Review: ‘Plane’ fails to land but sees Gerard Butler give a soaring performance     

“Plane” is helmed by Jean-François Richet. (YouTube)
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Updated 25 January 2023
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Review: ‘Plane’ fails to land but sees Gerard Butler give a soaring performance     

CHENNAI: “Plane,” helmed by Jean-François Richet from a screenplay by Charles Cumming and J.P. Davis, pales in comparison to some of the great action thrillers of our time.  

With a half-hearted storyline, the only real attraction is Gerard Butler as Captain Brodie Torrance who pilots a huge commercial airline from Singapore to Tokyo just before New Year’s Eve.   

Torrance is a single dad, who promises his little girl that he will be back in Singapore to ring in the New Year, but the universe has other plans. Among the sparse passenger list is a convicted murderer named Louis Gaspare (a middling performance by Mike Colter), who is being extradited. The plot thickens when the pilot is rather bizarrely forced to fly into the eye of a menacing storm, eventually landing on an island inhabited by separatists and militias.  

We quickly pivot into an escape drama with the passengers trying to escape the militants and seek out a mode of communication on the jungle. Richet jumps genres and the work is uneven with more lows than highs.   

Butler manages to be the film’s saving grace — his conversations with his daughter are endearing and memorable, while the director fails to build any real tension in the plot. 


Mohamed Abdo rings in New Year with landmark Saudi celebration in London

Updated 02 January 2026
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Mohamed Abdo rings in New Year with landmark Saudi celebration in London

  • Abdo performs 16 of his most beloved songs over 4 hours
  • He lauds ‘genius choice’ of first Saudi-led New Year show

LONDON: Saudi Arabia’s music icon Mohamed Abdo welcomed the New Year with a historic sold-out concert in London, marking what organizers described as the first Kingdom-led celebration in the UK capital.

Organized by Global Gala, the event drew more than 1,400 people, with Saudis traveling from the Kingdom and across Europe to attend.

There were also local fans, underscoring the wide appeal of the evening and the growing international presence of Saudi Arabia’s cultural events.

The concert was held at the Great Room at Grosvenor House, a venue of particular significance for Abdo because it was the same location where he first performed in London.

Tickets sold out rapidly following the show’s announcement. The organizers said the strong response reflected both Abdo’s enduring popularity and the anticipation surrounding a Saudi-led New Year’s event abroad.

When asked about the timing of the concert, Abdo praised the organizers’

decision to stage the event on New Year’s Eve, describing it as a “genius choice” that aligned naturally with the spirit of welcoming a new year.

Over the course of four hours, Abdo performed 16 songs, spanning decades of his career.

The audience responded warmly throughout the night, particularly during well-known tracks including “Al Amaken,” “Ashofak Kil Youm,” and “Majmouat Insan.”

The audience included prominent figures from the worlds of entertainment, media and public life.