I have a long list of favorite patriotic movies, including "Victory at Sea,"
"Yankee Doodle Dandy" and "Sands of Iwo Jima," but Oliver Stone's "World
Trade Center" is right up there with the best of them. It is one of the
greatest pro-American, pro-family, pro-faith, pro-male, flag-waving, God
Bless America films you will ever see.
What? Oliver Stone, who hangs out with and praises Fidel Castro? Oliver
Stone, who indulges in conspiracy theories and is a dues-paying member of
the Hollywood left? Yes, THAT Oliver Stone.
"World Trade Center" is the story of five men who volunteered to enter the
twin towers on Sept. 11, 2001 in their role as officers of the Port
Authority Police Department (PAPD). Three of them died and two, Will Jimeno
(played persuasively by Michael Pena) and Sergeant John McLoughlin (played
magnificently by Nicolas Cage), were buried in the rubble. These are real
men who love their wives and children and are not afraid to say so. They are
religious men who pray without shame or reserve. In fact, Jesus makes an
appearance in Jimeno's hallucination, carrying a bottle of water to quench
his thirst). Treating faith as genuine and with respect has only recently
made a comeback among filmmakers.
"World Trade Center" is several stories folded into one. It not only tells
of the bravery of the PAPD officers, but the faith, strength and fears of
their wives. It is also the story of an ex-Marine who, after watching the
carnage on television, goes to church to ask God what he should do. He
emerges believing God wants him to go to Ground Zero. This is far from
fanaticism. It is spirituality at its deepest and most profound.
That man, Dave Karnes (played by Michael Shannon), put on his old Marine
uniform and managed to slip through police lines where he hooked up with
another Marine vet. It was Karnes who found McLoughlin and Jimeno and
directed rescuers to their location.
There is another element to this film that should be recognized and
applauded. It is the overwhelming number of men and women of differing
ethnicities in police and fire department uniforms who were so much a part
of the good that shone forth through evil on that terrible day. At a time
when we are engaged in a battle over illegal immigrants and the future of
American culture, it should be encouraging to see so many who recently came
from elsewhere behave like most Americans think real Americans should
behave. They did, because they are real Americans.
In the press packet about the movie, Oliver Stone is quoted as saying:
"Although my politics and John and Will's may be different, it didn't
matter; we all got along. I can make a movie about them and their
experiences because they went through something that I can understand.
Politics does not enter into it - it's about courage and survival."
One of the five who died, Dominick Pezzulo (played by Jay Hernandez)
survived the first tower collapse, but not the second. The real Will Jimeno
says of his friend, "He was a cop, a schoolteacher, a father, a son, but in
the end, he was a great American."
Movies like "World Trade Center" - and "United 93," which preceded it -
don't come along very often. More should.
There are many scenes that will cause audiences to reach for the tissues,
but the last one is a true resurrection moment. As Jimeno, first, and then
McLoughlin are lifted out of what could have been their graves, they are
passed from hand-to-hand along a gauntlet made up of their colleagues, more
than 50 of whom are real-life members of the PAPD, the NYPD and FDNY who
were flown to Los Angeles for the scene.
Whatever one thinks of Oliver Stone, the man knows how to make movies. This
is one of his best. It deserves an Oscar in so many categories. It also
deserves the thanks of a grateful nation. Go and see it beginning Aug. 9 and
make him a large profit so he might consider inspiring us again, as his
predecessors so often did during Hollywood's Golden Age. |