Captain Phillips

Captain Phillips(2013)

PG-13
10/10/2013 (US)Action, Drama, Thriller2h 14m
7.5

"Out here survival is everything."

Overview

The true story of Captain Richard Phillips and the 2009 hijacking by Somali pirates of the US-flagged MV Maersk Alabama, the first American cargo ship to be hijacked in two hundred years.

Paul Greengrass

Director

Billy Ray

Screenplay

Where to Watch

Stream

Netflix
fuboTV

Rent

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home

Buy

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home

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Media

Official Trailer #2

Official Trailer #2

Trailer

Official International Trailer

Official International Trailer

Trailer

Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Trailer

Tom Hanks and Paul Greengrass on Captain Phillips | Film4 Interview Special

Tom Hanks and Paul Greengrass on Captain Phillips | Film4 Interview Special

Featurette

CAPTAIN PHILLIPS: B-Roll Footage

CAPTAIN PHILLIPS: B-Roll Footage

Featurette

"Letter" Spot

"Letter" Spot

Teaser

"Pirates take the Maersk Alabama"

"Pirates take the Maersk Alabama"

Clip

"One Team" Spot

"One Team" Spot

Teaser

"Unarmed" Spot

"Unarmed" Spot

Teaser

Social

K
A review by kineticandroid

Written on June 21, 2014

Allow me to start with what you likely have already read — this film is well-crafted and tense procedural about a true story. The fact that I still found it tense and exciting, even when I already knew the ending (including the oft-mentioned Captain Phillips ending scene) is a high compliment.

So why tell this story? I took it as a meditation on powerlessness, a film that didn't deal with heroes or villains, only victims. There's a shipping crew that is easily sought out by pirates, and there are the pirates that ultimately fail. In either case, it's not as if either side feels in control of their destiny. They're just playing to some largely unseen authority. After the crew deflects the first attempted piracy in the film, one character says that as a union member, he didn't sign up for this kind of danger. The reaction? He chose to work on a ship that went around the horn of Africa. "What did you expect?" he's asked. Later, when one of the pirates steps on broken glass and injures he foot, he's asked the very same question by his leaders. Even the two competing captains — the pirate and the title character — ultimately are swayed (or saved) by the power of the state. What did they expect? To be the one in control?