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April 30, 2006

Required Viewing: United 93

If you haven't seen United 93 yet, please do so at your earliest convenience. This sober depiction of the events of 9/11 is a fitting tribute to the heroes who brought United Airlines Flight 93 down in a Pennsylvania field before the Muslims who had hijacked it could crash it into the Capitol. Without injecting any opinionating, the movie makes it crystal clear why we must aggressively confront Islamic terrorism.

We used to be able to expect that Hollywood would help our country in time of war. Famous actors actually fought for the flag, including Humphrey Bogart, Clark Gable, Jimmy Stewart, Charles Bronson, Gene Autry, George C. Scott, Kirk Douglas, and many others. But now, instead of turning out films to rally the country, Hollywood actually propagandizes on behalf of the enemy (e.g., Fahrenheit 911, Syriana). Imagine useless pretty boys like George Clooney or Tom Cruise or the obese obscenity Michael Moore putting on flak jackets and facing down terrorists.

Fortunately there's nothing Hollywood about United 93. There are no smirking fops, no self-worshiping Julia Roberts types tossing their hair. Key figures play themselves and perform admirably. There are also no "nuanced" suggestions that the terrorists might have a point, or that fighting terrorism is somehow comparable to terrorism itself (as in Munich), let alone tinfoil hat notions that the whole atrocity was an American conspiracy (as we will presumably be getting from Oliver Stone). The movie is not entertainment but a historical reenactment, which the no-frills style never lets you forget.

However, antiwar types who want to continue to forget why we're fighting in the Middle East are warned to stay away.

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Flight 93 heroes Jeremy Glick, Mark Bingham, Todd Beamer, and Tom Burnett.

Posted by Van Helsing at April 30, 2006 11:43 AM

Comments

I wonder if the same folks who say "too soon" about Flight 93 said the same thing about Fahrenheit 911.

Your readers may recall that immediately after the September 11th atrocities, Hollywood execs made a very public promise to "do their part" to rally and unify the country.

That promise lasted as long as French President Jacques Chirac statement "Today, we are all Americans."

Glad to see that at least this film will remind people of why we are at war and just what is at stake.

Posted by: Mike's America at April 30, 2006 11:48 PM

This review is including in my blog http://amboytimes.blogspot.com/2006/04/united-93-review-round-up.html

Posted by: kevin at May 1, 2006 9:15 PM