Date: Fri 15-Aug-1997
Date: Fri 15-Aug-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: DONNAM
Quick Words:
Turbulence-Playing-Liotta
Full Text:
(rev "Turbulence" for Now Playing, 8/15/97)
Now Playing-
Steer Well Clear Of `Turbulence'
By Trey Paul Alexander III
Last weekend, Harrison Ford thrilled audiences as a two-fisted, commanding
Commander-in-Chief as his newest flick, Air Force One , ruled the box office
with an opening weekend take of over $35 million. It would seem that such
films as Absolute Power and Murder at 1600 , which take potshots at the office
of the presidency, didn't deter folks from flocking to a movie where -
surprise, surprise! - the leader of the Free World is actually a good guy! But
what does the success of Air Force One , also one fierce entry in the
terrorists-take-a-plane genre, mean for other similar movies, namely one of
the top ten video rentals in the country, Turbulence ?
Starring Ray Liotta and Lauren Holly, Turbulence was one of the first new
films to be released in 1997 and can boast that it beat Air Force One to the
premise of featuring a 747 slicing perilously through the sky while havoc
reigns onboard. However, that's about the only claim it can make as viewers
fresh from Air Force One (or any of the summer movies, for that matter) will
likely find themselves wishing they'd bought a return ticket to the theater
instead of popping this cassette into their VCR.
The freshness of the far superior Air Force One on the minds of viewers is not
the only downfall for Turbulence . An earlier summer flick, Con Air , also
hurts this movie's plot. When a recently captured rapist/serial killer, the
Lonely Hearts Strangler (Liotta, in raving lunatic mode), is transported,
along with another menacing felon, from New York to Los Angeles on Christmas
Eve via a commercial 747, you may be tempted to shout out to the dim-witted
cops escorting them, "What are you thinking?!" In light of the story line of
Con Air , in which crafty, nasty criminals overcome a high-tech prison plane
and its abundance of guards, the decidedly undermanned approach by the
authorities in Turbulence seems destined to failure.
And fail it does, in a violent, brutal bloodbath that leaves all four cops,
one felon, two pilots and one flight attendant all dead. (Don't ask how it all
happens; it's beyond rational explanation.) After the Strangler locks the few
remaining passengers in a cargo hold, he is left alone with a pretty flight
attendant, Terry (Holly), who struggles to ward off her assailant and get the
plane, careening through a violent storm, to safety at LAX.
Though Turbulence features a plucky heroine in Holly, it is a difficult film
to embrace, due to its graphic violence and misogynistic subtext. First, its
brutality comes from all imaginable angles but carries little of the emotional
or substantive force that it should. For instance, Air Force One is arguably
just as violent as Turbulence , but the former attempts to illustrate the
consequences and overall sting of meaningless deaths while the latter seems to
throw them in for little impact other than to make the viewer recoil in
sensationalistic shock.
Second, though Holly's flight attendant is called upon to save the day, she is
not allowed to do so without shedding her blouse and doing battle with a
psycho in only a skimpy skirt and camisole. Ridding oneself of a jacket or
encumbering tie is one thing, but disrobing at such a crucial juncture, and in
the presence of a sexual predator, seems imprudent at the least, and
borderline suicidal. This, added to a disturbing sequence in which one of
Terry's friends perishes brutally at the hands of the Strangler, gives the
film a nasty taste that no amount of "Don't call her a stewardess, she's a
flight attendant!" empowerment lines can wash away.
Turbulence is rated R for graphic violence, profanity and sexual
suggestiveness. For stronger, more satisfying entries in this genre, try
renting Executive Decision or go see Air Force One .
