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I_luv_rusty
08-15-2006, 01:27 AM
Has anyone seen the new September 11 movie yet? It called the World Trade Center, I saw it Sunday. It was a very sad, and touching movie. My dad,my brother, and me liked it alot. My mom didn't really like it that much, because she though it'd be more about events that happened that day. It was mainly about these two police officers that were trapped in the rubble (sp?) and about their familes and all that. It was a good movie though. :eek:

Miss Z
08-15-2006, 05:14 AM
I'd not even heard of that movie until I read this, perhaps it's not out in the UK yet....

joanofark
08-15-2006, 05:26 AM
I saw the preveiws on TV, I'll probally end up seeing it when it comes out on DVD...:)

smokey the elder
08-15-2006, 08:12 AM
Same here. I think Oliver Stone chose to personalize it, rather than make it a "9/11" movie as such.

JenBKR
08-15-2006, 08:23 AM
I haven't decided yet if I want to see it, it looks like a good movie but the events of 9/11 are still very painful to me, so I don't know how I'd do. We went to the drive in a month or so ago and one of the movies playing was United Flight 93 - I had a hard time watching that movie, I cried and cried the whole time.

Alysser
08-15-2006, 08:30 AM
I haven't decided yet if I want to see it, it looks like a good movie but the events of 9/11 are still very painful to me, so I don't know how I'd do. We went to the drive in a month or so ago and one of the movies playing was United Flight 93 - I had a hard time watching that movie, I cried and cried the whole time.

This is exactly why I don't want to see it. I was 8 years old when 9/11 happened and all I remember was a few months after(I had just turned 9) we went to where the twin towers had stood. I started crying and when I saw all the firefighters I was crying even harder. It might just be to hard for me to see, so I'm not.

zoey
08-15-2006, 08:30 AM
I've heard it's pretty good. I dunno though. I probably won't see it. I'd get too emotional.

Pawsitive Thinking
08-15-2006, 08:38 AM
Not sure I want to sit through it. We booked a 4 day trip to New York the day before it happened!

As our flight wasn't until December we kept our tickets and went to where the towers used to be - very moving experience

trayi52
08-15-2006, 08:42 AM
I haven't seen it, but I do want to see it when it comes out on DVD. I know I won't get to see it at the movies. I have to take care of my mother and I never get out to a movie.

Willie

ramanth
08-15-2006, 07:54 PM
I'll probably wait until DVD, that way I can blubber like a baby in the privacy of my own home. I'm very empathic to other peoples pain. I still haven't got up the courage to watch any documentaries or Flight 93 yet.

Riptide
08-15-2006, 08:09 PM
I honestly don't want to see it. I don't want to feel those raw emotions all over again.

It happened when I was in 4th grade and all I knew was that my daddy was in the Pentagon. He's ok, but it was just...gahhh I don't even know.

dogzr#1
08-15-2006, 11:48 PM
I saw it this past Friday. I was wonderful! I cried a little bit, but I always do that no matter what movie I see. Well almost any movie. I also watched United 93. Both were very good movies and I highly recommend them to anyone who wants to watch them, but is skeptical.

Dorothy39
08-16-2006, 12:26 PM
Until today, clicking onto and reading this thread was "impossible".

I still feel a gravitational weight , remembering September 11, 2001!!!

Then, I purchased a copy of Reader's Digest. Among the listed features , is an interview done with Nicolas Cage, by Meg Grant.

She asked him several questions, about his childhood, his parents, his new wife and child, etc. Then, she said, "Let's Talk about "World Trade Center".


He explained to her what happened to John McLoughlin and Will Jimeno.(Fire fighters who responded that day, and, were trapped in debri. :(

Cage spent time with John McLoughlin, preparing for the role--visited Ground Zero with him, and got a sense of what he needed to portray to his Audience in this film.

{quote}-"I felt like I was being called to represent John, and wanted to make sure I got it right. I felt that's how I could give back ,in some way, what they had given to all of us"

He also noted that while their was huge Evil and tragedy that day, there was also tremendous love and goodness--

so, perhaps this movie is Healing?

I still don't know if I can watch it, maybe in a few years, on DVD, so I can hide underneath a quilt and cry into my popcorn!!!!!

The_Duck
08-16-2006, 12:47 PM
I havn't seen it and I'm not sure if I want to. I was in school when it happened. I remember one of the teachers got a call from a family member who had seen on the news after the first plane hit. She came into the classroom, tears in her eyes, and quietly told the other teachers. They then informed the class and whoever wanted to see the story was allowed to exit the classroom and gather in front of the tv. We were all bawling like babies when all of the sudden, the second plane hit the other tower. I SAW that. I saw, from the outside, hundreds of lives being ended. It was a horrible experience then, and it will be horrible to see it depicted again. We live in a time when terror is no longer a surprise. The things that humans do to each other... it should be unthinkable. I am amazed at how little surprises me. I'm 17 years old and when I hear that a child has been sexually assulted, a teen has slaughtered his schoolmates, a husband has killed his wife... I see it as something that has happened before. Over and over again. There is no shock at the news as there should be. I hate this so very much. To think of all of those who were only little kids when 9/11 happened... It brings tears to my eyes. They were robbed of their inocence and some of them, their families. A part of me says 'Good, someone has decided to make a movie to honor those whose lives were lost. Either in the attack, or as a result from it.' and another part thinks it's wrong for someone to capitalize off of such a tragic event in the history of this country, nay, the history of this world. I don't know... I'm sorry if none of this makes sense. I just needed to say it, ya know? :(

JenBKR
08-16-2006, 12:55 PM
A part of me says 'Good, someone has decided to make a movie to honor those whose lives were lost. Either in the attack, or as a result from it.' and another part thinks it's wrong for someone to capitalize off of such a tragic event in the history of this country, nay, the history of this world. I don't know... I'm sorry if none of this makes sense. I just needed to say it, ya know? :(

No, it makes total sense. I agree completely.

Dorothy39
08-16-2006, 01:38 PM
I havn't seen it and I'm not sure if I want to. I was in school when it happened. I remember one of the teachers got a call from a family member who had seen on the news after the first plane hit. She came into the classroom, tears in her eyes, and quietly told the other teachers. They then informed the class and whoever wanted to see the story was allowed to exit the classroom and gather in front of the tv. We were all bawling like babies when all of the sudden, the second plane hit the other tower. I SAW that. I saw, from the outside, hundreds of lives being ended. It was a horrible experience then, and it will be horrible to see it depicted again. We live in a time when terror is no longer a surprise. The things that humans do to each other... it should be unthinkable. I am amazed at how little surprises me. I'm 17 years old and when I hear that a child has been sexually assulted, a teen has slaughtered his schoolmates, a husband has killed his wife... I see it as something that has happened before. Over and over again. There is no shock at the news as there should be. I hate this so very much. To think of all of those who were only little kids when 9/11 happened... It brings tears to my eyes. They were robbed of their inocence and some of them, their families. A part of me says 'Good, someone has decided to make a movie to honor those whose lives were lost. Either in the attack, or as a result from it.' and another part thinks it's wrong for someone to capitalize off of such a tragic event in the history of this country, nay, the history of this world. I don't know... I'm sorry if none of this makes sense. I just needed to say it, ya know? :(


You said it well!!!! It makes perfect sense to me too.

Can anyone here imagine a movie--depicting a tragic Era in The United States--being shown 5 years afterwards??

Todays movie gentre, :( (OH, Hollywood is dead now, by the way) sensationalizes human atrocity!!

1968, Bobby Kennedy assassinated during a political convention speech, and, at the same time, a movie about the assassination of his brother, J.F.K., is showing at a theater near you!!!

Unthinkable--- at that time in our History!!!!

RICHARD
08-16-2006, 02:26 PM
There was a phone call to a talk show about the movie.

A paramedic, from CA, that went to help at the WTC was angry that his profession was slighted by themovie.

Some families are ticked off too.


Oliver Stone made the movie to represent two men that lived thru the mess.

there are over 3,000 people that would like to have had their loved ones story told.....

that will take 3,000 movies...

I want to think that Stone's movie shows that people, and the country survived a reall kick to the groin.


Just because their story wasn't told doesn't mean that we won't forget.

BitsyNaceyDog
08-16-2006, 05:12 PM
another part thinks it's wrong for someone to capitalize off of such a tragic event in the history of this country, nay, the history of this world.That's why I don't want to see it.

dukedogsmom
08-16-2006, 05:54 PM
I don't want to see it. Too sad. And I wish they'd quit calling attention to it a lot. Just gives the terrorists more attention, too. I understand about memorials and things like that, though.

Chica
08-16-2006, 06:38 PM
I haven't seen it yet!!!I don't know if I want to yet. It is a grim reminder of terrible people killing inicent people!It makes me real mad!!!!!!!

PinkSunshine
08-16-2006, 11:07 PM
Saw it this past weekend and gave it 2 thumbs up. Even though I cried my eyes out, I'm glad I saw it

elizabethann
08-23-2006, 02:46 PM
I went to see WTC today. It was a very emotional movie from the very beginning of the film (when NYC was waking up that fateful day) to when the 2 police officers were rescued & reunited with their families. The movie only depicts perhaps 10-15 minutes of the towers being hit, to the towers falling. Most of the movie is of the 2 police officers reflecting on their lives and trying to stay alive.

I had mixed emotions as to whether I should see this movie. But I am glad I did. I think I came out of the movie a nicer person. Remember after 9/11 everybody was nice to eachother? I remember that well. Well I left the movie theater thinking I have to be nicer to people and that everybody around me is a human being just like myself. Sometimes you just forget and think the world revolves around you. I think many of us have gone back to that mentality - I know I did.

There were many heros that day but I have to say I never thought of the people who crawled into what was left of the towers to look for people and to rescue them. What was left of the buildings could have fallen and killed these people. Yet they crawled through tight spaces to help people. I just can't imagine. In the movie, one of the rescuers is an EMT. The guy who found the 2 police officers was a Marine.

Basically, I know this is a movie - a dramatization of actual events. But I'm glad I saw it. And I would recommend it.

Just my .02 cents.