Grounding - The Last Days of Swissair (2006) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
8 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Dramatic Countdown
Luigi Di Pilla8 October 2006
GROUNDING shows the story from the great air flag of our country which became a nightmare and that didn't never have the chance to get the emergency exit.

I didn't see GROUNDING in the theaters because there were long rows so I forgot this movie until I heard from an ex Swissair stewardess that she watched it and she found it very dramatic with full of emotions. In fact it touched me very deeply too and I recommend it to everyone that like air planes movies.

The picture was well done and I never got bored from start to the end. All the actors did a great job here and the director succeeded to tell all in a very dramatic countdown. What I didn't like therefore was that the story has been set up with a good and a bad guy that doesn't match at all the real events that happened before the definitive catastrophe.

I was impressed when I saw the SWISSAIR headquarter of Balsberg near the airport of Zurich where I spent a banking workshop last year. I realize now how hot the situation really was there and all the economical fights the management had to affront in this building. I was pleased to watch the Gate Gourmet employee called Luigi Dini in the film that was my partner in this workshop. All in all I give a 7/10.
4 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
This is what the average Swiss film looks like, sadly.
statistician_t18 March 2009
As a young investment greenhorn, still in High School, I invested some money in the company this film is about. I really thought that nobody could let this national symbol fail. It could never happen.

And then I lost US$ 550. In order to end my experiment at the stock exchange I even had to donate the shares to the broker firm because Swissair was in bankruptcy and I could not sell them for US$ 30.

Well, this summarizes how I approached this film. The powerpoint slides shown by the consultant were tell-tale and neatly summarized how Swissair got into that mess. The negotiations with the banks were also a (perverse) fun to watch – big banks wanting to crash Swissair in order to cheaply buy the still-profitable remnants of the wreck.

As somebody grown up and living in Switzerland I did not like that the film was made in the Swiss-German dialect. You know all the regional dialects that good that you wonder if the Swissair CEO really spoke like *that* – may you even know him? The new chief financial officer Mario Corti hires from the U.S., Jacqualayn Fouse, speaks such a horrible "English". It sounded more like a German imitating American English than an American imitating German. They could have used a perfect, accent-free German playing her part, especially when all the other roles speak Swiss-German dialect – this would have kept the distance between the Swiss managers and her as the hired expert from the U.S.

Another big trouble was the trashy, kitschy story about the little boy. About her mother. About her husband. It just did not look genuine. And the Italian worker in the GateGourmet kitchen – the police storming the cold room. Really.

The movie was certainly a well-made one. If one forgets everything beside the main plot, which was saving the airline and the negotiations with the government and the banks. A well-made corporate thriller is feasible and will attract many moviegoers. But don't waste the good premise with cheesy subplots, please. And I really mean PLEASE.

Another positive point worth mentioning is that the chief personnel officer of Swissair, Matthias Mölleney, actually played himself in this movie.

And I want my US$ 550 back, by the way.
3 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Better than expected
Globo43615 February 2007
Fascinating look at the events leading up to the grounding of Swissair in October 2001. The first part of the film is a documentary with the real people, then the story starts with actors. It makes the grounding personal by interweaving the impact on a family where both parents work for the airline. It is convincing, but friends in Switzerland tell me the film angers them because they feel the grounding could have been avoided. The problem here for American viewers is the film is presented in German (or French and Italian, the languages of the country) and with subtitles in the same. No English option. Perhaps if it is distributed in the US they'll add an English track or titles.
2 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Go see it!
muri7320 January 2006
Amazing mixture of real documentation, geniously played characters and fictional story lines. A national disaster with a lot of questions behind it, is now a lot clearer. Who's fault was it, that on this octoberday in 2001 the planes of the proud Swissair were grounded? The movie does not tell this in a final way, but leads you to an opinion, which could be new to the audience.

Very well played by swiss actors Hanspeter Müller-Drossaart (as Mario Corti) and Gilles Tschudi (as Marcel Ospel). A really intense experience, especially if you witnessed the happenings on October 2nd, 2001.

One of the revolutionary "new" Swiss Movies. And there are more to come. Watch out for Director Michael Steiner, who's "Mein Name ist Eugen" has become last years most successful swiss movie.

Go and watch it! You're gonna see things, you never expect....
18 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Excellent movie with valuable corporate lesson
RobinHeizmann11 February 2006
As stated in the Financial Times, this fast paced movie is an excellent lesson for companies. A MUST SEE for all Swiss and Germans and all former frequent flyers of Swissair.

Great casting (for those who know the real-life protagonists), convincing acting and script (although schmaltzy at times) and thrilling from start to end with a mix of news coverage documentation and movie. The simplification of the characters is permissible as are some of the lapses, like showing car models that didn't exist at the time.

I hope the movie gets some international attention and will be synchronized in English (swissgerman in the original) or at least get subtitles.
13 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
An awful, manipulative pseudo documentary
dementos23 December 2006
The film makers managed to reduce the fascinating example of arrogant mismanagement to a manipulative, confusing wannabe tearjerker. There is an abundance of irrelevant, sappy characters. My favorite being the heroic stewardess, who saves the life of a passenger who has a heart attack - and all she keeps worrying about is that she may be neglecting her poor pubescent son.

The facts are totally distorted. The incompetent manager "Super Mario" is depicted as the altruistic hero, who only wants the best for all his poor employees. And the bankers, of course, are just greedy cold-hearted monsters.

All in all, extremely annoying.
9 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
NO English
ugm-25 October 2006
I can not believe this film has been released with no English or English subtitles! I have been waiting for this film for over 6 months. I ordered the DVD some 5 months ago and at last I received it today However a note saying no English subtitles! Very disappointed hope they Change their mind. Such a long time to wait for this movie. This would assist others around the world understand what went on now for those of us like me who do not speak Swiss Italian German or read these languages I will never know what went on! It looks like Lufthansa is now going to be the global European airlines. Roomers are SAS is next. Not that is such a bad thing however the airline world is getting smaller and smaller (I was a former Ansett Australia pilot) need I say more as I do understand what it is like for an Airline of 60+ years to no longer exist
8 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Boring unless you are immediately affected
Horst_In_Translation14 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
"Grounding" is a Swiss film from almost 10 years ago and it deals with the collapse of Switzerland's biggest airline. I guess that is what happens when rich men in suits get more and more greedy to the extent that they put the entire enterprise in danger because all they want is profit, profit, profit. And who will be the ones that suffer from it? Everybody apart from the rich guys basically. On the one hand, it would be the people who want to fly to their destinations and who get in all kinds of trouble because their flights get canceled. On the other hand, it would be the employees of the company, namely the stewards and stewardesses who will be the first ones to lose their jobs. The movie tried to turn it into a mix of drama and documentary and one of the drama aspects (one that is not too based on facts) is the fate of a stewardess of the airplane and how the company's demise affects her family life. Director Michael Steiner is responsible for some of Switzerland's most famous films from the last 10 years including "Sennentuntschi". However, I have to say that I did not find a single one of his works particularly memorable. admittedly, I did not see his entire body of work. "Grounding" is not a really bad film by any means, but something was missing to make it truly worth watching. Also, I found it way too long. 90 minutes would really have been fine and there were a lot totally forgettable scenes that could have been cut. Instead, this film easily crosses the 2-hour-mark. Not recommended.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed