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ComedyDrama

The Terminal

- Life is waiting.

An Eastern European tourist unexpectedly finds himself stranded in JFK airport, and must take up temporary residence there.

Release Date : 2004-06-17

Language :BulgarianEnglishFrenchRussianSpanish

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : DreamWorks PicturesAmblin EntertainmentParkes/MacDonald Productions

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles : Steven Spielberg's The Terminal

Cast

Tom Hanks

Character Name : Viktor Navorski

Original Name : Tom Hanks

Gender : Male

Catherine Zeta-Jones

Character Name : Amelia Warren

Original Name : Catherine Zeta-Jones

Gender : Female

Stanley Tucci

Character Name : Frank Dixon

Original Name : Stanley Tucci

Gender : Male

Chi McBride

Character Name : Mulroy

Original Name : Chi McBride

Gender : Male

Diego Luna

Character Name : Enrique Cruz

Original Name : Diego Luna

Gender : Male

Barry Shabaka Henley

Character Name : Thurman

Original Name : Barry Shabaka Henley

Gender : Male

Kumar Pallana

Character Name : Gupta Rajan

Original Name : Kumar Pallana

Gender : Male

Zoe Saldaña

Character Name : Dolores Torres

Original Name : Zoe Saldaña

Gender : Female

Eddie Jones

Character Name : Salchak

Original Name : Eddie Jones

Gender : Male

Jude Ciccolella

Character Name : Karl Iverson

Original Name : Jude Ciccolella

Gender : Male

Corey Reynolds

Character Name : Waylin

Original Name : Corey Reynolds

Gender : Male

Guillermo Díaz

Character Name : Bobby Alima

Original Name : Guillermo Díaz

Gender : Male

Rini Bell

Character Name : Nadia

Original Name : Rini Bell

Gender : Female

Stephen Mendel

Character Name : Steward First Class

Original Name : Stephen Mendel

Gender : Male

Valery Nikolaev

Character Name : Milodragovich

Original Name : Валерий Николаев

Gender : Male

Michael Nouri

Character Name : Max

Original Name : Michael Nouri

Gender : Male

Ana Maria Quintana

Character Name : Government Inspector

Original Name : Ana Maria Quintana

Gender : Female

Bob Morrisey

Character Name : Government Inspector

Original Name : Bob Morrisey

Gender : Male

Sasha Spielberg

Character Name : Lucy

Original Name : Sasha Spielberg

Gender : Female

Susan Slome

Character Name : Woman with Cart

Original Name : Susan Slome

Gender : Female

Mik Scriba

Character Name : Transportation Liaison

Original Name : Mik Scriba

Gender : Male

Jim Ishida

Character Name : Yoshinoya Manager

Original Name : Jim Ishida

Gender : Male

Carlease Burke

Character Name : Brookstone Manager

Original Name : Carlease Burke

Gender : Female

Stephon Fuller

Character Name : Swatch Manager

Original Name : Stephon Fuller

Gender : Male

Dan Finnerty

Character Name : Discovery Store Manager

Original Name : Dan Finnerty

Gender : Male

Anastasia Basil

Character Name : La Perla Employee Julie

Original Name : Anastasia Basil

Gender : Female

Lydia Blanco Garza

Character Name : Burger King Employee

Original Name : Lydia Blanco Garza

Gender : Female

John Eddins

Character Name : CBP Officer

Original Name : John Eddins

Gender : Male

Kenneth Choi

Character Name : CBP Officer

Original Name : Kenneth Choi

Gender : Male

Cas Anvar

Character Name : CBP Officer

Original Name : Cas Anvar

Gender : Male

Conrad Pla

Character Name : CBP Officer

Original Name : Conrad Pla

Gender : Male

Danette MacKay

Character Name : CBP Officer

Original Name : Danette MacKay

Gender : Female

Ian Finlay

Character Name : CBP Officer

Original Name : Ian Finlay

Gender : Male

Janique Kearns

Character Name : CBP Officer

Original Name : Janique Kearns

Gender : Female

Eddie Santiago

Character Name : Man on Phone

Original Name : Eddie Santiago

Gender : Male

Kevin Ryder

Character Name : Businessman

Original Name : Kevin Ryder

Gender : Male

Dusan Dukic

Character Name : Young Drug Trafficker

Original Name : Dusan Dukic

Gender : Male

Mark Ivanir

Character Name : Cab Driver Goran

Original Name : Mark Ivanir

Gender : Male

Matt Holland

Character Name : Ramada Inn Clerk

Original Name : Matt Holland

Gender : Male

Benny Golson

Character Name : Himself

Original Name : Benny Golson

Gender : Male

Buster Williams

Character Name : Bass

Original Name : Buster Williams

Gender : Male

Mike Ledonne

Character Name : Piano

Original Name : Mike Ledonne

Gender : Male

Carl Allen

Character Name : Drums

Original Name : Carl Allen

Gender : Male

Scott Adsit

Character Name : Cab Driver

Original Name : Scott Adsit

Gender : Male

Robert Covarrubias

Character Name : Janitor

Original Name : Robert Covarrubias

Gender : Male

Terry Haig

Character Name : CBP Inspector

Original Name : Terry Haig

Gender : Male

Jeff Michael

Character Name : Anchor

Original Name : Jeff Michael

Gender : Male

Dilva Henry

Character Name : Anchor

Original Name : Dilva Henry

Gender : Female

Michelle Arthur

Character Name : Field Reporter

Original Name : Michelle Arthur

Gender : Female

Thinh Truong Nguyen

Character Name : Passenger

Original Name : Thinh Truong Nguyen

Gender : Male

Sandrine Kwan

Character Name : Passenger

Original Name : Sandrine Kwan

Gender : Female

Carl Alacchi

Character Name : Passenger

Original Name : Carl Alacchi

Gender : Male

Tanya van Blokland

Character Name : Passenger

Original Name : Tanya van Blokland

Gender : Female

Evelyne de la Chenelière

Character Name : Passenger

Original Name : Evelyne de la Chenelière

Gender : Female

Laurie Meghan Phelps

Character Name : Homeland Security Officer

Original Name : Laurie Meghan Phelps

Gender : Female

Ryan Stockstad

Character Name : Brookstone Employee (uncredited)

Original Name : Ryan Stockstad

Gender : Male

Reviews

S

SierraKiloBravo

@SierraKiloBravo

2021-06-23

Click here for a video version of this review: https://youtu.be/n9WhSQ8mYPI Tom Hanks is a perennial favourite in our house, and his 2004 movie _The Terminal_ is one that somehow I missed along the way. I’ve now fixed that and it’s time to talk about it. Let’s start with the official description: _Victor Navorski is a man without a country; his plane took off just as a coup d’état exploded in his homeland, leaving it in a shambles, and now he’s stranded at Kennedy Airport, where he’s holding a passport that nobody recognises. While quarantined in the transit lounge until authorities can figure out what to do with him, Viktor simply goes on living - and courts romance with a beautiful flight attendant. _ A man stuck in an airport for months on end, sounds a little far fetched? Not so much - this was actually inspired by the true story of a man named Merhan Nasseri who lived at Charles DeGaulle Airport in France from August 1988 to August 2006, yes, 18 years. He got stuck when his refugee certification documents were stolen from him in France, en route from Belgium to England. It’s an incredible story, and worth reading up on on Wikipedia. The movie is pretty light and fluffy stuff, and Hanks is well cast as the curious and friendly Navorski. He makes the most of his situation and quickly adapts to his circumstances, and makes a number of friends with various airport staff. He also makes an enemy in the character played by Stanley Tucci, the Customs Director at the airport. While at times it felt a bit like _Product Placement: The Movie_, it’s a charming movie that despite a few unrealistic - things like his rapid progress in a English - takes you along for a good fun ride. Hanks is great, his friends are a suitably quirky bunch, and Tucci plays the bad guy really well too. Catherine Zeta-Jones is in this too, but seems a little shoehorned in. There’s enough to work with with the “stuck in the airport” situation and didn’t really need a romantic plot line, but I guess these are the things that get done to make it appeal to a wider audience. It’s just been removed from the Netflix catalogue here in Australia - which was the reason I finally watched it - but if you happen to come across it, it’s a really nice film that will warm your heart for a couple of hours.

K

Kamurai

@Kamurai

2021-06-23

Great watch, will likely watch again, and do recommend. I should be able to recommend this just based on "Tom Hanks trapped in an airport", especially given how popular "Cast Away" was. I really love what they did with him being foreign and trap in an American airport, but being hard-working and intelligent. I'm sure there is a "Larry the Cable Guy" version of this movie when it's a useless American trapped in another country that would be much funnier, but clearly a worse movie. The progression of Hanks' character is wonderful, and while there are definitely components of this being a romantic movie, it is refreshing to see a movie that can hold the character's romantic motivations in parallel to the story's motivations and allow them to both be and be separate. Stanley Tucci also does a great job, though its as a very unnecessary villain. Yes, it's a guy doing his job, but the character is oddly motivated for someone trying to score a promotion: something they specifically point out in the movie. My point is that not only it is a well-made, well-performed movie, but it manages to be something larger and highlights problems with us a humans, society and bureaucracy.

P

Peter McGinn

@narrator56

2021-08-08

I may have watched The Terminal a while after it first came out, but I remembered no details, so I took the opportunity o watch it on Netflix recently. Whether or not I watched it before, I may not remember the details very well now either. It is a quiet movie with a slow moving plot. It stands in direct counterpoint to Spielberg’s Schindler’s List, which was slow moving in a way, but it had as a backdrop the murder of millions of people and one man’s character growth towards a time when he would try to save some of those lives. It’s quiet tone is interrupted by spurts of emotional and physical violence. The Terminal does not offer such exclamation points to add to suspense and tension. That is not to say The Terminal is boring, though some may find it so. It is a character study of a man in limbo, neither in the United States nor able to leave it. He has left his country to go to New York City, and there is a coup back home, and since the United States does not recognize the new government, he is stuck in a section of JFK airport. The story is very loosely based on the story of an Iranian man. He was apparently paid to use his story, but they ended up only using the concept behind it. His situation reminded me of the short story I had to read back in junior high, The Man without a Country, written by Edward Everett Hale. It told the story of a fictional soldier who was charged with treason along with Aaron Burr, and who cursed the United States saying she wished he would never have to hear about the U.S. again. He was sentenced to live out his life on board various ships with nobody ever mentioning his country in his hearing again. But back to the movie. The story is full of small moments showing **** adjusting to his limited new environment: trying to feed himself, helping a few others whether they want help or not, finding ways of amusing himself or keeping busy and, inevitably, slowing becoming involved with a flight attendant he sees often. Most movies need a bad guy and, as if his situation wasn’t giving our hero enough headaches, the security head played by Stanley Tucci periodically plots to get our stranded traveler arrested so that huge will be relocated and therefore someone else’s problem. But I will let you discover all of the intricacies of the plot for yourself, as well as learn what is in the can of peanuts he carries around. In total The Terminal is a pleasant enough watch, but one perhaps you will want to watch while doing housework, or multitasking in some other way.

M

madriyanto

@madriyanto

2024-06-21

"The Terminal," starring Tom Hanks as Viktor Navorski, is more than just a heartwarming comedy about a man stuck in an airport. It's a profound exploration of human resilience, fueled by love and an indomitable spirit. The film transcends its comedic elements to reveal a powerful message about the ability of the human spirit to adapt and thrive, even in the most challenging circumstances. Viktor's plight, thrust into a bureaucratic limbo within JFK Airport, becomes a microcosm of the human experience. He is separated from his homeland by political upheaval, facing a future shrouded in uncertainty. Yet, Viktor doesn't simply succumb to despair. Instead, he embraces his unexpected reality, turning the airport into a makeshift home, a haven for his dreams. He navigates the bustling airport life with grace, forging friendships, learning new skills, and even finding love. His story resonates deeply, reminding us that even in the face of adversity, our innate desire for connection and purpose can prevail. Viktor's tenacity inspires us to see beyond the limitations imposed by our circumstances, to find hope and resilience within ourselves. It’s a poignant reminder that love and survival instincts can be the most powerful forces driving us forward. However, the film also offers a unique glimpse into the overlooked world of the airport. What we often perceive as a sterile transit point becomes a vibrant microcosm of human life. Through Viktor’s journey, we witness a bustling ecosystem, teeming with diverse individuals who navigate the 24-hour cycle of this unusual environment. The film compels us to see beyond the surface, to appreciate the intricate tapestry of lives woven within this seemingly mundane space. Ultimately, "The Terminal" is a testament to the human spirit's capacity for adaptation and perseverance. It is a film that stays with you long after the credits roll, prompting introspection about our own resilience and the hidden depths of human connection. While we may not all face Viktor's extraordinary circumstances, his story serves as a powerful reminder that within each of us lies the potential to create our own haven, to find meaning even in the most unexpected of places.