Popularity: 4 (history)
Director: | Robert Zemeckis |
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Writer: | John Gatins |
Staring: |
Commercial airline pilot Whip Whitaker has a problem with drugs and alcohol, though so far he's managed to complete his flights safely. His luck runs out when a disastrous mechanical malfunction sends his plane hurtling toward the ground. Whip pulls off a miraculous crash-landing that results in only six lives lost. Shaken to the core, Whip vows to get sober -- but when the crash investigation exposes his addiction, he finds himself in an even worse situation. | |
Release Date: | Nov 02, 2012 |
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Director: | Robert Zemeckis |
Writer: | John Gatins |
Genres: | Drama |
Keywords | confession, pilot, flight, f word, airplane accident, syringe, baseball stadium, national transportation safety board, narcissist, substance abuse, cautionary, dramatic, airplane, investigation, emergency landing, alcoholism, hangover, airplane crash, denial, perjury, flying upside down, relapse, hard, inspirational |
Production Companies | Paramount Pictures, ImageMovers, Parkes+MacDonald Image Nation |
Box Office |
Revenue: $161,772,575
Budget: $31,000,000 |
Updates |
Updated: Aug 01, 2025 (Update) Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
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Denzel Washington | Whip Whitaker |
Don Cheadle | Hugh Lang |
Kelly Reilly | Nicole |
John Goodman | Harling Mays |
Bruce Greenwood | Charlie Anderson |
Brian Geraghty | Ken Evans |
Tamara Tunie | Margaret Thomason |
Nadine Velazquez | Katerina Marquez |
Peter Gerety | Avington Carr |
Garcelle Beauvais | Deana |
Melissa Leo | Ellen Block |
Carter Cabassa | Son on Plane |
Adam C. Edwards | Father on Plane |
Conor O'Neill | Kip |
Charlie E. Schmidt | Tiki Pot |
Will Sherrod | Schecter |
Boni Yanagisawa | Camelia Satou |
Adam Tomei | Fran |
Dane Davenport | Derek Hogue |
John Crow | Field Reporter |
E. Roger Mitchell | Craig Matson |
Ravi Kapoor | Dr. Kenan |
Jill Jane Clements | Morning Nurse |
Tommy Kane | Mark Mellon |
James Badge Dale | Gaunt Young Man |
Susie Spear Purcell | Waitress |
Philip Pavel | Bartender |
Piers Morgan | Piers Morgan |
Jim Tilmon | Jim Tilmon |
Charles Z. Gardner | Pentecostal Minister |
Tom Nowicki | Len Caldwell |
Jason Benjamin | Carr's Business Guy / Stalking Reporter |
Ric Reitz | Carr's Attorney |
Timothy Adams | Whip's Dad |
Darius Woods | Young Will |
Ron Caldwell | Trevor |
Dylan Kussman | Two Beer Barry |
Janet Metzger | Sheila |
Bethany Anne Lind | Vicky Evans |
Sharon Blackwood | Peach Tree Employee |
Pam Smith | Peach Tree Employee |
Justin Martin | Will Whitaker Jr. |
Shannon Walshe | Tilda Banden |
Rhoda Griffis | Amanda Anderson |
Michael Beasley | Officer Edmonds |
Ted Hall | TV Reporter |
Laila Pruitt | Girl on Elevator |
Precious Bright | Mom on Elevator |
Steve Coulter | NTSB Officer at Hearing |
Ted Huckabee | Prison Guard |
Sarah Clark | Radio Talk Show Host (voice) |
Vinnie Hasson | Radio Talk Show Host (voice) |
Randy Thom | Radio Stock Market Reporter (voice) |
Dennis P. Wise | Air Traffic Controller (voice) |
Paul Volle | Air Traffic Controller (voice) |
Hal Williams | Whip's Dad (voice) |
Kwesi Boakye | Young Will (voice) |
Jennifer Olympia Bentley | Naked Girl in Helmet (uncredited) |
Name | Job |
---|---|
Kevin Michael Murphy | Stunts |
Michael Burgess | "B" Camera Operator |
Daniel Laurie | Dialogue Editor, ADR Supervisor |
Robert Zemeckis | Director |
Victoria Burrows | Casting |
Alan Silvestri | Original Music Composer |
Dennis Leonard | Sound Designer, Supervising Sound Editor |
Randy Thom | Sound Designer |
Charles Croughwell | Stunt Coordinator |
Steve Starkey | Second Unit Director |
Goro Koyama | Foley |
Alex Madison | Stunts |
Kim Foscato | Dialogue Editor |
Kevin Baillie | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Ashley Rae Trisler | Stunts |
Elizabeth Davidovich | Stunts |
John Gatins | Writer |
John Casino | Stunts |
Jeannie Epper | Stunts |
Robert Presley | "A" Camera Operator, Steadicam Operator |
Alisa Simonds | Visual Effects Editor |
Larry M. Cherry | Hairstylist |
Sally Wilkerson | Set Costumer |
Katie Fellion | Digital Intermediate |
John Berger | Set Designer |
Des Carey | Digital Intermediate |
Carl Fullerton | Makeup Artist |
Eric Hooge | Location Manager |
Katrina Chevalier | Hairstylist |
Tracey Moss | Hairstylist |
Robert Zuckerman | Still Photographer |
Peter Oso Snell | Music Editor |
Tracey L. Miller-Smith | Makeup Artist |
Patrick Rofoli | Art Department Coordinator |
Jeffrey Schlatter | Construction Coordinator |
Hans Bjerno | Helicopter Camera |
Luca Kouimelis | Script Supervisor |
Robert Q. Mathews | Costume Supervisor |
Pierre Brouard | Dialogue Editor |
Toby Guidry | Casting Associate |
J.P. Jones | Property Master |
Stuart McCowan | ADR Editor |
Andy Malcolm | Foley |
Louise Frogley | Costume Design |
David Lazan | Art Direction |
Nelson Coates | Production Design |
Jeremiah O'Driscoll | Editor |
James Edward Ferrell Jr. | Set Decoration |
Alex L. Worman | Unit Publicist |
Teressa Hill | Hairstylist |
Dan Marrow | Transportation Coordinator |
Nikoletta Skarlatos | Makeup Department Head |
Patrice Coleman | Makeup Artist |
Quintessence Patterson | Makeup Artist |
Justin Oliphant | Visual Effects Editor |
Monique Eissing | Digital Intermediate |
Gary Duncan | Picture Car Coordinator |
Jon Carlos | Assistant Art Director |
Jenn Emberly | Animation Supervisor |
Michael Cioni | Digital Intermediate |
Peter Cioni | Digital Intermediate |
Stephanie Barnes | Makeup Artist |
Susan Ransom | Makeup Artist |
Daniel George | Set Costumer |
Sundari Moneek Reid | Set Costumer |
Danny Brown | Set Designer |
Matt Blackshear | Digital Intermediate |
Marilyn McCoppen | Dialogue Editor |
Stephen Urata | Sound Recordist |
Judith Sunga | Casting Associate |
Scot Boland | Casting |
Dana J. Kuznetzkoff | First Assistant Director |
Ryan Chan | Associate Editor |
Kevin J. Summers | Boom Operator |
Cherylanne Martin | Unit Production Manager |
Greg Gilman | Second Assistant Director |
Michael Lantieri | Special Effects Supervisor |
Dennis Sands | Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Don Burgess | Director of Photography |
Sarah Carter | Set Decoration Buyer |
Leff Lefferts | Sound Effects Editor |
Ryan Tudhope | Visual Effects Producer |
Rafael E. Sánchez | Chief Lighting Technician |
Jessica Merideth | Stunts |
Name | Title |
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Laurie MacDonald | Producer |
Walter F. Parkes | Producer |
Steve Starkey | Producer |
Robert Zemeckis | Producer |
Cherylanne Martin | Executive Producer |
Heather Kelton | Associate Producer |
Jack Rapke | Producer |
Organization | Category | Person |
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Popularity History
Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
---|---|---|---|---|
2024 | 4 | 44 | 73 | 30 |
2024 | 5 | 45 | 73 | 30 |
2024 | 6 | 38 | 58 | 25 |
2024 | 7 | 43 | 74 | 26 |
2024 | 8 | 40 | 63 | 27 |
2024 | 9 | 29 | 37 | 23 |
2024 | 10 | 35 | 64 | 23 |
2024 | 11 | 32 | 54 | 21 |
2024 | 12 | 35 | 53 | 25 |
2025 | 1 | 39 | 64 | 25 |
2025 | 2 | 24 | 38 | 9 |
2025 | 3 | 10 | 57 | 3 |
2025 | 4 | 8 | 13 | 4 |
2025 | 5 | 8 | 14 | 5 |
2025 | 6 | 6 | 10 | 4 |
2025 | 7 | 5 | 8 | 4 |
2025 | 8 | 6 | 8 | 3 |
2025 | 9 | 7 | 12 | 4 |
Trending Position
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 9 | 954 | 971 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 8 | 315 | 702 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 7 | 588 | 745 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 6 | 923 | 957 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 5 | 374 | 682 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 4 | 307 | 667 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 3 | 370 | 684 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 2 | 428 | 588 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2025 | 1 | 154 | 657 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 12 | 76 | 574 |
Year | Month | High | Avg |
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2024 | 11 | 264 | 753 |
With Robert Zemekis at the helm, it has to be good, right? Pretty much. Not the strongest performance by Cheadle, but otherwise the cast is great. John Goodman is a welcome surprise half-way through and really brings this home. With a feel good ending, what more do you 1-3 star people want?? ... It's Denzel!!
The title Flight is a perfect illustration that brevity really is the soul of wit. Its six letters describe not only the protagonist's occupation (flying), but also what he spends most of the film doing (fleeing), and if we only added a seventh letter (-y), it would describe the character himself. T ... he film itself could stand to be shorter, but overall it's no exception to the rule that no good movie is too long. In addition to illustrating the aforementioned Shakespearean principle, director Robert Zemeckis inverts a famous Simpsonian maxim; in this case, alcohol is first the solution and then the cause of all the problems. One can identify a compulsive smoker when he lights a cigarette with the butt of the previous one; Similarly, one can spot an alcoholic when he soothes his hangover with leftover beer from the day before — and that’s just the start of commercial pilot William 'Whip' Whitaker's (Denzel Washington) breakfast of champions. Whip is still drinking in the cabin of Flight 227 bound for Atlanta, making himself a screwdriver, or several, before taking a nap. He wakes with a start when the plane begins to nosedive. Unable to regain control, Whip is forced to make a controlled crash landing in an open field, saving most of the "102 souls" on board. This includes a maneuver where Whip flies the plane upside down, and it's not just him but also Zemeckis who takes a huge risk and lives to reap the reward. The scene avoids becoming unintentionally funny because part of its purpose is precisely to provide some much-needed humor to ease the almost unbearable tension; at the same time, it manages to stretch the audience's suspension of disbelief without breaking it for two reasons: 1) it has real precedent, and 2) it's exactly the kind of thing someone flying under the influence would do. There’s no doubt that Whip has the expertise to pull off this maneuver successfully; the question is whether he would have dared to execute it while sober. Moreover,, the cause of the accident is a mechanical failure completely unrelated to Whip's sorry physical state. But Flight is not, like Druk, an apology for alcoholism. In an inferior film the vehicle, be it a plane or a car, would crash as a direct result of the driver/pilot's drunkenness, and the driver/pilot would be the only or one of the few survivors, making him feel even guiltier. Flight instead debunks the myth of invincibility that every alcoholic invokes by leading us to believe, practically to the end, that Whip might very well be literally invincible. "Maybe I'm a fool," Whip muses, "because if I'd just told one more lie, I might have walked away from the whole mess." But he knows as well as we do that after that “one more lie” there would be another lie, and another, and another, and that eventually his lies would have caught up with him, because ultimately there is no escaping the negative effects of addiction. Like the similar Clean and Sober, Flight loses momentum with a Romantic Subplot that a nearly two-and-a-half-hour film doesn't need; on the other hand, I really liked Washington’s and Zemeckis's attention to detail — for example, when in the middle of crash landing Whip has the presence of mind to make a flight attendant tell her son that she loves him so that the box black can record it (in case they don’t make it), or the way his facial language unequivocally expresses the world of difference, the passage from hell to paradise, that exists before that first line of cocaine — supplied by John Goodman in a pair of hilarious cameos, each one heralded by the presence of “Sympathy for the Devil” on the soundtrack — and after.