View
From The Top
The MPAA rated View From The Top (2003)
PG-13 for language/sexual content.
Donna (Gwyneth Paltrow) is dreaming of a highflying job with
all the class and style that comes with such positions
or at least thats what she assumes.
With a Nevada trailer park upbringing, nothing could appear
more exciting than the prospect of becoming a flight attendant
for an international airline. After seeing former flight attendant
and now motivational speaker Sally West (Candice Bergen) on
television plugging her new book, Donna is convinced the sky
is the limit. Days later she lands her first job with a small
regional airline specializing in flying gamblers and
drunks.
The excitement, along with near-illness anxiety of never being
on a plane before, quickly wears thin, and Donna longs to
turn in her short skintight uniform for something more prestigious.
Hearing of a job fair for a major airline, she heads to San
Francisco and applies for employment with Royal International
Airlines. Her successful interview leads to training with
Mr. Whitney (Mike Myers), a cross-eyed instructor who keeps
a close tab on rules and regulations. She also meets her idol,
Sally West, who takes the time to tell Donna she has what
it takes to fly in the big birds.
With her confidence stoked and certain shes aced the
final exam, Donnas dreams crash when her name is beside
Cleveland, Ohio on the placement lists. She reluctantly accepts
the job, but with help from Sally, she determines to get a
second chance at writing the exam. Meanwhile, her heart tugs
in a different direction after bumping into an old boyfriend.
Billed as a comedy, I was never too certain if this film
determined to be farcical or fanciful. At one moment characters
like Sally, with a huge walk-in closet done in bold turquoise,
and Mr. Whitney, a competent trainer of flight attendants
with no social skills, appear larger than life. Yet at other
points the sentimental script, along with its improbable conclusion,
yearns to say something serious about the importance of family
versus career.
This positive message, along with strong lessons about career
choice and honesty, create a film that may be appropriate
for teens. But before you takeoff to the theater, be aware
that a handful of mild and moderate profanities, an implied
sexual relationship outside of marriage, and a brief portrayal
of a stereotyped male homosexual mar these shining points.
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