One
does not simply skip watching a Liam Neeson movie. At least I don’t. Not to
mention that I’m also a huge Downton Abbey fan, so the fact that Non-Stop has Michelle Dockery in it was
another incentive for me to watch it.
When
the film started, I thought it was going to be exactly like other airplane
movies I had seen, like Flightplan or
Red Eye. It had all the key
characters: an obviously grief-stricken (and alcoholic) main character, a child
flying by themselves, pretty stewardesses, someone who is afraid of flying, and
a few passengers who are jerks, who also turn out to be helpful later. As the story
continued, it seemed more and more like the plot of Flightplan, with the main character getting blamed for a hijacking.
I did like the twist of (*Spoiler) Liam’s character being the one who killed
the first victim, at exactly the same moment that the hijacker said someone
would die. That took a lot of planning on the hijacker’s part and made for an
interesting movie to watch.
They
also did a good job with not cluing the audience in to who the hijacker was. I predicted
that it was going to be Julianne Moore’s character, since she would be the most
surprising choice. Even though she was sitting next to Liam while the hijacker
was texting him. I thought that maybe she had an accomplice (which turned out
to be correct, because there were two men hijacking the plane). I was
disappointed when she was not the culprit, because then her character was just
kind of useless. I’m still trying to figure out why she was in the movie, other
than to provide a pretty weak romantic storyline between her and Neeson’s
character.
I
was also disappointed when the hijacker turned out to be someone who had
already been suspected earlier in the movie. It kind of felt anti-climactic to
me. I also was confused when the computer programmer was also involved in the
hijacking. Wasn’t he helping earlier in the movie when he told Liam and Co. how
to track the phone that he hijacker was using? I know that his partner dumped
the phone onto someone else before they could discover it on him, but couldn’t
the programmer just have lied and said that he did not know how to track the
phone?
The
film may not have been perfect, but I was still very much entertained throughout.
Like I said earlier, I would watch anything with Liam Neeson in it, even though
he always seems to play such depressed and troubled characters in movies (i.e. Taken, The Grey, etc). Poor Liam.
IMDb rating: 7/10
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