Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA documentary derived entirely from 'Black Box' transcripts of six real-life major airline emergencies.A documentary derived entirely from 'Black Box' transcripts of six real-life major airline emergencies.A documentary derived entirely from 'Black Box' transcripts of six real-life major airline emergencies.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
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Stereoscopic production to document live theater is one of the many niche areas for which it's perfectly suited. In Charlie Victor Romeo the 3D is so efficiently used that you'll forget it's a film. It does what 3D does best. Immerse. By using Cockpit Voice Recorder transcripts it takes you into that little room past 1st class where complete boredom suddenly turns into nail biting drama. And special effects you generate in the theater of the mind are more terrifying than any CGI. I think you'll agree it could never reach such an emotional high point without 3D. No slow-mo 3D, dragons or aliens. But real super heroes in action. For some, their last actions. In 3D, you're in that Cockpit with the crew. So part of you is a passenger, part NTSB investigator. The emotional draw is intense. You feel attached to the Crew so when the scene ends and their fate is revealed, you're touched. The slight release of tension comes when the actors reappear in other scenes and you say to yourself, "That's right, it's only a film." These folks nailed it so well that CVR is being used for Pilot training.
People pick apart the production values. This isn't mayday or any other series with a British guy narrating but it is true to nature. I've been in a aircraft incident and there isn't screaming or praying out loud. You could hear a pin drop. They did a really good job not over dramatizing life and death. Granted it is a dark show, but listening to the the pilots up until that thud is for real. Ok, apparently I have to reach some character limit. It's a good film, you would not be a miss if you watched it. It's dark, but it's a really good representation of how people react to real life. 12345678.
I thoroughly enjoyed this film. I'm surprised the film was ever made, as I imagine the audience would be limited. But, I'm glad it was. It reveals the intensity of sudden emergencies and the chaos they create.
Many of these emergencies were completely out of the control of the pilots. They did nothing to contribute to the problems. As passengers, we wonder how they are working in the cockpit. We could not imagine the drama that unfolds when three highly trained specialists are handed situations that no one anticipated or planned for.
Like a ballet, it looks easy, but it isn't. All the actions are intuitive, because you have to act without thinking...you actions are all hardwired into your brain through training. I think the film portrays accurately the heroism of our airline pilots.
I am a former flight instructor, but I have never seen any similar film that is actually acted out according to the recorded speech and on the same cadence as the pilots experienced in flight.
You can see how the airlines of foreign carriers have no chance of survival in cases where they have to fly by the seat of their pants. They aren't trained to react in situations that aren't spelled out in the flight manuals or handled by computers. Plus, they have cultural communications issues that impede direct intervention in emergencies, which can unfold in seconds.
I urge anyone flying on Asian carriers (plus other countries, I'm sure) to never get on a plane that is flying into bad weather, because the pilots' options are limited by their lack of hands-on training.
Many of these emergencies were completely out of the control of the pilots. They did nothing to contribute to the problems. As passengers, we wonder how they are working in the cockpit. We could not imagine the drama that unfolds when three highly trained specialists are handed situations that no one anticipated or planned for.
Like a ballet, it looks easy, but it isn't. All the actions are intuitive, because you have to act without thinking...you actions are all hardwired into your brain through training. I think the film portrays accurately the heroism of our airline pilots.
I am a former flight instructor, but I have never seen any similar film that is actually acted out according to the recorded speech and on the same cadence as the pilots experienced in flight.
You can see how the airlines of foreign carriers have no chance of survival in cases where they have to fly by the seat of their pants. They aren't trained to react in situations that aren't spelled out in the flight manuals or handled by computers. Plus, they have cultural communications issues that impede direct intervention in emergencies, which can unfold in seconds.
I urge anyone flying on Asian carriers (plus other countries, I'm sure) to never get on a plane that is flying into bad weather, because the pilots' options are limited by their lack of hands-on training.
A theater piece shot in 3D with a minimal set, a simple idea, yet yielding high drama and action simply from the transcripts of these aviation disasters.
This is a play where it is all about the words and the fact that those words are what really happened. Highly riveting and the blackouts are used to great effect. Here the adrenaline is genuine, not some CGI roller-coaster and it is made more compelling because if you have ever been a passenger on a airplane, it takes you where you probably wouldn't choose to go.
If you are going on a flight somewhere you probably wouldn't want to watch this movie. I am certain that this will never be an in-flight movie. You may want to consider the train or a bus after watching this.
Not a popcorn, action adventure, or any other kid of movie genre that is commercial - this is theater and an art film, not typical product.
The 3D is simple, effective and done as if that is just the way to shoot films, without the usual gimmicks and in your face rudeness of many 3D movies.
This is a play where it is all about the words and the fact that those words are what really happened. Highly riveting and the blackouts are used to great effect. Here the adrenaline is genuine, not some CGI roller-coaster and it is made more compelling because if you have ever been a passenger on a airplane, it takes you where you probably wouldn't choose to go.
If you are going on a flight somewhere you probably wouldn't want to watch this movie. I am certain that this will never be an in-flight movie. You may want to consider the train or a bus after watching this.
Not a popcorn, action adventure, or any other kid of movie genre that is commercial - this is theater and an art film, not typical product.
The 3D is simple, effective and done as if that is just the way to shoot films, without the usual gimmicks and in your face rudeness of many 3D movies.
Interestingly, the film "Charlie Victor Romeo," evolved from an award-winning play created in 1999 by Daniels, Berger and Gregory. The play captured two Drama Desk Awards for Outstanding Unique Theatrical Experience and Outstanding Sound Design and received recognition from Time Magazine in 2004 as Best Theatre Top Ten plays. The 1999 theater version eventually was videotaped and the Smithsonian Aviation Museum reviewed it. Shortly thereafter, the aviation community picked it up and incorporated it into its repertoire of training tools for its pilots' Crew Resource Management. After its 1999 opening at Collective:Unconscious in New York City, the played toured internationally and nationally until 2008.
The film version of "Charlie Victor Romeo," is a collaborative effort between Collective:Unconscious and 3LD Art & Technology Center. The production was filmed at 3LD Art & Technology Center as part of its new 3LD/3D+ program, a cross-platform for distribution and production of experimental work and made its West Coast premiere on Saturday, November 9th, at the AFI Filmfest 2013. Following the second viewing at the Filmfest on November 11th, the cast of Patrick Daniels, Irving Gregory, Noel Dinneen, Sam Zuckerman, Debbie Troche and Nora Wooley hosted a Q & A. Producer Catarina Bartha was also in the house to support her cast.
Berger, when asked what was the motivation behind the project, conveyed that it wasn't anything political that it was simply trying to make something of interest to an audience.
In its most basic sense, "Charlie Victor Romeo," dramatizes the human intensity that surfaces during the distressed descents of six airline crashes culled from dialogs taken from the surviving black box transcripts. In introducing the affected flights overlay schematics display the failed mechanical parts of the air crafts.
The team of screenwriters, Berger, Daniels and Gregory, scoured the typed transcripts of scores of airline emergencies and crashes, finally settling on the six presented. The criteria used in choosing which emergencies to dramatize the team wanted scenarios with enough emotional intensity that they could perform the scenes dramatically. They also wanted situations that illuminated the aviation perspective. And, finally, they wanted material that allowed their performances to create a bridge for the audience between professional aviation and their art in portraying the human aspect of handling an aviation emergency while in in-flight when things go horribly wrong. All the flights selected had issues due to mechanical failures.
"Charlie Victor Romeo," creates a spell-binding, psychological thrilling techs experience within a tension-filled cockpit as the flight crews provide testament to the ability to live life to the very last second while deftly providing insight into who the people are that we entrust our lives to during airline flights and what they do when things go horribly wrong. Furthermore, the conscious decision to use 3D technology enabled the troupe to help bring the reality of being in the cockpit directly to the audience consciousness during the catastrophic experience as the pilots fight to save their passengers and themselves from an impending disaster.
In my opinion, "Charlie Victor Romeo," pushes boundaries proving stereoscopic lensing is no longer the exclusive d0main of the epic major studios productions. But more than that, "Charlie Victor Romeo," takes real-life aviation emergencies and brings them into the mainstream consciousness in a very humanistic way. Recommended.
The film version of "Charlie Victor Romeo," is a collaborative effort between Collective:Unconscious and 3LD Art & Technology Center. The production was filmed at 3LD Art & Technology Center as part of its new 3LD/3D+ program, a cross-platform for distribution and production of experimental work and made its West Coast premiere on Saturday, November 9th, at the AFI Filmfest 2013. Following the second viewing at the Filmfest on November 11th, the cast of Patrick Daniels, Irving Gregory, Noel Dinneen, Sam Zuckerman, Debbie Troche and Nora Wooley hosted a Q & A. Producer Catarina Bartha was also in the house to support her cast.
Berger, when asked what was the motivation behind the project, conveyed that it wasn't anything political that it was simply trying to make something of interest to an audience.
In its most basic sense, "Charlie Victor Romeo," dramatizes the human intensity that surfaces during the distressed descents of six airline crashes culled from dialogs taken from the surviving black box transcripts. In introducing the affected flights overlay schematics display the failed mechanical parts of the air crafts.
The team of screenwriters, Berger, Daniels and Gregory, scoured the typed transcripts of scores of airline emergencies and crashes, finally settling on the six presented. The criteria used in choosing which emergencies to dramatize the team wanted scenarios with enough emotional intensity that they could perform the scenes dramatically. They also wanted situations that illuminated the aviation perspective. And, finally, they wanted material that allowed their performances to create a bridge for the audience between professional aviation and their art in portraying the human aspect of handling an aviation emergency while in in-flight when things go horribly wrong. All the flights selected had issues due to mechanical failures.
"Charlie Victor Romeo," creates a spell-binding, psychological thrilling techs experience within a tension-filled cockpit as the flight crews provide testament to the ability to live life to the very last second while deftly providing insight into who the people are that we entrust our lives to during airline flights and what they do when things go horribly wrong. Furthermore, the conscious decision to use 3D technology enabled the troupe to help bring the reality of being in the cockpit directly to the audience consciousness during the catastrophic experience as the pilots fight to save their passengers and themselves from an impending disaster.
In my opinion, "Charlie Victor Romeo," pushes boundaries proving stereoscopic lensing is no longer the exclusive d0main of the epic major studios productions. But more than that, "Charlie Victor Romeo," takes real-life aviation emergencies and brings them into the mainstream consciousness in a very humanistic way. Recommended.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesCharlie Victor Romeo is the NATO Phonetic Alphabet equivalent of CVR, which is the abbreviation for Cockpit Voice Recorder. All of the dialogue in the movie comes from CVRs of actual flight emergencies.
- ConnexionsReferences Seconds from Disaster: Terrified Over Tokyo (2012)
- Bandes originalesThe Bernoulli Equation
Written by Kevin Reilly
Performed by Kevin Reilly
Used by Permission
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