Non-Stop (2014) - full transcript

Bill Marks, a former cop dealing with his daughter's death by drinking, is now a federal air marshal. While on a flight from New York to London, Marks gets a text telling him that unless 150 million dollars is transferred to an offshore account, someone will die every 20 minutes. Can he find the terrorist in time and save everyone?

REPORTER: (ON RADIO) People
have to realize, we cannot
make everybody totally safe,

even if we allocated
the entire federal
budget towards security.

I promise you there
is not an easier job...

(CELL PHONE RINGING)

...in the whole federal
government than riding first
class in airplanes from...

Yeah.

I know. I'm sorry.

No, no, you can trust me.
I'm fine.

(PLANE APPROACHING)

What? I can't hear you.

I can't hear you!



(CAR HORN)

MAN: Hey, man,
you got a light?

Sir. Excuse me.

Excuse me, sir.
You got a light?

Yeah. Sorry.

WOMAN: (ON PA) May I have
your attention, please?

MAN: So, where you off to?

Where you headed?

I'm headed to Amsterdam.

WOMAN: (ON PA) May I have
your attention, please?

The white zone is for
the immediate loading

and unloading of
passengers only.

Here you go, sir.
Enjoy your flight.

MAN: Everyone and
their mother's in the
game right now.



You got Korean phones,
Japanese phones,
Scandinavian phones.

OS is trying to keep up
with the hardware from 15
different manufacturers.

Right!

That's what I've
been saying. No
one listens to me!

Dude, you're
preaching to the choir!
It makes absolutely no sense.

Really?
I guess I'm
in your way.

New Yorkers,
man, I swear to God.
Give me two minutes.

Clear.

Right this way, sir. Please.

Listen to me. Listen to me.
I cannot stay in
London for three days.

Get me on
the next flight back.

Please, look. This is...

This is a bad time for...

"You have to do
what you have to do."
Well, guess what? So do I.

Here.

Long flights
are the worst.

No, thanks.

Hi, baby.

MAN: (ON PA) Good evening,
passengers.

WOMAN: There's a mix-up
with my reservation.

I was supposed to
have a window seat
and they put me in an aisle.

Maybe you could move
some people around,

'cause I was guaranteed
the window seat.

I'm sorry about that,
Ms. Summers.

MAN: (ON PA) At this time
we are inviting passengers
with small children,

or who require assistance,
to board at this time.

Once again,
in the boarding area,

we are ready to
begin our priority
boarding Flight 10 to London.

We'll begin general boarding
in just a few minutes.

WOMAN: Are you all
set to board?

GIRL: So we have to
go on the runway?

Come on, sweetheart.
Is this everything?

Yeah. My mom checked
my big bag for me.

Have you flown by
yourself before?

No. This is my first time.

WOMAN: You're gonna
have a lovely time.

NANCY: Welcome aboard.
Yes, just through there
and down to the left.

Nancy, this is Becca.
It's her first
time on an airplane.

Wonderful.
Who's waiting
for you in London?

My dad.

Well, we've a seat
by the window all
picked out for you.

Look, I know it may
seem scary, but
flying's really quite fun.

I believe this little
guy made a run for it.

What's his name?

Henry.

Yeah, he looks like
a Henry. That's
a good name.

Well...
Becca.

Becca, I think
Henry's a little scared.

Maybe you can show
him how it's done.

Good girl.

I'm sorry, am
I in your way?

Again?

We are right up here.

ATTENDANT: (ON PA)
Good evening,
ladies and gentlemen.

As a reminder,
all carry-on luggage
must fit in the overhead bin

or be safely stowed
under the seat
in front of you.

If you're having
trouble fitting your luggage,

we'll be happy to
check it for you.

Thank you for
choosing British Aqualantic.
Enjoy the flight.

JEN: Do you know,
is there somebody
sitting there?

Do you know who has that seat?
No, sorry.

WOMAN: Is somebody
sitting here?

Hey, I'm on the plane.
And guess what?
They effed up my reservation.

We land at 7:35.
Did they book a car?

Hang on. Hang on.

Excuse me.
Sir? I'm here in 3B.

I was wondering if
maybe you'd switch seats

with me so I
could have the window?

Do you care?

Do you speak English?

Okay. Thank you.

Excuse me. Excuse me. Sir?

Hi. I'm right here,
I'm in 3B

and I was just wondering
if maybe you would
prefer the aisle,

or if you don't care,
if you would

switch with me
for the window seat?

A lot of people
just sleep anyway,
so I was wondering if...

Sure. Why not?

Thank you so much.
I really appreciate that.

Sorry,
let me get out
of your way.

Let me help you.

MAN: There's room
right up here.

ATTENDANT: Aqualantic is
pleased to offer extensive
in-flight entertainment

with hundreds of video
and music programming
at your fingertips.

Oh, God.

WOMAN: (ON CELL PHONE)
Hello? Are you there?

Your phone.

What?
Hello?

Your phone.
Oh, shit.

Hello?
Hi. Hi, hi.

I'll call you
when we land, okay?
All right, bye.

Rough day, huh?

Yeah, you have no idea.

Hi, excuse me.

Could I get a gin and tonic,
when you get a chance?

Of course.
Make that two, please.

God.

Nancy, right? Gwen.
Yeah.

Thank God for you.

Girl doesn't show
up and leaves me

to handle two cabins.
You're a lifesaver.

If I pass out,
just promise to catch me
before I hit the floor.

Not if I do first.

Can I get you
gentlemen anything
before we taxi?

No, thanks, Nance,
I'm fine.

What?

Nothing.

Ground, this is AQ-10,
we're ready to
disconnect ground power.

You naughty boy.

(CHUCKLES)
Naughty.

Thank you.

Didn't you
order gin and tonic?

Did I?

'Cause she
brought you a water.

It's not my lucky day.

CAPTAIN: (ON PA) Good evening,
ladies and gentlemen,

welcome aboard British
Aqualantic Flight 10,
non-stop service to London.

I'm your captain,
David McMillan,

flying with First
Officer Kyle Rice.

And we expect
a smooth ride this evening

with a flight time of
just over six hours.
Seatbelts, thank you.

We should have you in
the air momentarily.

This is a beautiful
picture they took of her.

ATTENDANT: Sir, could you
move your seat-back forward?
Thank you.

Flight attendants,
please be seated for takeoff.

What's that for?
Is that for luck?

Something like that.
My daughter gave it to me.

Better than a gin
and tonic, I bet.

It is.

I'm Jen.

Bill.

You fly much?
All the time, actually.

Yeah, I can tell.

It's just the takeoff.
Once we're in the air, I'll...

You'll have a seizure?

I'll be fine. I promise.

You actually
fly all the time?

Some things you
never get used to.

How old's your daughter?

Now, she's, uh, 17.

What's her name?

Olivia.

That's nice.
Yeah.

I like that name,
it's a nice name.

So, why'd she
give you the ribbon?

Some kids have blankets,
stuffed animals.
Olivia had ribbons.

This was hers
when she was little.

She'd tie it to
a finger or toe
before going to bed.

And then in the morning,
she'd make me guess.

Where she put it?
Yeah.

That's cute.
That's really cute.

Yeah, and then she grew up.

I suppose I need it
more than she did.

Anyway.

So, what do you
do for a living?

Well...

I fly a lot.

Oh, yeah?

Yeah, but I think that

I'm gonna try to
get some sleep.

Get some sleep, sure.
Yeah, it's gonna
be a long flight.

Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Sleep well.

WOMAN: Stop!
MAN: Baby...

(WOMAN SHUSHING AND LAUGHING)

WOMAN: You're crazy!
MAN: You're so hot, baby,
I can't stop it! I can't!

WOMAN: People are watching!

MAN: No, no, no.
Nobody's watching. Nobody.

MAN: Oh, my God.

WOMAN: In front of my
mom, with no pants on

and half a Toblerone
in his mouth.

MAN: He didn't.

Do you know him?

(SIGHS)

(CELL PHONE DINGING)

Excuse me.

What kind of tea
do you have?

I'll have chamomile. Thanks.

Certainly.

(CELL PHONE DINGING)

This your idea of a joke?
What're you talking about?

If you have a problem
with me, say it to my face.

Don't play games
on a flight in
a secure network.

You need to
calm down, partner.

I was a cop for 25 years.
I knew men like you.

Men like me?

Men like me follow
goddamn protocol.

We're not even supposed
to be talking right now.

It's a secure network, Jack!

Bill, what the hell
are you talking about?

Don't deny
you sent these.

Bill, I didn't send these.

See for yourself.

Then someone on this flight
is threatening to
kill a passenger

unless $150 million
is transferred
in the next 18 minutes.

Who knows about this?

You and me.

I say no way.
It's bullshit.

Any threat to an aircraft
requires immediate landing.

Right, yeah, all right.
If there is a threat.

Come on, Bill.
You wanna be the agent

who lands
an international flight

because some asshole
knows your personal problems?

Sends you a couple
of joke texts?

Bill, I gotta ask you,
how many have you had today?

A threat's a threat!

Okay.

You really need to
think this through,
partner, all right?

Listen, how do you
kill somebody aboard

a crowded plane
and get away with it?

Pretty hard to pull that off,
don't you think?

Bill,
if there's not a situation,
you don't create one.

I'm going to see the captain.

You keep your eye
on the main cabin.

Bill? Don't panic
the cockpit. Bill?

I tell you,
it's five hours in

and then, out of nowhere,
he suddenly sits
up and he says...

How do we
validate the threat?
We can't.

Captain?
TSA says a full cross check
on the passenger manifest

could take 25 to 30 minutes.

We can divert the flight,
if this is for real.

The nearest airport?

Well, it's 95
minutes back to Halifax,

two hours to Iceland,
three to London.

We're midway
over the Atlantic.

You okay?

It's this juice fast I'm on.
Gives me the shakes.

It's your call, Bill.

Do we have a situation?

Can we review the footage?

It's recorded directly
to the black box.

But I can watch
all the camera feeds
live from the galley?

Yeah.

Get back on the line with TSA.

See if they can back trace
this account number.

In the meantime,
I'll need
the passenger manifest.

I'll see if I can find him.

But in 10 minutes,
I'd like you to switch off
the network system.

We don't want
him checking to see
if a transfer's been made.

Nancy, come with me.

Two cameras in business,
six in coach.

We're gonna need more eyes.

I'll get another attendant.

How well do you
know the crew?

Not very well.

Excuse me.
Yeah?

Will you come
with me, please?

Now?

You want me to
come right now?

This is a bad idea.

She was sitting beside
me when this started.

The only two people
I trust on this
airplane are you and her.

Trust me with what?
What's going on?

I text, you circle any
passenger with a phone

or acting like
they have a phone.

I'm not sure I understand
what it is you
want me to do...

Please, just do as I ask.

DAVID: (ON PA) Ladies and
gentlemen, looks like

we've hit some
unexpected turbulence.

Please return to your seats
and keep your
seatbelts fastened

until it's safe to
move about the cabin.
Thank you.

There. 9B.

Seat 9B. David Norton.

22C.

Austin Reilly.

(PHONE RINGING)

2F.

NANCY: Jason Cole.

14C.

NANCY: 14C,
Charles Wheeler.

13B.

Fahim Nasir.

5B.

NANCY: 5B.
Iris Marianne.

(PHONE RINGING)

You better answer it.

Hello?

Bill?

Who is this?
This is Philip Marenick.

I'm with TSA.
I understand from the captain
you have a situation.

I need to speak
to my supervisor.

Listen, I'm calling
from the DHS here in D.C.

From here on out,
I am your supervisor.

Now, Agent Marks,
I need you...

I'm going to run
seat numbers by you.
I need red flags and priors.

That's a very
serious request you put in.
20G.

Agent Marks,
I need you to take me

through the events
from the beginning.

And we're looking into
tracing the account
number you gave us.

20G again.

And as you know,
protocol dictates
in these situations...

...we corroborate everything
with the second
officer on board.

20G again.

It's not him.

It's not who?
Look, I'd rather not
jump to any conclusions.

Listen, Bill,
I don't think you're in
a position to sort out

who's a suspect or
not at this point.

Agent Marks?

Bill?

Agent Marks,
I need some sort of
acknowledgment from you.

Bill?

Agent Marks?

Marks, you need to answer me.

Hang on.

Marks, are you there?

Go back to your seat.

You son-of-a-bitch!

Keep your voice down.

Hand it over!
What're you...

Bill, look at me, okay?
I need this money.

I can cut you in...

Give me
the goddamn phone, Jack.
Just listen to me.

Give me the phone...

Jack! You son-of-a-bitch.

Give it up, Marks.
Stop it!

Give it up.
Stop it.

Damn it, Jack!

Stop it. Stop it!

Stop fighting!

Jack!

Don't do this, Jack.

Stop it!

Don't.

Don't do this, Jack!

Don't!

(WATCH ALARM RINGING)

(CELL PHONE DINGING)

DAVID: Ladies and gentlemen,
this is your captain speaking.

I apologize for
the inconvenience...

Shit.

...but our network is
down for the moment.

If you just bear with us,
we'll attempt to
restart the Internet.

Turn the network back on.
What?

The network, turn it on.

We'll keep you posted.

(KNOCKS ON DOOR)

I need
the network system back on.

Go ahead, Nance.

The account
number you gave us.

It's in your name.

What?

TSA just confirmed it.

That doesn't make any sense.

You know me.
You know I'd never do...

I know, I know.

Look, the 20 minutes are up.
Has anything happened?

No.

It's probably just a hoax.

Some elaborate middle finger
to the airline industry.

Excuse me. Are you waiting?

No. Go ahead.

Agent...

Hi, ma'am.

Agent Marenick,
who you spoke with,

will continue to
handle the investigation
from D.C.

David...

And they've asked me
to take your
badge and your gun.

BILL: No.
DAVID: Bill.

No.
Bill...

I don't have
a choice here.

I'm the air marshal.

Bill...
Okay. Okay.

Look, just sit back, relax,

and...
Enjoy the flight.

Enjoy the flight, yeah.

Was it him?
The guy in 20G?

No, it was nothing.

I dropped my stupid
phone in the sink.

Oh, God, I do
that all the time.

I lost like five
phones in six months,

and then I learned
this little trick.

Here we go.

So, should I be worried?

No, not at all.

It was a mistake to
involve you, I'm sorry.

So, if it's not him,
then why do you
have his phone?

I have to be careful,
even when

there's nothing to
be concerned about.

It's my job.

As a passenger,
don't I have the right
to know what's going on?

Listen... Jen, right?
Yeah.

It's an innocent prank.
Some kid with a cell phone.

If it was on the ground,
I'd catch him

in two seconds flat,
but up here,

traveling at
500 miles an hour,
I can't track his phone.

There's nothing I can do.

There's nothing you can do?
Aren't you an air marshal?

Ma'am,
please return
to your seat.

Did you just call
me "ma'am"?

Please return
to your seat.

Seriously?
Did you call me "ma'am"?

Now.

Okay, Bill.

I'm going.

Thank you.
Ugh.

Agent Hammond?

Just a moment.

Nancy.

Sorry.
The indicator
must be broken.

I was looking
for Agent Hammond.

What's wrong?

Nancy, wait. Wait!

Nancy, please.

Calm down, calm down.

Calm down.

Please, I can explain this.

Okay?

This is a setup.

The captain just
told me that the account

they want the money
wired to is in my name.

Do you think I would
extort $150 million

using an account
in my own name?

He was transporting
cocaine, Nancy.

Whoever we're
looking for knew that.

He threatened Hammond,
made him paranoid.

I found out,
and Hammond
tried to kill me.

The person who's doing
this, he wants it
to look like this.

Like two federal agents
are the ones
doing this, not him.

Jack pulled a gun on me.
I had no choice.

Nancy?

I had no choice.

You know me.

You know
I could never do
something like this.

Look at me.

I need you to believe me.

I believe you.

In 13 minutes,
someone else will die,
unless I find him first.

I need you to help me.

BILL: (ON PA) Ladies and
gentlemen, may I have your
attention, please?

My name is Bill Marks.

I'm the federal air marshal
assigned to this flight.

I apologize for
the disturbance.

The TSA has recently
instituted a policy

of random searches
aboard international flights.

Unfortunately,
this is one of three lucky
flights this month.

I'm gonna be coming
through the cabin.

If I call your
name and seat number,

please stand up and
move into the aisle.

If you're in possession
of an illegal substance,
item or weapon,

it's best to just
step forward now.

Captain,
you might want to hear this.

BILL: I need everybody
to place both hands on
the seat in front of you.

What the hell is he doing?

Right now!

Contact TSA,
tell them we have
a possible hijacking.

Nancy, what's going on?
It's just a random search.

Thank you.

Excuse me.

Jennifer Summers?

Should I have told you
about the bomb in my bag?

Let's not use that
word on a plane, please.

When I move on
to the main cabin,
you watch business class.

If you see
anything suspicious,

anything at all,
get my attention.

Scream, if you have to.
Okay.

American paranoia.

Iris Marianne, 5B.
Stand up, please.

Is that how older men
pick up younger women?

Fondle first, talk later?

Phone.

Why don't you
enter your number?

You're a little young for me.
(GIGGLES)

Who does this guy think he is?

WOMAN: It's all right.
Just calm down!

Just married?
Yesterday.

Congratulations.
Thank you.

Sit down.

It's nothing to worry about.
Happens all the time.

13B, Fahim Nasir.
Bullshit.

Stand.
Thank you, sir.

Feeling okay?

Flying is not
my cup of tea.

Tell me about it.

You're a doctor.
How do you know?

Your bag.
Can you fetch
it up, please?

Sure. It's right
down here.

What kind of doctor?

Molecular neuroscience.

Sounds interesting.

Hey, look, man,
some of us need
to get some sleep.

Sir, sit down. Be quiet.

14C, Charles
Wheeler? Stand.

There was nothing
in his bag?

What's the purpose
of your trip?

I have a client in Brighton.
I'm a bankruptcy attorney.

Yeah? You any good?

Why?
Oh, you need one?
Sit down.

Sir, you need to keep
your hands on the seat
in front of you. Thank you.

MAN: This sucks.

This is crazy. Are we next?

Just relax.

Okay, 22C.
Austin Reilly. Stand.

Hey, look.
Can we move this along?
Seriously, man.

I'm not gonna
tell you again.

Mr. Reilly,
what do you
do for a living?

NYPD.

London your
final destination?

My fairy brother's
getting married to a guy
with a British accent.

Mind if I take
a look at your phone?

MAN: Come on, man.
Are you serious?

This is some Big
Brother-type shit.

Take your seat.

You, step into the aisle.
Come on, up!

Up! Right now!

Nah, man, I'm good.

I'm not asking.
Shades off.

Come on.
What is it,
like 2:00 a.m?

Why don't you go back
up there so I can go
back to sleep, man?

Shades.
No, dude!

Come on, man! Yo, chill!

Let me see your phone.

I don't have
a phone, man.

WOMAN: Jesus.

This isn't yours?

Man, I ain't never
seen that before.

Looks a hell of a lot
like the one you
were using at the gate.

MAN: This is ridiculous.

Sit down.

Gladly.

(CELL PHONE DINGING)

What happened
to Amsterdam?

I'm connecting to London.

Show me your boarding
pass. What's your name?

Tom Bowen. Why?

Man, take it easy.

Move!

I didn't do anything!

Look, I have rights!

Come here.
(PHONE RINGING)

Marenick?
Marks, what the hell
is going on there?

Listen to me.
The threat is real.

I want you to stop doing
whatever you're
doing immediately.

I have a suspect in custody.
I need a background check.

Seat 24E,
Tom Bowen, B-O-W-E-N.

You have unlawfully
subdued innocent
passengers, Marks.

I don't have
time for this.

You called your supervisor
before the flight
and threatened him.

What?
He wouldn't book
you an overtime flight

and you said you'd
do what you had to do.

I didn't threaten anyone.
Is that right? Marks?

I need to run a full
check on Tom Bowen,
seat 24E.

Marks, damn you!
Now! You're wasting time.

Marks... Agent Marks,
you are hereby relieved
of duty. Do you hear me?

In three minutes,
someone on this plane
is gonna die. Do you hear me?

Bowen is clean, Bill.
He's a schoolteacher,
for Christ's sake.

He has family in London.

Everyone on that
flight is clean.
Everyone except you.

Marks?

You said Amsterdam.

I never asked you
where you were going.

You volunteered
that information.

Why would you lie
to a federal agent?

Look, I didn't know
you were a federal agent.

Why would you
lie to a stranger?

You can answer questions
now, or in federal
custody when we land.

Look. Okay, Jesus.

He said he'd give me $100
if I asked you where
you were flying. Okay?

I don't know why
I said Amsterdam.

I swear to God,
I didn't know you
were a federal marshal.

Bullshit!
I swear to God!

He said he
wanted to play a prank
on his friend. Will, right?

Bill.

Bill. Whatever, man.
I did it for 100 bucks.

Who was he?
I don't know!

What does he look like?

He was white with brown hair,
a European accent,
like 30, 35 years old...

Is he on this plane?
I don't know,
I didn't see him.

When I went back,
he didn't pay me,
he was already gone.

You'd know him if you saw him?
I don't know!

I never saw him get
on the plane, man,
I swear!

Humor me. Look!

God damn it!

Come on, look.

I don't see him.

Look.

Come on, look!
God damn it! I don't see him!

Right there.
Where?

Right there. The glasses.

Come on, move.

MAN: This is crazy.

You! You. Look at me.

Look at me!
What's your name?

Michael. Michael Tate.

Well?
It's not him.

You're sure?
Yeah, God damn it, I'm sure!

Look, if I'd seen
him get on the plane,

I would've gone
and asked him for my money.

What's going on?

Nancy, watch business class.

Turn around.

Are you serious?
Don't talk.

Now, sit down.

Don't move.

(CELL PHONE DINGING)

Oh, God.

Nancy!

ATTENDANT: Everybody
remain in your seats.

Ladies and gentlemen,
please remain in your seats

and keep your
seatbelts fastened.

Ladies and gentlemen,
please remain in your seats

and keep
your seatbelts fastened.

Nancy, are you okay?

Yeah.
You sure?

What's happened?

(WATCH ALARM RINGING)

He started having chest
pains, then he just
collapsed over the yoke!

Come on, come on!
Wake up!

ATTENDANT: Sit down!
MAN: What the hell was that?

Everything's under control.

Excuse me. Excuse me.

Is the captain okay?

Dr. Nasir?
I didn't do anything, I...

Come with me, now.

Marshal!
Is someone gonna tell us
what the hell is going on?

I need your help.

Hey! People are scared!

We have a right to know
why you searched us.

Why this plane
almost went down!

Hey, Marshal, you and I
are gonna have a conversation.

Don't you walk away from me.

Doctor, cockpit, now!

You're letting that
guy in the cockpit?

Here's what's gonna
happen. You're gonna
get back to your seat,

you're gonna sit down,
and you're gonna shut up.

Or what?

From one cop to another,

you know.

There was nothing
I could do.

Excuse me, miss?
You were sitting next
to that guy, the marshal?

You know what's happening?

I have no idea.

DR. NASIR: There's no
evidence of assault.

It could be poison.
Induced anaphylaxis.

What?
Allergic reaction.

Without an autopsy, I...

Yeah.

Doctor, would
you mind seeing

if any of
the passengers in coach
need medical assistance?

This...

This stays between
us. Please.

Nancy, go with him.

Kyle.

Kyle, did the captain
leave the cockpit since
I last spoke with him?

You?
No.

Did anyone else enter?

No.

Has he had anything
to eat or drink?

I don't think so.

Have you or the captain
had any reason to
unlock this door?

Of course not.

So you and he
were both alone here,

on the flight deck,
for the past 20 minutes?

You bastard.

Don't get emotional.

I'm getting emotional?
Look at you!

Rice, if you have
a problem with me...

I have a problem
with my friend
dying next to me.

I have a problem
with being accused

of not only murder,
but also hijacking.

I didn't accuse
you of hijacking.

Christ, I've heard
about you. About your
problems with money.

With drinking. TSA.

They gave a paranoid
alcoholic a gun and a badge

and they put
him on my plane.

Brilliant.

You're gonna hit me?

Don't tell...
Hey! Hey! What
are you doing?

This door stays locked
until this plane
lands safely. Okay?

Marenick...
Marks, God damn it,
I thought I told you...

The captain's dead.

Excuse me?

The cockpit was secured,
locked from the inside.

Let me guess,
were you inside, Bill?

The co-pilot said
the man just
collapsed beside him.

It could be
induced anaphylaxis,
I think it's called.

Induced...
What are you talking about?

Poisoning,
I don't know how.

It was just he
and the co-pilot,
and the co-pilot, I trust.

For now.

"For now"? I don't
know about this, Bill.

Marenick, you need
to transfer the money.

Where is Agent Hammond?

I need to corroborate
everything you're telling us.

Hammond's dead.

What?

He had cocaine
in his carry-on.
Jesus Christ!

I confronted him,
he pulled a gun.

Are you serious?
Marenick. Transfer
the money.

Buy me time.
I'll find him.

Transfer the money.

$150 million
into your account?

Is that something
you're seriously
asking me to do, Bill?

The moment we land,
arrest me, freeze the
funds. Just transfer it.

I can't do that, Bill.

The airline
believes paying the demand

will set a dangerous
and irreversible precedent.

Christ, there are 150
people on this plane.

Which makes me wonder
why you haven't
cut the network.

You have 150 people panicking,

contacting their families,
while we're trying to
handle the situation.

You attribute all
this to a passenger,

but you can give me no proof
he actually exists.

I won't cut the network.
I need to communicate
with this guy.

Then, Agent Marks,
I can't continue
talking to you.

What does that mean?

It means we will
not negotiate
with a terrorist.

Nancy.

Who else in the crew
has access to the cockpit?

Just me.

Would you like
to see my phone,
Agent Marks?

Is your
interview in
the morning?

Yeah.
If we ever
make it there.

Yeah, if we ever
land, right?

Exactly. But
it shouldn't...

I'm sorry. I'll get up.

No. Please, don't worry
about it. Zack, this is Bill.

Bill, Zack.

We were just talking
and Zack was telling me

that he's
a programmer
for smart phones.

Is that right?

Yeah. I'm interviewing
at Paige in the morning

for a software
analytics position.

Which, technically,
isn't programming. But...

Look, I'm sorry for being
such an asshole earlier...

Yeah, but you were
a programmer, right?

I was telling him that
I keep losing my phone,

and because I
keep my ringer off...

It'd be nice if there
was a way to find it.

Yeah, but apparently,
it's pretty simple, right?

I didn't say it was simple...
GPS?

Carrier signal triangulation?

No.

Basically, you just
send an intrusion virus
attached to a picture text

that switches the phone
from silent to ring.

Most phones load
images automatically,
so if you...

What if there's no
cell phone coverage?

If it's two phones
on a smaller network?

It's the same protocol.
Even over Wi-Fi.

How fast could you do
something like that?

What, like right now?

Yes.

There are variables.

The phone and the network.

If the other phone is
even turned on or not.

It's on. But the target
number is anonymous.

You have to send
it from this phone.

Jesus.

Marshal,
I don't know
about this.

Can you do it?

This dude is talking
about killing people.
Can he see us right now?

I'm here.

I guess I can give it a shot.
But I can't guarantee...

How fast?

Thirty minutes?

Twenty?

We have less
than eight minutes.

You can do it.
That's why they want
to hire you, right?

Eight minutes.

Okay.

Tell me when it's ready.

Thanks, ma'am.

Hey, hey.

What did you
see up there?

I'm really not
at liberty to say.

What, are you like
a doctor or something?

What the hell?

BILL: Ladies and
gentlemen, if I can have
your attention.

The business
cabin is now closed.

I repeat, the business cabin
is now closed to everyone.

Flight attendants,
if you could do your best,

please, to
accommodate all passengers.

Thank you.

(ALL SHOUTING)

MAN: I have a family,
for Christ's sake!

We have a situation.

Hey, man, you gonna
tell us what the hell
is going on or not?

Is the captain
all right or not?

The... The situation
is quite complicated.

Complicated? Come on!

But I can assure you...

This is bullshit!

Everything's in hand!

Everything is under control!

Everyone, calm down!

I want to see the captain.

I'm gonna head
up there myself.

That's it.
Move aside, Marshal.

Wait, wait. Free travel.

Free flights!

Free travel.

The airline
company will guarantee

one year's
international free travel.

If you sit down, remain quiet,
and do what I say.

Free international travel.

Thank you.

Twelve months.

Free.

Guaranteed.

One year.
Free travel. Thank you.

Kyle, it's Bill.

Why are we turning?

I've been instructed
not to communicate
with you, Marks.

Did they tell you
to cut the network?
Listen to me.

The men who issued
those instructions
are not on this plane.

This is your plane.
These are your passengers.
Rice!

Kyle!

We've been diverted
north. 55 minutes.

Did they tell you
to cut the network?

I have orders, Marks.

Give me five minutes.
Five minutes.

Land the plane
wherever you want,

but do not switch
that network off.

Do you hear me?
I have a plan.
I can find this guy.

Five minutes.

I hope we can trust this guy.

I trust him.

Yeah, well,
I'd rather not end up
an accessory to a hijacking.

Okay.
BILL: Zack.

It's done.
Here it is.

Good man.

You think the captain's
still in control of the plane?

The plane almost goes down,

there's a guy
waving his gun around,
tying people up.

I'd say he pretty
much took control.

So you think the thing
about free international
flights was bullshit, or...

At what point do
we do something?

Gentlemen,
would you please
return to your seats?

You don't know
what's going on
either, do you?

So, what's the air
marshal up to now?

Ladies and gentlemen,

I need every passenger
to raise their
hands above their heads

and remain silent for
the next 60 seconds.

This is not a request.

Up.

Flight attendants, too.

Up!

(CELL PHONE RINGING)

(CELL PHONE CONTINUES RINGING)

Hands behind your head.
What the fuck...

Hands behind
your goddamn head!

Remove the phone.
With one hand.

I've never seen
that phone before.

Miss, undo his seatbelt.

Stand up, now.

You searched me.
My phone was in my bag.

Into the aisle.

Whatever you
think I've done...

Shut up.
Front of the plane. Move!

You're making a mistake.

Turn around.

Take it easy!

MAN: What's going on?

Listen to me, please!
That's not my phone!

Who are you?

Just a passenger!

Why did you open
the account in my name?

I don't know what
you're talking about!

Answer the question,
or I will break your arm.

You got the wrong guy!

We found him, Nancy.
We got him.

Why me? Why?

Why me?

Why?

Nancy, get the doctor. Now!

(WATCH ALARM RINGING)

Bill? Bill?

Okay, let's
break this down.

First, he ties up that guy,
then he takes another guy and
brings him out back.

What, is he gonna
pick us off one by one?

That's the doctor
right there. Hey.

You want to let us all
know what's going on?

And the captain?
Dead.

The co-pilot is flying.
Behind locked doors.

Are you all right?
Me? Fine. I'm great.

You shouldn't be
seeing all this.

All right, Doc. So,
we got a dead passenger
and a dead pilot.

The plane took a hard
turn 15 minutes ago.

That doesn't
happen mid-flight.

The marshal closed
off business class,

moved all the passengers
to the back.

Does this scenario
ring any bells?

You think he's
gonna crash the plane?

Flight 10,
this is Royal Air Force 114,

call sign Jackrabbit.
How copy?

Excuse me.

I was told I could
stay here with my husband.

Of course.

You used the lavatory
about an hour ago.
Do you remember that?

I don't have Alzheimer's.

Do you know
if someone else went
in there after you?

Yes, she was standing there
blocking the aisle.

Who?

The redhead.

The woman you
were sitting next to.

What are you doing in here?

I'm drinking.
I'm sorry, I shouldn't.
That's just terrible.

I've been wondering.

Why the window seat?

What? Why the window seat?

Why did you sit next to me?

What?
I found a hole

in the first class toilet,
clear shot to the captain.

The guy who died
had one of these
imbedded in his skin.

Ever seen one before?

No.

The toilets were
locked 10 minutes
before the captain died.

Five minutes before that,
I saw a woman enter.

She's 70 years old.

She said you
went in after her,

and she doesn't
have Alzheimer's,
if you're wondering.

Are you asking me
if I saw someone
else go in,

or if I killed
the captain?

Did you see someone else?

No.

Then answer the question.

You're a dick.

You switched seats
to be next to me,
which made you trustworthy.

You engaged me
in conversation.

To relax you
because you were scared...

Yet you evaded
personal questions.

You mean, like where
I work. Yeah, that's
a great personal question.

You inserted yourself
into the investigation.

Are you serious?

Tracking the phone,
that was your idea.

Are you kidding me?

I am the only
person on this plane
who has stood by you.

You've been lying to
me this entire time.

You've been lying to me
since the second you
boarded this plane.

Oh, God! Okay, fine, fine!

Seven years ago
my heart failed,

and I was dead
for like 43 minutes.

Aortic arch aneurysm.

They tried to fix it,
but when I woke up,

they told me
it was something
they couldn't fix

and that one day
it would fail again
and I would just die.

And that's okay with me
because we're all
gonna die someday,

and none of us
know when it's
gonna be, right?

But when I fly,
which is a lot,

I like to look out
the window instead of

at the back of
the seat in front of me

or a folding tray table,
because one day
might be today.

Why do you
like the aisle?

Dick.

Wait a second.

Here.

Let me pour
you a real drink.

Thanks.

I'm sorry.

I hate flying.

Really?

I always kind of
liked it, you know?

Six hours in the same spot,
nobody can get to you.

Nothing to do but just
be present, you know?

You have no control.

Control is an illusion.
There is no control.

Over anything.

WOMAN:
You need to listen to this.

REPORTER: Where
a federal bomb squad and
investigators are searching

a car that allegedly
belongs to Bill Marks.

Sources tell us that Marks
parked his car here
at the airport today

before boarding
British Aqualantic Flight 10,

the way he had boarded
so many flights before,

in the guise of
an everyday passenger,

but carrying a mandate

from the United
States Department
of Homeland Security.

His job,
to protect the flight.

And he was also, as always,
carrying a concealed handgun.

Well, we know this is
the hijacker's phone.
Can it tell us anything?

It's password protected.
I can't get in.

Did you try guessing?

This is a transatlantic flight
from New York to London,

the airline now
confirming this is,

in fact,
a hijacking in progress.

What did you do?
I didn't do anything,
I swear to God.

I just was
messing around with it.
I didn't do anything.

Open every bag in this cabin.

And the horrific
twist is that the hijacker

is now believed to
be the one person who

was authorized to
carry a gun onto the plane.

You're looking for a package.
You'll know if you find it.

Every bag. Go! Now!
Okay.

Marenick.

Marks?
Order this plane
down to 8,000 feet.

Marks, listen to me.

I have reason to believe
there's a bomb on the plane.

Agent Marks,
just listen to me.
We need to drop altitude now.

A bomb at this height
would tear this plane apart.

REPORTER: and questions
already swirling around

Bill Marks and
his state of mind

as he boarded the flight...

MARENICK: Bill, when you send
me a text and you say

that you're out of options,
you and I both know
that's not the case.

Who else
received that message?

Clearly,
we got it here at TSA.

We're getting
calls from the FBI,
the White House,

and now the press is involved.

You have our attention.
There's no need to take
this any further, Bill.

No one else has to die.
I know it feels like no one
is listening, but I am.

We'll work it out together.

Marenick,
you're not getting this!

Bill, listen to me.
Let's talk this through.

You're talking to me
like I'm a terrorist.

You know how this works.

If you try to bring that
plane any lower into
civilian airspace,

you will be shot down.

You're a threat
to ground, Bill.

Just wait for your
money and sit tight.

REPORTER: A stark picture
of a man in a dangerous
psychological state.

MARENICK: Bill, stay with me.
I need you to
cooperate with us...

What now?

REPORTER: Officials say
he was originally
from Northern Ireland.

He became
a decorated New York City

police officer
with a young family.

He became distraught
when his 8-year-old
daughter, Olivia,

passed away from cancer.

Over the next decade,
sources say he
became withdrawn,

got divorced in 2003.

Suspended and later
fired from the NYPD,

it was then,
in the summer of 2003,

that he transferred
to the Federal
Air Marshal Service.

And there,
his colleagues and neighbors

saying he's a quiet man
who kept mostly to himself.

MALE REPORTER: This is
a costly program, as well.

There's no question.
This is what happens
when you put an unstable,

angry man in
a position of power.

This guy wasn't
even born in the U.S.

He could be IRA,
for all we know.

Thank you.

Since 9/11,
we've put 4,000 air
marshals in the sky.

Where do these
people come from?

I've seen these guys myself.

They walk right
past the security line

and they're barely
qualified to carry a badge.

Walked right past security.

There's controversy
around the air marshal
program already.

Is this the final blow?

We give these people
absolute power in the sky.

We give them guns
and we put them on planes,

and we're surprised
when we have incidences
of drug smuggling.

Oh, God.

Now!

Go, go, go!

Grab him!
Grab him! Get the gun!

Help me, man!
Wait!

Hey, stop it!

Stop it!
No, no, no, no.

Stay down!

MAN 1: Take him down!
Kick his ass!
MAN 2: Somebody stop him.

NANCY: Stop it!

WOMAN: Oh, my God!

Stop!

Help me, man!

NANCY: Let go of him!

Stop!

(SCREAMING)

Get him to the ground!
Hold him steady!

Get his legs!

Hold him, God damn it!

Grab his legs!
BILL: Listen to me!

Listen to me!
Shut up!

Listen to me, please!
Please, go into the bathroom!

Pin him down!
In the bathroom!

You're done, Marshal!
There's a dead body!

Shut the hell up! Shut up!

There's a dead
body and a briefcase!

In the briefcase
you'll find a bomb!

Bullshit, you're lying!

There is a bomb on this plane.

Believe me, please!

Get off of him.

I said get off of him!
Get off him!
(ALL GASPING)

Do it now. Get back, back!

Back away, all of you.

You don't know
what you're
doing with that gun.

MAN: Come on.
What is he doing?

Bowen, give me the gun.

Tom, please.
No, stay where you are.

I'm NYPD, we got it covered!
Put it down!

Is there a bomb on this plane?

I want you to tell me
what the hell is going on.

Relax.
Don't tell me to relax!

A passenger on
board this flight has

threatened to kill
someone every 20 minutes

unless they're
paid $150 million.

And now,
three people are dead.

The bomb will explode
in less than half an hour.

Now, they want you to believe
that I'm responsible.

Everything you've
heard about me is true.

I've lost my family, my job.
I'm an alcoholic.

My daughter was diagnosed
with acute leukemia
at the age of five,

and I spent my days at work
instead of being at home,

looking after her,
because I was afraid
of watching her die!

I'm not a good father.
I'm not a good man.

I'm not hijacking this plane.

I'm trying to save it!

And I will save it!
If you work with me.

You're NYPD. So was I,

and you look as if you were
a better officer than I was.

Cut him loose. Nancy.

We need to start moving
all the luggage
towards the back.

And move
the women and children,

move them up to
the front of the plane.

That's your plan?

My job is to prepare
for the worst
possible outcome.

Well, my job
is to prevent it.

Women and children,
no exceptions.
Men move up in coach.

What the hell
are you thinking?

There's a plan of
action that exists

called the Least Resistant
Bomb Location Protocol.

You place the bomb
against the rear door

and stack anything and
everything against it.

Every bag,
blanket, every pillow.
Nullify it as best you can.

At this height
a bomb would tear
this plane apart,

but we descend
to 8,000 feet,
pressure equalizes,

and then we
have a chance.

So you're just gonna
let the bomb go off?

Of course not,
I'm gonna stop it.

But if I can't,
I'd rather be prepared,
wouldn't you?

The man who brought this
bomb on the plane
may try something.

Can I trust you
to stop him?

You're damn
straight you can.

Hey, Reilly, sorry
about the nose.

It was never
my best feature.

Can't you get them
to wire the money?
Just try something?

This was never
about the money.

Then what's it about?

I'm not sure.
They used an
account in my name.

They want an air marshal
to take down a plane

with 150
people on board,

and they want
the whole world
to see it.

I was never
supposed to find
that bomb.

WOMAN: Look.

That's not good.

WOMAN: Do you know
what that means?

Aqualantic Flight 10,
this is Royal Air Force 114,

call sign Jackrabbit.
How copy?

Copy, Jackrabbit.

We will be your
escorts to the
designated landing zone.

Do not deviate from
your current course

or altitude
without authorization.

Do you copy?
Copy.

Kyle.

Kyle.
Yes, Marks?

We have a new situation.

Yeah, no shit.

I need you to drop
the plane to 8,000 feet.

Get to the lowest
pressure deferential
you can.

One PSI, 1.5 at most.

Wait, Bill,
that's explosives protocol.

Yes, we have 16 minutes,
give or take.

You know we have
company, right?

Two typhoons are
flanking me right now.

They're watching,
and you want me to...

Kyle, we need to
drop altitude now.

Look, I have orders, Marks.
Any suspicious
activity and they...

Rice!

There is a bomb on this
plane. We have to
descend to 8,000 feet.

All right, give me 10 minutes.
If we drop now, I lose speed.

Ten minutes at this
altitude, maybe I can get
us close enough,

close enough to
land in Iceland.

Ten minutes. Thanks.

It's an RDX explosive.
Very professional.
Maybe military.

Is that blow?

Are you positive it
can't be disarmed?

This is
a calibrated
pressure trigger.

The only way to disarm a bomb
is to remove the trigger.

But remove the trigger,
the pressure releases,
the bomb goes off.

Well, can't we
just dump it?
Same principle in reverse.

The low pressure
outside the plane

won't hold the trigger.
You try to dump it...

The bomb goes off.

Isn't there like
a wire you can cut?
No.

So, if this guy
doesn't get his money,

he's gonna kill
himself and everyone aboard?

I can't believe this.
This is crazy.

Why aren't we
looking for this guy?
We're out of time.

That's a bullshit answer,
Marshal, you know it.

Take it easy.

There's 150 passengers
and crew.
It could be anyone.

Let's find him!
Let's pay him,
let's do something.

It's not about the money,
and even if I find him...

I don't think
he ever intended to
get off this plane.

My God, we're all gonna die.

No!

We gotta place the bomb
here. Stack all available
luggage over it.

And direct
the explosion outward.

At 8,000 feet,
the pressure will
equalize. Then we land.

With a hole in the fuselage?
And this has worked before?

It's never been tried before.

That you know of.
You're not being
helpful, Doctor.

We're so screwed.

It could work!
We've got to try!

Come on! Grab every able hand!
Let's get this done!

Marshal, if they're
setting this thing off,
no matter what,

what are they waiting for?

AUSTIN: Just grab
what you can, go to the back.

All right,
you guys form a chain,

send those bags back
as fast as you can.

ATTENDANT: Please
remove all luggage
from the overhead bins.

Kyle, how close are we?
We need to descend, now!

No, give me three minutes.

Three minutes, okay.

Look at your watch.
Three minutes from now,
not a second longer.

No matter what happens,
drop down 8,000 feet.

Okay.

Take this.
MAN: Lighter luggage up front.

Keep piling please.
Bring the heavier
luggage down.

NANCY: Keep them going.

Sir, keep that with you,
I just need...

Your nose.

Yeah, it's bleeding, thanks.

You have
a displaced fracture.

Look, it's a broken nose,
it's normal,
I don't need you to fix it.

Look, I'm going
to set your nose.

Here, hold this.

Just make it quick, all right?

Apply some pressure.

Okay.

On three. One...

(GRUNTING)

GWEN: Sweetheart,
you've got to come out.

It's all right,
I'll hold your hand.
But it's not safe.

Gwen, what's going on?
Please.

We need to hurry.

Sorry.
I'm sorry, I need your help.
She won't come out.

What's wrong?
Are you scared?

I wanna see my daddy.

I know you do,
sweetheart.
I know you do.

You know, I was a daddy
once to a little
girl just like you,

and when she was scared,
you know what she'd do?

She had a magic ribbon,
very powerful.

It'll protect you,
just like your daddy.

You wanna see it?
I have it in my pocket.

I carry it all the time.
Here it is. Here.

You wrap it around
your hand, just like that.

That's it, hold
on to it now.

Are you bribing me?

Yes, I am.

This is my friend, Jen.
She's gonna look after you.

Jen, this is Becca.
Hey.

Don't worry,
you'll see your father
soon. I promise.

Can I have the
window seat?

You mean this old seat?
Mm-hm.

KYLE: Ladies and
gentlemen, we're about to
begin our descent.

I need you to
return to your seats
and fasten your seatbelts.

GWEN: Please stay calm.
Everyone, please get
back to your seats.

(PHONE RINGING)

Yeah?

MARENICK: Marks,
we transferred the money,

150 million US
into your account.

It's too late for the money.
Whatever he's doing...

You can stop now, Marks.
You have your money.

The jets will escort you in.

I have to bring this
plane down to 8,000 feet.

You will not descend
into civilian airspace.

You think he wants the money?
You think that will stop him?

If you transferred
the money, prove it.

You want proof?
Here's your proof,
$150 million was transferred

to account
CH-1000-23000-A-10982.

Confirmation code R48940.

We'll escort you into
a military air field,

you will not be arrested,
no questions will be asked.

There is a bomb on this plane.
It isn't mine. It will go off!

And we have to prepare...
You're in command
of a hijacked vessel

and you will not
dive that plane
into civilian airspace.

I will!

Then, Marks, God damn it,
we will shoot you down!

Someday, they'll fish
this plane's black box
out of the Atlantic Ocean,

and the world will
know these people
could have been saved.

The world already
knows what's going on

in that plane, Bill.
You are hijacking it.

That's what
you're telling them.
No, no, no, no, no.

That's what your
hostages are telling them.

That video is playing on
every major news
network on repeat, Bill.

What video?
One of your
hostages uploaded a video.

You're taking a man,
dragging him
around at gunpoint,

stumbling over
terrified passengers.

How do you expect
us to believe anything
that you're saying

when you clearly
are abusing those hostages?

We've seen everything
we need to know.

But we're trying
to negotiate...

Your phone, now! The phone!

Show me the video
that you uploaded!
Come on!

I apologize for my son.

Humor me. Look!

Look.
I don't see him.

Come on, look.

Right there.
Where?

Glasses.
Come on, move.

God damn it!

You. Look...

God damn it!

Stay where you are.

Bill, don't test me!

Bill.

Reilly, drop!

Reilly, get down!

You gave me
an unloaded weapon?

Overhead bin, 4B!

Everybody, down! Stay down!

Hey, get out of there, move!
What?

Hey, man!

You looking for this?

Give me that.

What are you doing?

Get back!
Okay, okay.

Jackrabbit,
I have shots fired outside
this cockpit, need to descend.

That's a negative, Flight 10,
do not deviate from your
current course or altitude.

Turn around.

I need all of you
to put your hands

on the seat-back
in front of you.

Do it now!

Move.
Don't test me.

Step back!

Put your hands up!

Sit!

Sit, sit!

He was supposed to be
in the seat next to mine.

Yeah. He was close enough.

Listen,
whatever I've done to you,
whatever it is, I'm sorry.

Stay down!

Bill, I'm not mad at you.

You're my hero.

People everywhere
are gonna remember
the name Bill Marks.

An alcoholic,
self-destructive,

suicidal man with
a gun and a federal badge

who changed everything.

What do you think doing
this is gonna change?

Two minutes outside
the window. Suit up.

Every one of these
people boarded this plane

believing their
country would protect them.

That you would protect them.

Everyone!

We're gonna be okay!

There's an air
marshal on board.

Do you have any
idea how easy this was?

You're right, I failed.
You've made your point.

No, Bill, you
failed miserably!

Three thousand
people died that day,
including my father!

So I joined up
'cause I wanted to go
fight the cowards that did it.

But I just ended
up fighting in a war
that I still don't understand

and came home to a country
where nothing had changed.

Until now.

Security is this
country's biggest lie.

In our homes, in our cities,
in our planes, no one's safe,

and one day
somebody worse than me
is gonna expose that lie,

and the last thing
our children will see

is our failure as
it destroys them.

You, Bill, you are that lie!

You should just have
handed out pamphlets.

It would have
been a lot easier.

You can't change
the world with words, Bill,

unless you write those
words in the evening
news with blood.

We gotta go.

You're military.
These are the people
you fought to protect.

I swore to protect my country,
and that's what I'm doing.

You believe that?
I do.

I also believe we'll
be $150 million richer.

You'll never get that money.
It's in an account in my name.

It's in a trust
in your name.

I die, the money moves.

To 100 accounts,
27 countries, each of
those into 100 other accounts.

When do you think
you're gonna jump?

35,000 feet? You'll be
dead in four seconds.

We'll jump when the pilot
follows explosive protocol

and drops us
down to 8,000 feet.

Anything you think of,
we've thought of
a thousand times.

They've been instructed
to shoot us down
if we try to descend.

That's bullshit!

They're not gonna
kill all these people.

This is a hijacked flight.
We're a classified
threat to ground.

If you don't disarm that bomb,
everyone on board
will die, including you.

Did you think of that?

Look, I'm prepared to die.
We're not gonna die.

Say again, Jackrabbit.
I need to descend.

That's a negative, Flight 10.

I'm gonna stick with the plan.
We descend, we jump.

The plane goes down,
we have enough money.

We can do whatever we want.

Think about it, Tommy.
We can disappear
and never come back.

You hear me?
Never be found, ever.
Mission accomplished, right?

But right now
we need to get
the hell off this plane.

Zack, you and I both know
we were never
getting off this plane.

Zack, whatever your name is,
you don't have to die.

If you won't save these
people, save yourself.

Disarm the bomb.

Come on, do it.

He was a martyr,
like you and me, Bill.

Real heroes don't
need to be remembered
or recognized.

Real heroes do
whatever's necessary.

I guess I wouldn't understand.

Fuck it!
I guess you wouldn't.

No!

20,000! Come on, you wanker!

8,000 feet! Come on, come on!

Bill!

8,000!

JACKRABBIT: AQ 10,
climb back up to 25,000 feet!
There's a bomb on board!

I need to get this
plane on the ground.

Nancy, move, move!
Everybody down, heads down!

Hey, Bill!

I'm getting off this plane!

Am I in your way, asshole?

Get down!

Do it quick! Heads down!

Get down!

Come on, Kyle!
You can do this!
You can do this, come on.

JACKRABBIT: severe
damage to your fuselage.

Are you able to
maintain control?

Shit!

KYLE: Fuel dump in progress.

Copy that, Flight 10.
Come on, damn it!

A little longer, come on!

Oh, God!

Get the belt! Get the belt!

Hang on!
Bill, help me!

Becca, I have you!

Hang onto me! Hang onto me!

You okay? Are you okay?

Door is disarmed.
Release your seatbelts!

Take her. Everybody.
Come on with me.

Undo your seatbelt!
Move to the front, quickly.

Leave everything.
Come this way,
up to the front.

One at a time, please.

Leave everything.

(SIRENS WAILING)

Leave everything.

Up to the front.

Leave everything.

All passengers and
crew accounted for.

And you, are you all right?

That was a hell of a landing.

REPORTER: Less than
one hour ago, British
Aqualantic Flight 10

made an emergency landing
after a bomb exploded mid-air.

This following
an attempted hijacking,
yet in an unbelievable twist,

the suspected hijacker,
U.S. Air Marshal Bill Marks,

turned out to be the hero.

It was Marks
who confronted and
killed the hijackers,

saving the lives...

Yeah?
It's Marenick.

It's my turn to break
protocol, Agent Marks.

I'm calling from
my personal line

and I'll deny this
conversation ever took place.

Listen, Bill,
what you did on that plane,
what you were up against,

I want you to know
I was wrong about you.

And you'll have
my full support.

Appreciate that.

And, Bill,

we're gonna need
that money back.

What money?

Take care, Agent Marks.

AUSTIN: Marshal!

Reilly, you son of a gun.

Next time,
give me a loaded weapon.

Next time,
don't get shot.

Deal.

I'm gonna give you
back your ribbon.

I don't need it anymore.

That-a-girl.

It's your dad.

Daddy.

Hey, I was looking for you!
Hey.

Do you know where we are?
Iceland.

Ah! Well,
never been to Iceland.

I mean, I've seen it,
few times from
plane windows, but...

Thank you.

For what?

You stood by me,
even after all
that happened.

Why?

You're a good man.

I bet your daughter
would have been proud of you.

Thanks, ma'am.

So...

Mm-hm.

Where you headed?

Depends.