Graduate of the US Air Force Academy, then seven years an AF pilot, then thirty years a civilian airline pilot, Chesley Sullenberger, of Swiss-German ancestry from Texas, is a real person. This whole heroic story is true.
At the end of the movie director Clint Eastwood then shows the real Sully, his charming and attractive wife, and the passengers at a joyful reunion.
Mrs Sullenberger
The aborted flight was from LaGuardia airport in New York City to Charlotte, North Carolina, and 99% of the passengers and all the crew were white.
Aaron Eckart as the copilot, and Tom Hanks as the pilot do a superb job, and portray white males at their best.
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90 seconds into takeoff, at merely 2,800 feet altitude and still rising, Sully lost both engines and was certain he could not make it back to any airport. His decision, taken after 35 seconds of frantic engine checks, was vindicated by scientific tests despite NTSB (National Transport Safety Board) bureaucratic harassment. All passengers survived the landing in the icy waters of New York City in January 2009, with just one woman suffering a gash on her leg. Immediately, federal bureaucrats began accusing Sully of errors, but had to retract their charges.
Clint Eastwood is simply a genius as a movie maker. Hollywood loves him because his movies all come in under budget and on-time. The reason? He is perfectly prepared every day to shoot the scheduled scenes, and he likewise expects every actor to “nail” his lines on the first take.
The movie is a huge success at the box office, reflecting IMO 1) the secret public hunger for white male heroes and 2) anger at government bureaucrats who dog white males who act decisively to save people.
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https://i.ibb.co/b2GZb1X/Operation-black-brother.png
https://archive.org/details/PolyaenusStratagemsInWar
https://archive.org/details/Suntzu-ArtOfWar
“Super masculinity” is what little boys become as they grow up into their intended responsible roles in life. Thanks to Clint Eastwood for honoring “Sully” this way. And thank you for posting the information.
Glad you liked it.
Tom Hanks is a very good actor, and I admired him especially in “Cast Away” (2000), and also for co-producing for HBO in 2010 “The Pacific” (about the Marines fighting the Japanese, among them, my own father), which got an incredible approval rating of 91% from the “Rotten Tomatoes” website.
And “Sully” director Clint Eastwood is legendary. His “Mystic River” (about the murder of a teenage girl and the false suspicion then thrown on an adult who had been molested as a child) was also powerful.
Both Hanks and Eastwood personify white American masculinity and Aryan excellence.