DC 9/11: Time of Crisis (TV Movie 2003)

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DC 9/11: Time of Crisis: Directed by Brian Trenchard-Smith. With Timothy Bottoms, John Cunningham, David Fonteno, Gregory Itzin. This is the story of the days directly after 9/11, and the president’s whereabouts.

“This movie does its best to be accurate, and it does a pretty good job. If youu0026#39;re looking for fuel for a conspiracy theory, it isnu0026#39;t here. The film captures the essence of the man who now sits in the Oval Office, and how he and his team worked to deal with the tragedies of the WTC, the plane hijackings, and the Pentagon.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIt is a powerful film. Be prepared to be moved.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe film serves to remind the viewers of the combined tragedies, and the impact on our national psyche. If you have somehow dozed off to the implications of 9/11, this film might serve to wake you up.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eBy the end of the film, if you donu0026#39;t feel the surge of love for your country and the compassion and pride that goes with it, perhaps you need to check your partisanship at the door. When we were attacked on Sept. 11, 2001, the terrorists didnu0026#39;t target just Democrats, or just Republicans. They werenu0026#39;t even targeting just Americans. The World Trade Center was a financial icon for the world, and was as multi-ethnic and multi-national as any single building besides the U.N. headquarters can be. No, the WTC attack on 9/11 was an indication that the attacks previously focused on the United States had just been expanded against all Western nations, and by extension – on Christians, Jews, Muslims who do business with them, and on all non-Muslims. It was a renewed declaration of war, and this film portrays the leaders who helped us through the tragedy as a nation, and as a result – it focuses around the one man who did the most to comfort a grieving nation.”

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