-
Recent Posts
Latest Comments
- Robert McCarty on Films by Title
- marc on 2012: Ice Age (2011)
- Happenstance on Airport (1970)
- KENNETH A BRIGANTI on Airport (1970)
- Evelyn Louise Surovy on St. Helens (1981)
Recommended Films
Tags
airplanes| airport| asteroids| climate change| coming attractions| earthquakes| fires| floods| freezing| george kennedy| irwin allen| leslie nielsen| meteors| morgan freeman| roland emmerich| ships| stacy keach| storms| the asylum| titanic| tornadoes| volcanoes| wolfgang petersen|
fires Archive
-
Heaven’s Fire (1999)
Posted on 2012/06/07 | No CommentsIt’s Die Hard meets The Towering Inferno, with Eric Roberts as the hero and Jürgen Prochnow as the bad guy! How could you possibly go wrong? -
Firestorm: Last Stand at Yellowstone (2006)
Posted on 2011/05/16 | 2 CommentsScott Foley and Richard Burgi fight fires in Yellowstone in this very mediocre but watchable made-for-tv film. -
Fire! (1977)
Posted on 2010/11/26 | 3 CommentsErnest Borgnine stars in this entertaining, Irwin Allen-produced TV movie that offers grisly deaths, lots of fire and a helping of low-budget cheese. -
City on Fire (1979)
Posted on 2010/02/21 | 4 CommentsDirected by: Alvin Rakoff Starring: Barry Newman, Susan Clark, Shelley Winters, Leslie Nielsen, Ava Gardner, Henry Fonda, James Franciscus Shelley Winters’ demise in The Poseidon Adventure was one of the... -
Terror on the 40th Floor (1974)
Posted on 2009/11/29 | No CommentsDirected by: Jerry Jameson Starring: John Forsythe, Joseph Campanella, Anjanette Comer, Lynn Carling, Laurie Heineman Terror on the 40th Floor is usually said to be a rip-off of The Towering... -
The Towering Inferno (1974)
Posted on 2009/09/06 | 6 CommentsSo here it is, the film that is arguably the major classic of the disaster movie genre. Certainly, The Towering Inferno is the finest example of the 70's style of disaster cinema: big all-star cast, multiple storylines, a spectacular central event, and an all-around massive production (Inferno was at the time the biggest film produced on the 20th Century Fox lot by virtue of its 57 sets and four camera crews.)












