Captain Phillips review

There's cling-ons on the starboard bow…

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Paul Greengrass gave us terror in the skies in United 93 after showing us terror on land in Bloody Sunday . Now he brings us terror on the sea in Captain Phillips , a white-knuckle recreation of a real-life 2009 hijacking that, either by accident or design, plays like ' Zero Dark Thirty : The Prequel'.

Yes, the same Navy SEAL unit that took out Osama Bin Laden in May 2011 got to warm up their trigger fingers two years earlier when the Maersk Alabama - a US container ship lugging freight from Oman to Kenya - was boarded by brigands as it sailed past Somalia. Parachuting into the Indian ocean under the cover of darkness, the men from DEVGRU - Naval Special Warfare Development Group - played a crucial role in the resolution of the crisis that may well have had an impact on that later, more celebrated mission.

Small wonder then that Greengrass' film shares some of its chromosomes with Kathryn Bigelow's, particularly when, after two heart-stoppingly tense hours, it finally reaches its lethal endgame. For all their tactical ability, nous and rippling musculature, however, the SEALS are not the heroes here. That honour belongs to a grey-flecked, glasses-wearing, man-boobed sea salt - an ordinary Joe who, when pushed into a corner, reveals extraordinary fortitude and resilience.

When we first encounter Richard Phillips (Tom Hanks), he's a working stiff being driven to the airport by his loving if careworn wife (Catherine Keener). A stickler for procedure and a rather cold fish, he's respected by his crew but hardly loved - a by-the-booker with a job to do and no time for shilly-shallying.

Yet when a pair of skiffs appear on the sonar headed for his vessel, the company man becomes a man to be reckoned with, capable of not just thwarting an initial assault with some well-placed backwash but also of quashing an incipient mutiny with a well-read riot act.

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Freelance Writer

Neil Smith is a freelance film critic who has written for several publications, including Total Film. His bylines can be found at the BBC, Film 4 Independent, Uncut Magazine, SFX, Heat Magazine, Popcorn, and more.