"Flightplan" (Touchstone/Imagine)
Starring: Jodie Foster, Peter Sarsgaard, Sean Bean, Kate Beahan, Michael Irby, Erika Christensen, Marlene Lawston, Assaf Cohen
Director: Robert Schwentke
Sound: Dolby Digital/SDDS/DTS
Rating: Two and a Half Stars
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for violence and some intense plot material

Flightplan is well made enough that its entertaining for most of its length. Granted, its basically Panic Room with wingsit even stars Jodie Foster as another terrified mombut director Robert Schwentke, a German making his American debut here, keeps the suspense going from almost the opening scene. He matches the increase in tension to Fosters skilled performance so neatly that our emotions keep pace with hers.
Unfortunately, however, it turns out to be driven by one of those stupid, only-in-a-movie schemes that require absolutely everything to go precisely the way the conspirators intend. The least slip and their carefully-laid plans would waft away like so much smokewhich is basically what they are. Here, for example, it is absolutely required that not a single passenger or flight attendant notices Fosters six-year-old daughter. There are playful, noisy kids seated a row away; people walk up and down the aisles frequently; when boarding the plane, some passengers would have had to walk directly by the little girl. And yet nobody notices her.
The result is that the film runs out of credibility well before the plane runs out of air. In a sense, what happens in the last half hour or so is unimportant because by that time believability has been trampled under foot.
Its also a little hard to accept that Foster is an American airline propulsion engineer living in Berlin. She has to be in order to pull off some of her own counter-plans. Also, one big visual idea is shamelessly swiped from Alfred Hitchcocks classic The Lady Vanishes, although the movie is not especially Hitchcockian otherwise.

The script by Petra Dowling and Billy Ray must have dazzled Brian Grazer of Imagine Films; hes been trying to get this one launched for some time. Presumably, the element that caught his eye is the basic setup. I dont think her first name is spoken in the movie, but Foster plays Kyle Pratt, as mentioned, living in Berlin. There are some confusing flashbacks at the beginning, but we learn her husband fell to his death off the roof of their building. Now she and her six-year-old daughter Julia (Marlene Lawston) are accompanying the husbands coffin back to America, the first visit for the child. Kyles nerves are understandably frayed, and shes a bit overprotective of Julia even before they board the supercolossal airliner, a fictional E-474.
The immense plane is almost another character in the movie, which except for brief opening and closing scenes, is set entirely on the plane. Its a huge monster with two decks of plentiful seating, a lounge and other amenities. Every seat features its own video screen; its surprising there isnt a bowling alley. Since Kyle is an airplane expert, she knows about the several galleys and just how much extra spaceother than the passenger compartmentsthat this plane contains. The script gets her into almost all of the various areas of the airliner.
Kyle and Julia are the first passengers aboard the flight, which is filled but not to capacity. The child is still troubled by the unexpected death of her father; Kyle is, too, but has to try to maintain Julias spirits. Soon after the seat belt sign goes off, the two move to vacant rows and stretch out to sleep.
When Kyle awakes, Julia is gone. No one has seen her, and in fact, one of the flight attendants, Stephanie (Kate Beahan), says she thought Kyle was alone when she boarded. Another attendant, Fiona (Erika Christensen), is less certain. However, the flight manifest shows no sign of Julia Pratt, and Kyle cant locate her daughters boarding pass.

Understandably, Kyle starts raising a fuss, which leads to the involvement of so-far friendly Gene Carson (Peter Sarsgaard), who reveals himself as an air marshal. The more agitated Kyle becomes, the less the others, including flight captain Rich (Sean Bean), are inclined to believe her. Eventually, this leads to Kyle dashing about the plane, getting into all kinds of areas, and trying to get Rich and the others do do what she wants, whether they believe her or not.
The trouble with a movie like this is that its all setup. The premise is established early on, but then the story stalls; it simply does not realistically build beyond its overly familiar premise. The central idea is one of the earliest urban legends: a pair of people (usually mother and daughter) check into a hotel, taking separate rooms. The next day one cant find the other; asking at the desk produces only Im sorry, madam, but when you checked in, you were alone. Several films have been based on this premise; it was even part of The Kiss of the Vampire, a Hammer movie I watched the day I saw Flightplan.
Always, but ALWAYS, it turns out that our central character was right all along and that there was a sinister plot to pretend the missing person ever existed. And always, but ALWAYS, the central problem with these stories is that we, the audience, have already seen the person who disappears, so we know for sure that there is indeed a sinister scheme. It would be interesting if one of these began with the disappearance, not before, but so far I dont recall having seen a movie with that idea.

Director Schwentke seems to have all the skills necessary for movie of this type. He shoots everything very low-keythis is a remarkably dark moviebut he handles the confined areas of the plane with aplomb and visual variety. (Even a plane this size is confined.) Suspense builds, the actors do their stuff, and its all tense and exciting enough to be entertaining for most of its length. He tries a few ideas that dont work: in her bedroom, Julia has a lamp with a rotating shadebut the images it casts on the walls couldnt possibly have been made by the shade we see. Most viewers wont notice this; those who do will be irked by it and distracted from the story.
A few ideas are thrown in that, however contemporary, are intrusive and even insulting. There are a few Arabs on the plane; Kyle fixes on them as likely suspects near the beginning because, she says, she saw two of them in the rooms across from hers in Berlin. The audience may very well blurt out a collective Huh!? at that point, because WE didnt see themand were supposedly experiencing the movie mostly from Kyles point of view. A burly American passenger remains convinced that the Arabs are the bad guys, and occasionally tries to do something about it. This may be accurate in reflecting the tensions of our time, but its also distracting and intrusive. (Theres also a key casting error, but its difficult to describe it without revealing too much of the plot.)
Jodie Foster doesnt make very many movies these days, being busy as a real-life mother. Its a shame that she chose to make a movie so similar to one of her recent films, and one that has so many holes in its plot. (Panic Room, though not significantly better, at least held together.) Its like harnessing a race horse to a plough. You get the job done, but the race horse is capable of so much more.
Reviewed by: Bill Warren