CNN FILMS: Sole Survivor – Survivors Share What Happens After Their
Rescues
Film screening at
Time Warner Center in January with Psychology Today magazine, Followed by
Broadcast Premiere
There have been 14
large airplane crashes with a lone survivor in the history of commercial
aviation. CNN FILMS: SOLE SURVIVOR explores the complex emotional
aftermath experienced by survivors of major aviation disasters. The film
is written and directed by Ky Dickens, executive produced by Susan
Aurinko, and produced by Amy McIntyre and Alexis Jaworski. SOLE
SURVIVOR will debut for the first time ever on global television on CNN/U.S. on
Thursday, Jan. 9, 2014, airing at 9:00pm, 11:00pm, and 2:00am. The film
will encore on Sunday, Jan. 12, 2014, at the same broadcast times. All
times Eastern.
At the age of only
17, George Lamson, Jr. was the sole survivor of Galaxy Airlines flight
203 after it crashed near Reno, NV, which also killed his father along with the
other soles on board the aircraft. Nearly three decades later, Lamson has
memorized the names of the other 13 sole survivors. The film, in part,
follows Lamson’s journey to meet those that he can, connecting with some in the
community of sole survives that he now describes as feeling like family, and
sharing in their profound expressions of loss.
Dickens understands
well the complicated emotional geography explored in the documentary. As
a young adult, she became a survivor herself when she traded places with a
friend who, moments later, died in a car accident. In making the film,
Dickens sought to “put a face on survivorship” – revealing the social,
spiritual, and psychological aftermath experienced by survivors of aircraft
disasters, many of whom remain deeply traumatized by survivor’s guilt.
Lamson writes moving
letters to each survivor, learning how each one has responded to their very
singular experiences. Each survivor has had a unique journey towards
healing, and most have never been interviewed before their participation in this
film, including Ceclia Cichan, who was only four years old at the time
of her flight’s crash. Cichan describes her vivid memories of loneliness
during her extended recovery in the hospital, and how she has sometimes coped
by not thinking of the accident that she survived.
Comair first officer Jim
Polehinke describes the depression and self-medication he experienced
following the crash of the flight he co-piloted. Polehinke’s struggles
with survivor’s guilt are reflected in the conflicting emotions of the family
members left behind by the dead, particularly following the National
Transportation and Safety Board’s hearing, that determined the probable cause
of the accident to be pilot error.
SOLE SURVIVOR also
includes moving interviews with family members of some of the other 13
survivors, as they discuss how their loved ones have changed since surviving
their crashes. The filmmakers also interview family members of those who
were lost in the disasters. They discuss how their lives suddenly changed
after learning of the crashes that abruptly ended their loved ones lives – and
how they have coped with their tragic losses.
CNN Films will
partner with Psychology Today for a press screening of SOLE SURVIVOR at
Time Warner Center in January to be moderated by CNN’s award-winning senior
medical correspondent Elizabeth Cohen.
During the telecast,
filmmaker Ky Dickens, CNN
Films,
and others associated with the documentary, will offer behind-the-scenes
commentary and respond to users’ questions about the film via social media, by
using the hashtag #SoleSurvivorFilm. A live social blog for SOLE SURVIVOR
will capture and curate the real-time conversations across multiple social
platforms (including Twitter via @CNNFilms and Facebook),
powered by ScribbleLive. Also online,
users may also view excerpts from the film, discover more about major aviation
disasters around the world, and learn more about the survivors whose stories
are featured in SOLE SURVIVOR, by visiting www.CNN.com/solesurvivor.
2 comments:
Although fascinating, I find this film's promo to be highly depressing. I will be skipping this one.
Yikes. January 2014 will be ugly for CNN. Judging from the ratings so far on TVN, CNN is becoming a very distant 3rd. Where have those CNN viewers gone to ? Obviously it's not to FNC or MSNBC. The demos for FNC are not good for the number of viewers and MSNBC needs more from 8 PM. However All In is now beating 360. CNN is doing poorly at 4,5 6 & 7. There is nothing for 360 to grow on.
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