Out of the Clear Blue Sky is hardly the first documentary about 9/11, but its chronicle of bond trader Cantor Fitzgerald tells a uniquely epic tale of a corporate family. All of the 658 employees who began that dreadful day at company headquarters on the World Trade Center's top five floors lost their lives, representing nearly a quarter of the attack's total casualties.
Among the company's 302 survivors was CEO Howard Lutnick, who arrived -- at the moment the planes did -- after accompanying his son on his first day of kindergarten. Lutnick's brother, Gary, wasn't so fortunate. Nor was filmmaker Danielle Gardner's brother, Douglas. Her personal connection permeates the movie and adds to its raw intimacy.Within 48 hours of September 11, Lutnick was promising through widely televised sobs to take care of the Cantor Fitzgerald community: Cantor would now turn over 25 percent of corporate profits to the victims’ families for five years and treat them to 10 years of healthcare. Overnight the man with the "ruthless and cutthroat reputation on Wall Street" became "the face of the tragedy" to a nation in shock who shared in his grief and found solace in his generosity.
entire corporate divisions wiped out, Cantor dropped missing employees from the payroll. Sympathizers saw the decision as a necessary evil to salvage what was left of the firm and generate cash to support the living, while detractors vilified it as unspeakable act by a cold-hearted Judas. In a media frenzy of denunciation, Lutnick was now the persona non-grata of the hour.
death? Which is more ethical, letting that business go or focusing on the bottom line?