BEIJING, May 23 -- U.S. director Oliver Stone has given the Cannes Film Festival the first glimpse of "World Trade Center," a tale of survival on the day of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.
Before the roughly 20 minutes of the movie was shown late Sunday, Stone told an audience it resembled his Oscar-winning "Platoon" — also screened to mark its 20th anniversary — in that it took the view of everyday people involved in conflict and attempted to find truth within their story.
Stone said that whether in Vietnam, the current conflict in Iraq, or "in the rubble of the World Trade Center," his struggle had been to retell what really happened.
"It's the true story of two New York Port Authority policemen who were trapped in the rubble, their wives and the children and the incredible, almost improbable rescue efforts that went on to rescue them," Stone said.
Based on the clip, which follows the policemen as they go about their normal lives before joining the rescue effort after the towers are hit, "World Trade Center" does not appear to delve into conspiracies like his "JFK," about the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
The movie stars Nicolas Cage as the leader of the policemen who are trapped inside the building and must be saved.
The footage ended as the buildings came down, and all the audiences can see are Cage's eyes in the dark.
The movie is due to be released in the United States in August, not long before the fifth anniversary of the attacks.
It comes several months after Paul Greengrass's "United 93," a film that seeks to reconstruct events on the hijacked plane, which plowed into a field in Pennsylvania after three others had hit the World Trade Center and the Pentagon
(Source: Shenzhen Daily/Agencies)