7/10
What is freedom? What does freedom feel like?
16 December 2022
Warning: Spoilers
What does a bad movie feel like when you strive to be free from it, or a slow movie that somehow builds and finally gets you to enjoy it in spite of it's flaws? That is the situation with this film, a movie that starts off slow and builds once you get into the court case, but at times seems stagnant and lifeless. It's the story of a plane that is hijacked from poland, supposed to land in East Berlin and ending on the west side instead. That puts the hijacker (Heinz Hoenig) on trial, having held one of the passengers at gunpoint to make his move, and put the case in the gavel of American judge Martin Sheen under the defense of the tough Sam Wannamaker.

Like other films set in West Berlin, this is quite intense as it shows the impact of the hijacking for everybody involved. The film opens up with the actual hijacking, showing the calm before the storm, and immediately switches to beginning of the trial. The film manages to grab the viewer as they realize what is actually going on, the points of the early part of the film and the message of what goes on during the trial. I am not much of a connoisseur on me politics of Eastern European countries during this time, but I managed to be engrossed after a while and found the characters engage in, seeing Sean Penn in a completely different light after watching this. It might help to know a little bit of the history of the period, but that's absolutely unnecessary because the script reveals enough to give to viewer an indication of the intensities of that time. Great performances aide the slow spots, although the direction could have been a bit more fast-paced. An important film if not a classic.
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