Flightplan review

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As anyone who's ever spent an hour in limbo circling Heathrow will confirm, there's little glamour and excitement in air travel nowadays. In Hollywood, however, in-flight entertainment is clearly back in vogue. First Wes Craven touched down with Red Eye, a daft but devilish tale of terror in the skies; now Jodie Foster's back from her extended break with a Hitchcockian thriller that skilfully plays on post-9/11 anxieties.

Not that it starts off that way. As a grief-stricken Foster walks Berlin's streets beside the ghostly presence of her recently deceased hubby, it seems as if German helmer Robert Schwentke is steering us into Sixth Sense territory. The spooky mood is sustained once Jodie and her daughter are airborne, so much so that, when Foster awakes to find her daughter missing, we're tempted to side with the sceptical trolly-dollies who doubt her very existence.

Compelling take-off with major turbulence near the end, but a safe landing thanks to Foster's undimmed star power.

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