Oct 11, 2013
Every person has a public side that they show the world, and a private one that they reveal only to themselves and God. Yet it is in the moments where we stare death in the face – whether in a car accident, skydiving or a cancer diagnosis – that our inner self and its indomitable spirit rises to the surface.
In the fact-based, nail-biting new thriller “Captain Phillips,” Tom Hanks puts that principle in action through his portrayal of Captain Richard Phillips, the American seaman who made worldwide headlines in the spring of 2009 when his massive cargo ship was attacked by Somali pirates and he was taken as a solo hostage aboard its lifeboat when the raid went awry and the marauders were forced to flee.
Phillips is a gruff, no-nonsense man at the film’s start, the kind of boss who orders his crew back to work the moment they hit 15 minutes on their coffee break. We see glimpses of his upright personal life, in a brief exchange with his wife before he ships out, and via the rosary beads that dangle from his car’s rear-view mirror as he drives to the port.
But it’s when he has to protect his crew from the pirates that we see the caring side of Phillips emerge for his men to see. He devises an elaborate series of maneuvers that enable his ship to outwit and evade the encroaching evildoers, in a thrilling sequence that ends with his crew’s vastly increased respect for him.
Yet it’s Phillips’ by-the-book style that gets them back into much bigger trouble the next day. His crew wanted to speed their ship far out of the pirates’ range overnight, but Phillips insisted on following their scheduled route to deliver the thousands of tons of goods carried aboard their freighter.