9/11

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Plot

Telecast to coincide with the six-month "anniversary" of the horrific terrorist attack on New York's World Trade Center, the powerful and poignant two-hour CBS TV documentary 9/11 grew out of an independent film project inaugurated by French filmmakers Jules and Gedeon Naudet several months before the tragedy. Originally intending to produce an in-depth study of a "typical" American fireman, from the rookie training days to matriculation as a full-fledged firefighter, the brothers virtually lived in the headquarters of the F.D.N.Y.'s Engine Seven, Ladder One company. Thus it was that the Naudets were on hand to tape record the airliner "bombing" of both towers one and two on that fateful September 11 -- and even more dramatically, one of the brothers was able to record the hectic activities of the firefighters as they courageously went about their duties in the doomed lobby of tower one -- with only minutes to spare before both towers would collapse into a sickening mass of rubble. Although the more appalling examples of carnage are tactfully left unshown, such chilling vignettes as the offcamera sounds of crashing glass, indicating that another victim has jumped to his or her death from the uppermost heights of the twin towers, are left intact, obliging CBS to run a disclaimer in hopes of sparing the victims' loved ones any further anguish (too, the amount of understandable profanity spoken by the harried firefighters far exceeded anything ever heard before on mainstream American television). Telecast with only three commercial interruptions on March 10, 2002, 9/11 was dedicated to all the victims of the tragedy, with most of the proceeds going to the Uniformed Firefighter Association Scholarship Fund. The special garnered one of the highest ratings posted by CBS in years, with 38 million viewers tuning in. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Cast

  • Robert De Niro - Host
  • Gedeon Naudet - Narrator
  • Jules Naudet - Narrator

Credit

James Hanlon - Director, Gedeon Naudet - Director, Jules Naudet - Director, Richard Barber - Editor, M.J. Maloy - Editor, Jason Schmidt - Editor, Bruce Spiegel - Editor, Mead Stone - Editor, David Friend - Executive Producer, James Hanlon - Executive Producer, Graydon Carter - Executive Producer, Hal Gessner - Executive Producer, Gedeon Naudet - Executive Producer, Jules Naudet - Executive Producer, Susan Zirinsky - Executive Producer, Ricahrd Fiocca - Composer (Music Score), Richard Barber - Producer, Tom Forman - Producer, Rob Klug - Producer, Paul LaRosa - Producer, M.J. Maloy - Producer, Bruce Spiegel - Producer, Mead Stone - Producer, Susan Zirinsky - Producer, Tom Forman - Screenwriter, Greg Kandra - Screenwriter

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9/11

DVD cover art.
Directed by Jules Naudet
Gédéon Naudet

James Hanlon
Produced by Tom Forman
Jules Naudet
Gédéon Naudet
James Hanlon
Written by Tom Forman
Greg Kandra
Narrated by James Hanlon
Music by Richard Fiocca
Michael Patterson
Cinematography Jules Naudet
Gédéon Naudet
James Hanlon
Editing by Richard Barber
Michael Maloy
Jason Schmidt
Bruce Spiegel
Mead Stone
Distributed by CBS Television
Release date(s) March 10, 2002 (2002-03-10)
Running time 112 minutes
Country United States
France
Language English

9/11 is a 2002 American documentary film about the September 11 attacks in New York City, in which two planes crashed into the buildings of the World Trade Center from the point of view of the New York City Fire Department. The film was directed by Jules and Gedeon Naudet, and FDNY firefighter James Hanlon.[1]

Contents

Synopsis

Firehouse of Engine 7, Ladder 1

Filmmakers James Hanlon and the Naudet brothers were originally filming Tony Benetatos, a probationary firefighter of the New York City Fire Department assigned to the Engine 7/Ladder 1/Battalion 1 Firehouse on Duane Street with the intention of making a film about the "probie's" experience. On the morning of September 11, the firehouse, under the direction of Battalion Chief Joseph Pfeifer, was called out on a gas leak on Church and Lispenard Streets. Jules rode with the Chief Pfeifer, to check it out, while Gedeon stayed behind at the firehouse. When American Airlines Flight 11 flew by overhead, Jules turned the camera to follow the plane and taped one of only three known recordings of the first plane hitting the North Tower (Tower 1) of the World Trade Center, the others being a video shot by Pavel Hlava and a sequence of still frames taken by Wolfgang Staehle.

The members of Battalion 1 that were investigating the gas leak were the first responders on the scene and Jules was allowed to follow the chief during the attempted rescue operation. Jules, Chief Pfeifer and several other FDNY Chiefs are inside the lobby of Tower 1 when Tower 2 is hit by the second aircraft and when Tower 2 eventually collapsed (Gédéon, meanwhile, is back at the firehouse, filming the reactions of probie Tony Benetatos and the rest of the firefighters as they try to deal with the disaster). The film gives various firemen's accounts of the events of the remainder of the day, from the initial crash to the building's collapse to the attempts to rescue survivors from the rubble.

Broadcast

CBS aired 9/11 commercial-free on March 10, 2002, to mark the six months since the attacks. Hosted by actor Robert De Niro, CBS's broadcast was repeated on the first anniversary as well. The film aired in 103 countries in 2002 alone.[1] The DVD of the documentary was released in proximity, although De Niro's footage was edited out of the DVD release. CBS re-aired the film, hosted again by De Niro, on September 10, 2006, the night before the fifth anniversary of the attacks. However, this version contained updates from the principal members of the documentary as of 2006.[2]

The film was noted for its use of profanity, which in regular circumstances on American broadcast media would be subject to censorship by the broadcaster or the Federal Communications Commission. At the time of its broadcast, the FCC took no action against the network for violating indecency rules because doing so would have a negative connotation and would be interpreted as sanitizing history.

However, a recent ruling by a federal appeals court successfully granted a "temporary halt"[3] to the FCC's enforcement of its indecency rules. This allowed CBS and any affiliates to air the documentary without edits[3] and without fear of facing stiff fines.

On Sunday, September 11, 2011, CBS broadcast 9/11: Ten Years Later, once again hosted by Robert DeNiro. The aftershow was updated by the Naudet brothers, Hanlon and CBS News producer Susan Zirinsky to include new interviews and footage on the lives of those involved with the documentary ten years later.[4] In addition to the rebroadcast of the original documentary, the show also focused on the building of the new One World Trade Center, and on the health problems facing many of the firemen at Ground Zero. DeNiro was to be joined by the Naudet brothers and James Hanlon, a former New York fireman-turned-film director who was also present that day. As with all previous broadcasts of the film, CBS aired repeated viewer discretion warnings before and during the broadcast.

Awards

9/11 was nominated for and won multiple awards including an Emmy for Outstanding Non-Fiction Special (Informational) and a Peabody Award.[5]

See also

References

External links


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