Backdrop
9/11: Minute by Minute

9/11: Minute by Minute (2021)

1h 4m | PG-13

⭐ 8 / 10

September 11th 2001, the day America was under siege. Thrust into defense against the deadliest disaster ever faced. The four coordinated attacks by nineteen individuals, driven by religious extremism, claimed the lives of thousands that day, exposing flaws in the defence of the mightiest nation on the globe. The chaos in the skies sent radio communications into meltdown. Follow the key aspects of the nation's response as the gravity of the situation unfolds before your very eyes. Through official FAA, Airline, Military and NYC Fire Department recordings, as well as archival footage and reenactments, retrace the critical moments that forced American society to change forever. This documentary will expose the frenzied communication that took place over the airwaves as flight attendants, aviation authorities and the president grappled with a nightmare. Join us as we observe and reflect on the darkest day in American history as we recount those moments minute by minute.

Director: Piers Garland

Studio: Entertain ME

Genre: Documentary

Video: 720p

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Cast

Bob Taylor

Bob Taylor

as Narrator (voice)

Betty Ong

Betty Ong

as Self (voice) (archive footage)

Nydia Gonzalez

Nydia Gonzalez

as Self (voice) (archive footage)

George W. Bush

George W. Bush

as Self (archive footage)

Mighty Swag

Mighty Swag

as Kid in crowd

Reviews

By Peter McGinn

There wasn’t anything new or revealing in this short film, which I suppose means I have read and watched enough about 9/11 to be quite informed on the subject. But it was interesting to watch the events unfold from this moment by moment perspective, mostly from the angle of the traffic controllers and other outsiders trying to make sense of the tragedy as it developed. There was hardly anything political discussed, though there was the comment that as a nation we used it as an excuse to go after Saddam rather than those more at fault, or rich oil supplier nation the Saudis. Mostly it stuck to its theme of sort of “you are there.”