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  1. Nov 30, 2016 · Try for free. For all his outward calm, Sully is clearly traumatised. One of the scariest, most juddering moments in the film has nothing to do with the crash. It’s when a distracted Sully, out...

    • Tom Hanks

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    • The Miracle on The Hudson
    • The Conflict
    • The Character Study
    • The Full Scope
    • Conclusion

    Most of us know the story already, so I’ll sum it up briefly: Sully focuses on an incident back in January of 2009 when a commercial airline from NYC with a destination of Charlotte, North Carolina crashed into a large flock of birds shortly after takeoff. The birds subsequently got caught in both engines, resulting in complete loss of thrusting po...

    After seeing Sully, I was scrolling through a few articles about it and noticed some that expressed the NTSB’s objections to their portrayal in the film. Portrayed by Mike O’Malley and Anna Gunn, among others, the group seems to operate more as prosecutors as opposed to investigators. They question Sully, insinuating that he may have made the wrong...

    Throughout Sully, we catch small glimpses of who he is as the film progresses. Sully is not only dealing with the immediate aftermath of the incident and the investigation by the NTSB, but, in addition, the surrealness of suddenly becoming a recognizable celebrity. For the first time in his life, people greet and praise him as a hero. Yet, Sully hi...

    The subtleties in Sully are surprising as a whole, especially given the production team behind it. Clint Eastwood‘s films have been known to overly dramatize their subjects for some other more-obvious purpose. For example, his past film American Sniper very much tries to push its pro-war, nationalistic agenda. There are inklings of patriotism withi...

    To conclude, Clint Eastwood‘s Sully is a satisfyingly level-headed film. It might not be as remarkable when compared to either Eastwood‘s career as a whole, or even when compared to other, more distinctive airplane thrillers (United 93, for instance). Yet, for a film that could have easily overreached beyond its scope and attempted to tug at the he...

    • The Pursuit of Happyness. Logline: A struggling salesman takes custody of his son as he's poised to begin a life-changing professional career. Moment: Chris has spent the whole film struggling to achieve his dream of attaining a well-paying job so he can support him and his son — both of which are homeless.
    • Chariots of Fire. Logline: Two British track athletes, one a determined Jew, and the other, a devout Christian, compete in the 1924 Olympics. Moment: Eric Liddell, the devout Christian, is the fastest man alive in 1924.
    • RUDY. Logline: Rudy has always been told that he was too small to play college football. But he is determined to overcome the odds and fulfill his dream of playing for Notre Dame.
    • Mr. Holland’s Opus. Logline: A frustrated composer finds fulfillment as a high school music teacher. Moment: Glen Holland, a musician that put his dreams of being a composer aside as he raised a family and taught music classes at a high school, took a job he didn’t want but learned to love.
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  3. It may be that horror movies provide psychic relief on this level because this invi-tation to lapse into simplicity, irrationality and even outright mad-ness is extended so rarely. We are told we may allow our emotions a free rein ... or no rein at all. If we are all insane, then sanity becomes a matter of degree.

  4. His view of catharsis is neither simple nor entirely uniform across his corpus. Nietzsche’s understanding of catharsis proves to be much closer to the view he appears to reject, and much closer to classicism’s reading of tragedy than one might suppose.

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  6. “The Miracle Morning is literally the ONE thing that will make immediate and profound changes in any—or every area of your life. If you really want your life to improve, read this book immediately.” —RUDY RUETTIGER, the Notre Dame football player who inspired the hit Hollywood movie RUDY

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