St. Paul native George Lamson Jr., the lone survivor of a 1985 plane crash, isn't just one of the subjects of the documentary "Sole Survivor" — he's the reason the movie exists.
"George has been the engine of the whole thing," said director Ky Dickens. The film, which will be shown Thursday at the Riverview Theater in Minneapolis, "started with George," she added, "and the story rests on his shoulders."
Along with a group of fellow Minnesotans who had spent a weekend in Reno, Nev., Lamson and his father, George Sr., were on a charter flight home on Jan. 21, 1985. About 70 seconds after takeoff, the Lockheed Electra lost lift and crashed. The fuselage cracked open and deposited the 17-year-old — who was burned and cut and still strapped to his seat — in the middle of a highway about 100 feet from the wreckage. The other 70 people on board, including his father, were killed.
For 25 years, Lamson kept the emotional trauma of that experience to himself.
"I had a few friends I had confided in that I would share the pain I was feeling," the 46-year-old said last week. "The problem was that the people that I talked to didn't understand my pain. They tried to be of support, but I didn't feel like I was connecting with them."
Things changed in 2010 when he read news accounts of two other lone survivors and realized that he could be an emotional resource for them.
"These accidents brought back feelings to me," he said. "I felt compelled to offer myself to help in any way I could."
He created a Facebook page mentioning his experience. That's where the Chicago-based Dickens found him. But she wasn't looking for a movie subject — she was looking for help. Dickens was a survivor, too. She had changed car seats with a friend less than two minutes before experiencing a crash that killed her friend.