Charlie Victor Romeo


An unusual and gripping piece of minimalist experimental cinema, Charlie Victor Romeo dramatizes the cockpit voice recordings of a half dozen actual airline emergencies. Directors Robert Berger and Karlyn Michelson — working in concert with actor/producer Patrick Daniels, who helmed the stage version of this New Frontier world premiere from last year’s Sundance Film Festival — craft a psychological thriller that blends low-fi technique with high-tension situations, and wrings a real rooting interest out of viewers.



Filmed in front of live (though never shown) audiences over the course of three days during one of its 2012 stage runs, Charlie Victor Romeo deploys a small repertory company of actors playing the various roles of the pilots, co-pilots and other flight crew members grappling with six discrete disasters. The situations unfold at different lengths, and include incidents with icing, birds, bulkhead rupture, hydraulic system failure and other mechanical malfunctions.

Brief interstitial title cards provide relevant information about the type of aircraft in each scene, and the passengers and crew on board. Otherwise, the black-box staging of the material provides a fixed, straight-on point-of-view of the cockpit, though with a couple camera angles and very occasional, tightly framed cutaways to the profiles of assisting, overheard air traffic controllers. It’s a very spare approach, but the telling suits the material. It forces a subjectivity upon the viewer which compels them to create all the surrounding elements — the passengers and scrambling ground crew — in their mind.

The acting is (appropriately) clipped and professional, though not without small moments of humor and humanity; the movie’s opening sequence includes some flirtation between pilot and stewardess. There’s profanity, too, understandably. The aviation jargon, meanwhile (“over-speed alarm,” “elevator control,” etcetera), summons forth memories of the panicked punch of television hit ER, which gave plenty of viewers their first real glimpse into the crisis reaction of frontline medical professionals. It’s considerable, this terminology, but since the scenarios are authentic it’s not distracting; the gist of all the problems in each event is always readily apparent.

By using actual “black box” voice recording transcripts (only condensing some material for time, not changing any of it) and recreating these scenes of extreme duress, Charlie Victor Romeo doesn’t so much provide a snapshot of heroic professionalism (though there is a good pinch of that) as much as plumb the valley between human frailty and our remarkable capacity for disaster response. The result is a unique and unsettling film. For the full, original review from ShockYa, click here. In addition to its New York City engagements, Charlie Victor Romeo opens in Los Angeles on January 31 at the Downtown Independent. For more information on the movie, meanwhile, visit its eponymous website and/or Facebook page. (Collective: Unconscious/3-Legged Dog, unrated, 81 minutes)