or so says this reviewer.
By ROB OWEN
ABC's "The Path to 9/11" (8 p.m., EDT, Sunday and Monday), attempts to communicate the results of the 9/11 Commission report in a dramatic, relatable way for viewers. This isn't entertainment per se, but a way to tell the story of events that led up to that terrible day. At almost five hours and with no commercial interruptions, the miniseries asks a lot of patience on the part of viewers and gives too little in return.
By attempting to dramatize a report, the miniseries jumps all over the place. It would have been better to concentrate on a few or even one key figure. FBI counter-terrorism expert John O'Neil (Harvey Keitel) is the obvious choice. Not only is he involved in efforts to track the work of Osama bin Laden before 9/11, but after a falling out with the agency, he became head of security at the World Trade Center shortly before the attack.
Of all the characters in the film, O'Neil has the most remarkable story and the film sticks with him throughout, but it also veers off to follow other aspects of the 9/11 attacks that we've either seen dramatized before ("Flight 93") or are dramatized poorly here (the guy playing Dick Cheney is way too feeble and bears only a passing resemblance to the vice president).
Nine minutes into Sunday's first part of the miniseries, "Path to 9/11" jumps back to February 1993 and the first World Trade Center bombing. It continues hopping through time to examine significant events in the run-up to the 2001 attack.
. . .
. . .
As 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.
much more . . .
http://www.scrippsnews.com/node/12422Most people don't know many of the people in DC. Without knowing the players this movie is going to lose viewers' interest real fast.