
Architect
Max Klein (Jeff Bridges), one of the few survivors of a terrible air
crash and dubbed by the media “The Good Samaritan” for having led others
to safety, has emerged feeling godlike and invulnerable. Disconnected
from his wife (Isabella Rosselini) and son, he feels close only to
another survivor, Carla (Rosie Perez), a young mother immobilized with
grief and guilt over the death of her infant son. Their struggle to
survive the survival is intricately set up in the first 111 minutes of
the film; the final 10 pays it all off: in flashback, as Max lies
suffocating from an allergic reaction to a strawberry, we see him
moments before the crash walking in slow-motion through the rapidly
descending plane, comforting terrified passengers with a smile, a nod, a
few words. He then takes the seat next to a frightened young boy who is
traveling alone, assuring him all will be well. This exquisite final
sequence, its masterfully edited visuals perfectly underscored by a
passage from Gorecki’s painfully beautiful “Symphony of Sorrowful
Songs,” culminates with Max’s jolt back to breath and sanity.
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