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Flightplan is a 2005 mystery psychological thriller film directed by Robert Schwentke from a screenplay written by Peter A. Dowling and Billy Ray. It stars Jodie Foster as Kyle Pratt, a recently widowed American aircraft engineer living in Berlin , who flies back to the U.S. with her daughter and her husband's body.
Bomer at the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con. Matt Bomer is an American actor who, as of 2023, has appeared in 23 films, 23 television productions and 6 stage productions. His first stage appearance was at the age of seventeen as the young collector in an Alley production of the play A Streetcar Named Desire, while in high school.
Schwentke was born in Stuttgart, West Germany. He graduated from Los Angeles film school, Columbia College Hollywood (CCH), in 1992. His wife is an American. He directed two feature films in Germany, the thriller Tattoo and the comedy Eierdiebe, the latter a semi-autobiographical film about a man being treated for testicular cancer, a disease he had been diagnosed with and survived himself in ...
Wahlberg previously worked with Gibson, 69, as actors in front of the camera in movies like 2022's Father Stu and 2017's Daddy's Home 2.Flight Risk is Gibson's first movie as a director since 2016 ...
Plane is a 2023 American action thriller film directed by Jean-François Richet from a screenplay by Charles Cumming and J. P. Davis. [4] Starring Gerard Butler and Mike Colter, it follows a commercial pilot allying with a suspected murderer to save his passengers from a hostile territory after an emergency landing.
Flightplan was screened at a special presentation at the 30th annual Toronto International Film Festival in 2005. [49] Despite the mixed reviews, [52] the film was a financial success, earning $223 million worldwide, [23] making it his highest-grossing film to the end of 2008.
Flight Risk is a 2025 American action thriller film directed by Mel Gibson and starring Mark Wahlberg, Michelle Dockery, and Topher Grace.Its plot follows a pilot (Wahlberg) transporting an Air Marshal (Dockery) and a fugitive (Grace) across the Alaskan wilderness, where the identities and intentions of those onboard come into question.
Not often does a movie character make such a harrowing personal journey that keeps us in deep sympathy all of the way." He also noted the plane's upside-down flight scene was "one of the most terrifying flight scenes I've ever witnessed" and called the film "nearly flawless". [18] Ebert went on to name the film the sixth best of 2012. [19]