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United 93: Everything but how and why it happened
By Joanne Laurier
12 May 2006
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United 93, written and directed by Paul Greengrass
The extremely limited merit of United 93, the account
of the hijacked airliner that crashed in a Pennsylvania field
on September 11, 2001, lies more in what it doesnt do than
in what it does. The film is not a flag-waving epic. It does not
exploit the doomed passengers, refashioning ordinary people responding
to a dire situation into heroes driven to save the White House
or the Capitol building. Nor does it simply dehumanize the terrorist
hijackers, guilty as they were of an atrocious, anti-human crime.
Drawing from interviews with more than 100 family members and
friends of the passengers and crew of the ill-fated flight, the
carefully (but evasively) crafted film at least has made less
likely future recreations of a more distorted, super-patriotic
nature.
The films British director, Paul Greengrass, is best
known for his 2002 docudrama, Bloody Sunday, about the
1972 shooting of 13 unarmed civil rights demonstrators by British
soldiers in Londonderry, Northern Ireland. He also directed The
Murder of Stephen Lawrence, a 1999 television film exposing
police racism and brutality. But what happened to his socially
critical views when he turned to the 9/11 events?
United 93 begins on the morning of September 11 by introducing
us to the hijackers, all young men, preparing for their part in
a deadly mission whose objective is the commandeering of one of
four commercial planes to be directed at major American targets.
They are crusaders in a holy war.
As passengers on Flight 93 assemble at the gate, the four men
sit among their soon-to-be victims. What are they thinking? Products
of a toxic political and cultural environment, one assumes that
they feel no compassion for those among whom they plan to die.
How else could they carry out their plan? This is one of the few
genuinely thoughtful or dramatic moments in the film. The would-be
terrorists blend unobtrusively into the crowd of passengers except
for their air of palpable discomfort, as they pray under their
breath to fortify their resolve.
The United Airlines flight is delayed on the ground by airport
congestion, leaving the hijackers out of sync with their comrades
in the other jets. Once in the air, normalcy prevails, the activities
of the flight crew, the cross-conversation among passengers, etc.
The hijackers wait and, presumably, steel themselves.
Ultimately, scenes of mayhem on board the plane, as the four
menincluding one trained to fly the jetseize control,
alternate with disorganized activity at the Air Traffic Control
Center in Herndon, Virginia, regional air traffic control stations
and NORAD (North American Aerospace Defense Command) headquarters
in Rome, New York.
The interplay between the Herndon command center and the military
reveals, at best, a gross incompetence that leads to a 40-minute
gap between the crash of American Airlines Flight 11 into the
World Trade Center and the launching of fighters from Langley
Air Force Base in Virginia. Both command centers hear the first
reports of the airplanes crashing into the World Trade Center
and follow events via cable television news.
Even as United Airlines Flight 175 and American Airlines Flight
77 turn up off-course and presumably hijacked, military commanders
are unable to contact the president or vice president for authorization
to use force against civilian aircraft. (Michael Moores
Fahrenheit 9/11 famously shows Bush sitting paralyzed in
an elementary school classroom in Florida for seven minutes after
being informed about the World Trade Center attack.)
As word spreads among the passengers and crew aboard United
93 about the terrible events in New York City and Washington,
they guess at their fate. With nothing to lose, they ultimately
storm the cockpit and overwhelm the hysterical terrorists as the
plane goes down. An epilogue states that it was not until four
minutes after the jet crashed in rural Pennsylvania that military
commanders were notified that Flight 93 had been hijacked.
While a few critics take United 93 to task for its portrayal
of the terroriststhe San Francisco Chronicle
claims that the men do not deserve the dignity of being
humanized in artcommentators and reviewers, both liberal
and right-wing, praise the film as a taut and tasteful
work. Right-wing columnist George Will of the Washington Post
goes so far as to proclaim viewing United 93 a civic duty.
Director Greengrass was interviewed by extreme-right blowhard
and radio host Rush Limbaugh. In part, Will and Limbaugh are clutching
at straws within a political environment that is turning against
them, but nonetheless Greengrass has provided them with a certain
opening, to his serious discredit.
United 93, the first major film to deal with any aspect
of September 11, circumvents every contentious issue. Its focus
is narrowrecounting, documentary-style, the 90-minute ordeal.
Greengrass has created a work that can satisfy a wide spectrum
of opinions. Far too wide a spectrum. Its openness to interpretation
is not a strength. The film seems tailored to avoid offending
official public opinion. In the movies production notes,
the filmmaker demurs: There are lots of ways to find meaning
in the events of 9/11 ... I believe that sometimes, if you look
clearly and unflinchingly at a single event, you can find in its
shape something much larger than the event itselfthe DNA
of our times ... Hence a film about United 93.
But Greengrass has not taken a clear and unflinching
look at his subject matter. How is it to be explained that the
Limbaughs and Wills (could there be a worse fate for a filmmaker
than to be fêted by that foul crowd?) interpret his work
as meshing comfortably with the Bush agenda. Ones views
of the film depend largely on what one already knows about that
terrible day. Reproducing surface reality, even painstakingly,
does not yield something much larger than the event itself,
and with United 93, Greengrass has not excavated more truth
than he put into the project.
The manner in which Greengrass treats September 11, omitting
any reference to the process by which the tragic event came to
pass, does not qualify as a discovery of the DNA of our
times. How is it that these young men are able to destroy
themselves and others so barbarically? This is never probed, nor
is the bizarre conduct of the administration and the military.
The film fails to treat the 9/11 events in a serious artistic
manner. The filmmakers refusal to provide a broader, historical
context for the events inevitably results in a superficial treatment
of characters. Powerful characterizations emerge from historical
circumstance. The director takes shortcuts, looking for types
who will stand in for all that is not developed. So, to avoid
stereotyping the lead terrorist as simply a monster, Greengrass
casts a soulful-looking performer (Lewis Alsamari) in the role,
who, one frankly feels, could not have carried out such a brutal
act. So much more socio-historical understanding and depth would
have had to go into the appropriate treatment of the hijackers.
A clear and unflinching look at 9/11 would inevitably
allude to Washingtons decades-long sponsorship of Islamic
fundamentalism, underscoring the fact that the hijackers of Flight
93 were not even born when the US began courting and encouraging
reactionary Islamicism, first to weaken left-wing and secular
nationalist forces in the Middle East and later in Afghanistan
to undermine the Soviet Union.
Even within the films docudrama framework,
this would have been feasible. Greengrass places titles at the
end of the film, commenting on various facets of the 9/11 events.
Why could he not have similarly begun his film with titles conveying
the fact, for example, that in 1979 the US commenced giving financial
and military backing to the Islamic fundamentalists engaged in
guerrilla warfare against the Soviet-backed regime in Kabul? Or
why not a title indicating that Osama bin Laden was essentially
on the CIA payroll in the early 1980s, through Pakistani intelligence?
Why not a reference to the 500,000 Iraqis who died as a result
of US-led sanctions or Washingtons unstinting support for
the suppression of the Palestinians? Why not a title explaining
that on August 6, 2001, George W. Bushs daily intelligence
briefing was entitled Bin Laden determined to strike in
US? What questions such an approach would have raised in
the spectators mind!
Greengrass has made it a guiding principle to offer no explanation
and no backgroundnone whatsoever!to a world-historical
event that provided the justification for two neo-colonial wars
and the deaths of tens or hundreds of thousands. Artists of another
day would have found such an approach unthinkable. Disasters of
far less geopolitical consequence, like the sinking of the Titanic,
were treated more seriously decades ago. Insofar as the film implies
a cause or source of the violence, it lies in some inexplicable
or perhaps eternal religious fanaticism, the bankrupt argument
of right-wingers such as Christopher Hitchens.
Considering the isssues covered in United 93, it is
worth noting that Greengrass co-wrote the screenplay for Omagh
(2004), a film about a family whose only son is killed in a 1998
terrorist bombing in Northern Ireland. That work reveals that
the authorities had been alerted and, in fact, allowed the bombing
to take place. In a brief comment on the WSWS two years ago, the
films devastating implications for the September 11 attacks
were noted. In other words, Greengrass ought to be familiar with
the workings and machinations of Western intelligence services.
Confronted with even more explosive historical material in United
93, however, the director-writer has largely evaded his artistic
and intellectual responsibilities.
Nearly five years have elapsed since September 11, 2001 and
it is well established that at least several of the future hijackers
were known to US government agencies, including the CIA and military
intelligence, yet nothing was done to disrupt their operations.
The most plausible explanation is that powerful forces within
the US military/intelligence complex felt a terrorist incident
on American soil would help shift public opinion, permitting the
ruling elite to embark on a long-planned campaign of military
intervention in Central Asia and the Middle East, as well as attacks
on democratic rights at home. Whether or not the authorities could
have known the scale of the impending attacks and what the precise
targets or damage would be, they acted in such a manner as to
prevent the apprehension of known terrorist operatives, thus permitting
them to carry out their plot.
United 93 avoids even hinting at the unmentionable,
that the Bush administration was aware of the possibility of a
terrorist hijacking and stood down its military and
intelligence apparatus. At most the film suggests that the military
was inept.
Greengrass artistic evasiveness has produced a film that
is subject to almost any interpretation, including one that claims
the post-9/11 world necessitates the prosecution of a one-size-fits-all-evils
war on terror, a euphemism for the pursuit of American
global domination.
That final image haunts mea physical struggle for
the controls of a gasoline-fueled 21st century flying machine
between a band of suicidal religious fanatics and a group of innocents
drawn at random amongst us all ... I think of it often. Its
really, in a way, the struggle for our world today, muses
the director. Yes, as the film demonstrates, these are haunting
images. But how different is this ahistorical clash-of-cultures
outlook from that of the pro-war media? In the most neutraland
politically forgivingof interpretations, United 93
hardly differs, in its final portions, from conventional thrillers
and disaster films.
Greengrass subscribes to the notion that you cant
sustain events like 9/11 without responding on some level militarily,
otherwise democracy ceases to function, as one of the primary
functions of the state is to protect us all. The ultra-rightist
Limbaugh agrees. He introduced Greengrass to his radio show by
informing the audience that the director suggests that we
need a consensus in coming up with ideas on how were
going to ultimately defeat terrorism.
Despite Greengrass shameful cozying up to the right-wing,
United 93 has faced reprisals. Alsamari, the Iraqi-born,
British actor who plays the lead hijacker, was denied a visa by
the US government to attend the films New York City premiere.
The problem is Greengrass would not understand, or would not
choose to understand, the bitter irony of this exclusion.
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