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In Response to President
Jim Marshall's firm national policy to never negotiate with terrorists,
a group of Russian terrorists hijack the United States' most valuable
aircraft, Air Force One, in an attempt to free an imprisoned,
vicious tyrant. They promise to kill one hostage every hour until
their dastardly friend, dictator Raddeck (Jurgon Prochnow), is
released from a Russian prison. However, the president, Jim Marshall
(Harrison Ford), a former Medal of Honor winner, at first avoids
capture, and becomes the fly in the ointment, as he doesn't plan
on sitting on his butt waiting to see his family, his staff, and
himself get killed. Instead, it turns out to be an intense, great
action-packed thriller that proves the president isn't always
your typical three-piece suit, discreet businessman.
The direction, the screenplay, by Andrew W. Marlowe,
and the cast all come together to provide the audience with an
action-packed, intense thriller in the finest action movie tradition.
The German director, Wolfgang Petersen, who has also directed
THE PERFECT STORM, SHATTERED and DAS BOOT, keeps the pacing, the
intensity of the tension, and the rolling action scenes at just
the right level. His direction of this fine cast is also superb.
The acting was well done and efficient. Harrison
Ford portrays President James 'Jim' Marshall very well as the
smart, determined, brave man who can save the others and does
his usual great job as an action hero.
Gary Oldman, as Ivan Korshunov, "proved once
again that nowhere is safe." He somehow manages to look just
the part of a Russian terrorist, giving the audience a full glimpse
of his character's personality and motives; not just the typical
one note caricature of the typical bad guy. At one point he has
the president's 12 year old daughter, Alice (Liesel Matthews),
in the hot seat, perhaps as the next chosen victim. After giving
her a speech about her Dad, and how he also was a father, like
her's, this gutsy kid bravely says, "You are a monster, and
my father is a great man. You're nothing like my father!"
He in turn kisses her tenderly on the forehead.
The scenes between Ford and Oldman are absolutely
marvelous, as they really sparkle together as warring foes.
Glenn Close, who plays vice-president, Kathryn
Bennett, also does a good job playing the 2nd in command, being
torn as to what is to be done, and who to listen to. She is given
a hint of what President Marshall would do, when he manages to
contact them on a cell phone he found in the baggage compartment.
He says to illustrate his opinion: "If you give a mouse a
cookie.... She answers: "He's going to want a glass of milk,"
fully understanding what he was saying. This line came out of
a well-known children's book, "If You Give a Mouse a Cookie,"
by Laura Joffe Numeroff, who was thrilled that a line from her
book was used in the script! This book makes the point that giving
what the mouse wants will lead to other requests. This is the
same point that president Marshall made to his vice-president.
Some of the best scenes were Ford's game of wits
with the bad guys on board the plane, the flying sequence over
German air space, the President's rescue by the new A-F-1, and
the flight scenes with the terrorists taking control.
This film is rated R for violence and profanity.
If you enjoyed AIR FORCE ONE, you may like PASSENGER
57, DIE HARD 2, and CON AIR.
VISIT THE REAL "AIR FORCE ONE" |