medium. Films have the power to evoke joy, anguish, hope, inspiration and even anger. No film can ignore the time in which it's released, even if it's simply relating an exact account of another time. This is where "United 93" falls short. As endearing a tribute as it is, it fails to consider the nation's emo- tions today. It fails to realize that it is far past the time that we imag- ine terrorists as faceless, demonic lunatics. It regrettably plays to the innermost fears of America by mak- ing the terrorists discernable from the good guys simply by the harsh sounding tones of their language and their repeated, misguided evocations of God. In order to defeat an enemy completely, you must understand it better than it understands itself, not simply live a life of fear, distrust and stereotypes. Films, in their stylized, often exaggerated way, seek to foster an understanding of events, not simply to recount them. But "United 93," as Greengrass has repeatedly said, was never meant to offer any such thing. Perhaps there will be a time down the road to explore the American psyche following the terrorist attacks, but Greengrass - for all his belief that the time is right to explore Sept 11 itself - clearly does not believe now is that time. Let us hope it is not too far down the road.