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After a brief introduction, the "7500" did not leave the cockpit of the passenger plane. There we met Tobias Ellis (Gordon-Levitt), a fellow pilot on a flight from Berlin, who was suddenly and recently interrupted by a group of hijackers. In the brief scene that shortens the cinematic action after the first 15 minutes of operation, at least three men run into the cockpit and one of them kills the pilot before getting the best from Tobias, calling him a firefighter. Beat with. Tobias knocks on the doors of the other two men and the battle begins. While the hijackers are jumping in the door (there is a lot of traffic), Tobias Radio is in control of the air traffic and is assisting the Hanover study, where it climbs, refuels, and negotiates. And then the hijackers started bringing passengers to the cockpit door, at the same time they insisted that Tobias open the cockpit. Knowing that the whole plane could be removed if he opened the door, could he catch the people being killed? And what about being the owner of his girlfriend and the mother of his children?
The only character development we find about Tobias is the last question. You have children and you are in a relationship. And he's an American on a German plane, which he thinks is narrow in the narrative, this device can not understand certain exchanges. Without wasting any time, the kidnapping code "7500" turns into two conversations between Tobias and Vedat (Omid Mimer), a young Muslim activist whose motives are not clear today. We know so much about him, from the insignificant call to the removal of hearts from the final action. Writer/director Patrick Wollert's commitment to real-time fiction is fascinating, but it treats on-screen characters more like pawns than humans.
Recall that the "7500" has a fine line between slowing down and slowing down. Gordon-Levitt is trying his best to work with what he is given, but the surprise choice of a player who has not attended for a few years (his first film since 2016 "Snowden"). Later this year (or maybe later) before starring in roles such as Aaron Sorkin's "The Trial of the Chicago 7".
Available on Amazon Prime

