RATING:  
                  PG-13 for brief language and drug references                   
                  RELEASE: 
                  June 2004 
                  TIME:  
                  2 hrs. 8 minutes 
                  GENRE: 
                  Drama, Comedy 
                  STARRING: 
                  Tom Hanks, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Chi McBride, 
                    Stanley Tucci, Diego Luna 
                  DIRECTOR: 
                  Steven Spielberg 
                  WRITERS: 
                  Jeff Nathanson, Sacha Gervasi  
                  PRODUCERS: 
                  Steven Spielberg, Walter F. Parkes, 
                    Laurie MacDonald 
                  DISTRIBUTOR: 
                  DreamWorks Pictures 
                    
       		 
							 
							
							
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				MOVIE NEWS
				
				The Terminal
				
				By Megan Basham 
  Guest Reviewer 
  
				  
				
				 
          CBN.com  
            The most surprising thing about "The Terminal," 
            the new film that reunites cinematic Dream Team Steven Spielberg and 
            Tom Hanks is not that it relies on good-hearted wit, good acting, 
            and a story that highlights simple human goodness to entertain. And 
            it's not that Spielberg breaks a cardinal rule of the summer "feel 
            good" flick yet nevertheless leaves the audience feeling great. 
            Rather, it is the fact that not only is the story of Viktor Navorski, 
            a man trapped in JFK airport for nine months, loosely based on a true 
            story, but that the actual airport refugee has been confined to a 
            single terminal for over ten years.  
          This tidbit has much bearing on the enjoyment of the film as the 
            average movie-going citizen might find the premise of an innocent 
            tourist so victimized by governmental red tape implausible. They might, 
            as reasonable people, be tempted to dismiss the idea that any bureaucracy 
            could be so inflexible as to leave a man floundering in airport limbo 
            for nearly a year. These will be people, of course, who have themselves 
            never held a federal position and taken it as part of their job description 
            to make people wait longer than is ever humanly necessary.  
          Tom Hanks stars as Viktor Navorski, an international traveler who 
            lands at New York's JFK Airport only to find that a bloody coup in 
            his fictional Slavic homeland of Krakozhia has rendered him stateless. 
            Or, as the maniacally ambitious airport head of Homeland Security 
            Frank Dixon (Stanley Tucci) explains it, Viktor is "unacceptable" 
            to any nation.  
          With a passport from a government that no longer exists, Viktor cannot 
            enter the US and he cannot board a flight for home. His only choice 
            is to linger in the terminal and hope that peace will soon return 
            to his war-torn homeland. With little else to do as he watches other 
            people's flights come and go, Viktor sets up a make-shift home in 
            the crack he has fallen into.  
          Despite its grounding in semi-reality, there remains something fantastic 
            about this story. No matter where he is, Viktor maintains a high standard 
            of morality and compassion, and this wins him a loyal fan base of 
            employees throughout the airport. Even when he is literally invited 
            by top dog Tucci to break the law by sneaking out the sliding glass 
            doors that lead to freedom, Navorski refuses to circumvent regulation. 
            He sets his jaw, and offers a simple, "I wait." And wait 
            he does, willing to endure any humiliation the Department of Homeland 
            Security can dish out, including blocking his means to purchase food 
            for himself. 
          Viktor represents kindness and reason, Dixon, the rigid legalism 
            that is so obsessed with security it can't see people for regulation. 
            When Dixon insists on taking medication away from a man who needs 
            it for a dying father, it is Viktor who finds a loophole in the security 
            system that will allow the foreigner to return home with the life-saving 
            drugs. 
           Those audience members inclined to phobia over the Patriot Act will 
            no doubt see this plot (and Tucci's character) as a ringing indictment 
            of both it and the agency Tom Ridge heads. What they will likely not 
            learn much about are the real hard-hearted villains in the "Viktor 
            Navorski Story." You see, for all the evil legalism embodied 
            by Tucci, the pigheaded bureaucracy that provided the inspiration 
            for this film stemmed not from the US Department of Homeland Security, 
            but from Belgium and France's refugee-wary immigration authorities. 
           
          The real Viktor Navorski, a displaced Iranian named Merhan Karimi 
            Nasseri, was stuck in Charles De Gaulle Airport for over seven years 
            before the two European governments made any attempt to resolve his 
            situation. Now, sadly, it seems Nasseri has gone a bit mad and refuses 
            to leave the airport for any country save England, which is not an 
            option for him.  
          With Spielberg and Hanks at the helm, "The Terminal" is 
            for the most part everything one would expect--charming, funny, possessing 
            of its own singular character and visual beauty in much the same way 
            as their last collaboration, Catch Me If You Can. But 
            what it is not is intellectually honest. True, Spielberg most likely 
            could not have set this film in France with as much success. But if 
            he had, it is unlikely he would have made a French immigration authority 
            the villain he makes out of Tucci. 
           Truth, as always, remains stranger than fiction, and Hollywood's 
            fiction, as always, does what it can to undermine the reputation of 
            certain American institutions. The Terminal manages to 
            amuse, entertain, and inspire. But as with almost all things connected 
            to Tinsel Town, just don't expect it to educate. 
          
          
           
						
							
 
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