Robert Bianco - USA TodayKeitel is wonderful and Wahlberg does well by an underwritten part, but Path's story is too diffuse to be held together by two characters. Unfortunately, outside of some entertaining work by Amy Madigan as a CIA analyst, Patricia Heaton as Ambassador Barbara Bodine, and Penny Johnson Jerald as Condoleezza Rice, no one much registers.
Yet for some viewers, politics will be Path's stumbling block. In its tone, images, assumptions and factual liberties (led by an invented failed attempt to capture bin Laden), the movie misses no chance to slam the Clinton administration and no opportunity to support a very expansive reading of police powers, here and abroad. ("How do you win a law and orderly war?" "You don't.")
Path has enough trouble just following history. Rewriting history is an ambition it should have left at the door.
http://www.usatoday.com/life/television/reviews/2006-09-07-path-to-911_x.htmDoug Elfman - Chicago Sun-TimesAccuracy aside, ABC's '9/11' deserves to bomb I once sat in a car forever waiting for my mom to come out of a grocery store. I thought that was the definition of "interminable." I had no idea "The Path to 9/11" was in my future.
This is what happens during 4 1/2 lonnnng hours of "Path." Terrorists talk about killing Americans for Allah. FBI and other security officials try to track them but fail. 9/11 happens.
You don't say.
This is the most anticlimactic, tension-free movie in the history of terrorist TV.
It's hard to fathom a brouhaha brewed over such a bore. ABC has received tens of thousands of letters -- including one from Bill Clinton's office -- insisting "Path" is wildly inaccurate and should not air.
http://www.suntimes.com/output/entertainment/cst-ftr-elf08.htmlKen Tucker - Entertainment WeeklyIt's also difficult to suppress a giggle seeing Rice being played by Penny Johnson Jerald, once an evil First Lady on 24. This is the problem with TV movies that don't sweep you up in their narrative — you get distracted by famous faces playing famous faces. (The guy doing CIA director George Tenet: He's what's-his-name, the dad from The Wonder Years...right, Dan Lauria!) I don't fault these actors — heck, the best scene in five hours is a brief one in which Everybody Loves Raymond's Patricia Heaton (as ambassador to Yemen Barbara Bodine) condescends magnificently to Keitel (''I think the people here might appreciate it if you could pronounce the name of their country properly'').
The performances are actually wonderful. That they're in the service of presenting a monumental horror so tediously is appalling, really. Grade: D+
http://www.ew.com/ew/article/review/tv/0,6115,1516013_3_0_,00.htmlRob Owen - Pittsburgh Post GazetteAs the number of filmed dramatic projects related to 9/11 continues to grow, there's undoubtedly a greater need to offer context, which "Path to 9/11" attempts, but it does so in such a ham-fisted manner, it fails to tell an inherently dramatic story well.
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06250/719494-237.stmMatthew Gilbert - Boston GlobeWith all the ado about ABC's new docudrama ``The Path to 9/11," one point has gotten lost. While Clinton administration alums such as Madeleine Albright protest its perceived inaccuracies, and conservatives defend its bias, and many curious viewers plan to tune in to see for themselves, it's still not a very good piece of dramatic storytelling.
Like ``The Reagans," which CBS dropped amid political pressure in 2003, it offers the occasion for a political wing-ding but not for a very satisfying viewing experience. It's a few decently crafted terrorism set pieces -- the manhunt for 1993 World Trade Center bomber Ramzi Yousef , a near capture of Osama bin Laden -- loosely strung together into the semblance of an epic.
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One egregious moment that is likely to remain, however, features Patricia Heaton hamming it up as Barbara Bodine , the US ambassador to Yemen. After the terrorist bombing of the USS Cole, Heaton's Bodine refuses to help O'Neill and his FBI crew in a scene that is painfully over-the-top.
``Mr. O'Neill, you are the epitome of the ugly American," she says. Suddenly the movie changes awkwardly from suspense thriller to psychodrama/Emmy grab. As Condoleezza Rice , Penny Johnson Jerald also strikes a wrong note, looking almost campy with a black mark pasted onto her teeth. Jerald, best known as President Palmer's diabolical wife on ``24," is arch here, as well.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2006/09/08/fragmented_path_tries_to_cover_too_much_ground/