Here is a recent review from Christy Lemire of RogerEbert.com:
It doesn’t exactly sound like the stuff of a feel-good Broadway musical: On Sept. 11, 2001, 7,000 stranded airline passengers landed in the tiny town of Gander, Newfoundland, on the far, eastern edge of Canada, instantly doubling its population. Fearful, fatigued, and far from home, they were eager to contact loved ones and get back in the sky toward wherever they were heading. Many didn’t speak English. Nearly all of them were strangers.
Confusion reigned but kindness quickly conquered, with locals opening their homes and offering food, clothing, beds, diapers—whatever people needed to survive those disorienting days after the terrorist attacks shut down airspace. And from this story of connection and compassion came “Come From Away,” already a celebrated stage musical and now a film streaming on Apple TV+ in time for the 20th anniversary of 9/11. Tony Award-winning director Christopher Ashley and his wildly versatile cast and crew regrouped to shoot a performance of the show this past spring when the pandemic upended plans for a feature film to be shot on location. And what an oddly comforting feeling it is to watch a movie about a crisis in the middle of another crisis. Twenty years later, the caring gestures large and small depicted here carry a whole new resonance, a fresh sense of catharsis and even hope.
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