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Backdraft
List price: $14.98 Sale price: $11.99 You save: $2.99 (20%)
Actor(s): Kurt Russell, William Baldwin, Robert De Niro, Donald Sutherland, Jennifer Jason Leigh Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Audience Rating: R (Restricted) Binding: DVD Brand: Universal Creator(s): Producer Brian GrazerProducer John WatsonProducer Larry DeWaayProducer Pen DenshamProducer Raffaella De LaurentiisProducer Richard Barton LewisWriter Gregory Widen Director(s): DVD Layers: 1 DVD Sides: 1 EAN: 9780783223605 Format(s): Closed-captionedColorDolbyDVD-VideoLetterboxedWidescreenNTSC ISBN: 0783223609 Label: Universal Studios Language(s): English Dolby Digital 5.1 Original LanguageFrench Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround Original LanguageEnglish SubtitledSpanish Subtitled List Price: $14.98 Manufacturer: Universal Studios MPN: MCAD20041D Number Of Items: 1 Package Dimensions: Height: 0.3" Width: 5.3" Length: 0.3" Weight: 0.45 lbs. Picture Format: Letterbox Product Group: DVD Publisher: Universal Studios Region Code: 1 Release Date: 1997-12-10 Running Time: 132minutes Studio: Universal Studios Theatrical Release Date: 1991-05-24 UPC: 025192004124
Editorial Reviews Product Description: An action-thriller depicting the nerve-shattering life and death struggles of todays firefighters. An arson investigation is the focus of this white-knuckle adventure. Bonus features: production notes talent bios and film highlights. Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (mca) Release Date: 09/06/2005 Starring: Kurt Russell William Baldwin Run time: 135 minutes Rating: R Director: Ron Howard Amazon.com: A somewhat contrived screenplay doesn't stop this thriller from serving up some of the most spectacular fire sequences ever committed to film. Like any Ron Howard production Backdraft is impressively slick and boasts a stellar cast, including Kurt Russell and William Baldwin. The actors play sibling rivals who have been at odds since the death of their firefighter father years earlier. Robert De Niro is the veteran fire inspector who is tracking a series of mysterious and deadly arsons, and Donald Sutherland is effectively creepy as the former arsonist who understands the criminal psychology of pyromaniacs. Rebecca De Mornay, Scott Glenn, and Jennifer Jason Leigh are featured in supporting roles. Backdraft is a triumph of stunt work and flaming special effects. --Jeff Shannon
Customer Reviews Average rating - 4.0
Rating - 5 Date: 2009-01-06 Content: This is an awesome movie about firefighters. It shows the dangers that firefighters have to go through and you can appreciate what they do. Summary: Backdraft
Rating - 5 Date: 2008-09-25 Content:
Introduction: Outside of Jaws, the one of earlier movies I remember seeing as a child, [that I wasn't allowed to watch], was probably Ron Howard's "Backdraft". I was curious about fire; How it moved, its color. You name it, I was fascinated by it and the film satisfied my naive curiosity. This might've sparked the want to become a fireman at some point of my life, but the fire is definitely what struck me as the single most compelling thing about the movie. That, and Kurt Russell. Afterward, it sort of vanished into the foreground, becoming nothing but a fond and fuzzy memory until I saw it somewhere on TBS around 2002 or 2004, showing a scene I had never seen before. That scene being Stephen McCaffrey and John Adcox talking to each other outside of a house on the stairs, but its been so long that I'm not even sure that's an actual deleted scene or a fabrication of my own mind. Sad to say, as much as I love the movie, its not one I own on DVD (our VHS is pretty much on its last leg). So when I rented it, I was reminded of how much I enjoyed this film. Sorry for misinformation on my part (despite recently seeing the film, I totally forgot some things).
Plot: The film begins somewhere in the 1970's inside of closet where a younger Brian and Stephen McCaffrey are playing around with the firefighter attire (more or less Stephen trying to teach his brother how snap up the jacket right), when their father, Dennis McCaffrey's (Kurt Russell) firetruck --Engine 17-- is called to respond to a fire. Brian finally gets the chance to ride with his father and Axe (Scott Glenn) to the scene, while Stephen remains behind at the station. While in the process of securing the building, Brian's father is caught off guard by gas pipe rupture and is killed in the explosion. Brian, unfortunately, witnesses his father's untimely demise.
Fast-forward several years later, a young man named Tim and a older Brian McCaffrey (William Baldwin) have completed terms their in the academy and are ready to be trained as professional firemen, at the Station 13 (if memory serves). Outside of the bar he meets Jennifer Vaitkus (Jennifer Jason Leigh), his ex-girlfriend, before following Tim to the scene of a fire. Like a ghost from fires long past, Stephen McCaffrey steps out of a burning building, the spinning image of their late father. (Something you'd think would bother Brian.) And much to his displeasure, Brian discovers that he now has to train at his brother's station instead of the desired station he wanted. The McCaffrey's relationship at best, a shaky one; The simplest things set the two off at each others throat and sometimes simply forgotten the next day. Naturally, their strained relationship is tested as the two compete against each other and the fire's their station faces, while, inspector Donald Rimgale (Robert De Niro) investigates several backdrafts, trying to determine whether or not if they're arson or accidental.
Overview: Despite its age, Backdraft has suffered only a little wear over the span of seventeen years; There are obvious things, like some wardrobes, and the environment itself that keeps the viewer aware of how much the world has changed since then. Hell, the actors themselves let you know how much time has passed. That's hardly anything against it though. But purely on a technical level, Backdraft's special and practical effects still hold up remarkably well against some of today's highly improved effects. Like John Carpenter's The Thing, Backdraft may require multiple views to fully appreciate and understand the storylines it throws at you.
Unless your the type of viewer who catches onto subplots particularly quick, then you'll have no problem with solving the mystery that surrounds the secondary story of the film; The backdrafts and their seemingly unconnected victims. It throws one possibility at you after another as to who could be causing this (one possibility in particular actually had me praying it wouldn't be a certain character), but the film tends to get distracted with Brain McCaffrey's struggle to prove to his cynical brother that he can be a real fireman and the half-baked romance between himself and Jennifer Vaitkus; The only sex scene in the movie between the two characters, constantly interrupts a particularly gripping search for a fire inside of a high-rise building and ruined the entire scene for me. Thankfully, it doesn't last for long.
However, when the film does return to the main focus of the story (the firefighting), things slowly start to click together and make sense. Thus, what was once regarded as a string of disjointed plots, come together in a near-perfect execution that will surprise or confuse you the first time you watch it. When its not throwing the audience into the thick of a fire, Backdraft focuses on the quirky personalities of Station 17 and portrays them more or less as people instead of these mythical beings admired from afar by onlookers and children alike.
I'm no expert on a fireman's profession, but from what little I do know, Backdraft is probably the best flick done in respect to their profession and it makes them look good doing it. What surprises me though, is the lukewarm response toward the portrayal of their jobs in this film. Particularly from the so-called firefighters themselves; Some reviewers tear the movie apart over the lack of proper equipment usage or how the fire sequences themselves are portrayed. Its like, for one moment, they completely forget that their watching a movie and feel the need to critique it on the smallest things like its some sort of documentary gone horribly wrong. Now in terms of the dialogue, while some of it is indeed cheesy, I never thought it so terrible or irritating enough to criticize it. If you want to be reminded how bad dialogue can get, go watch a Steven Seagal movie.
Performances in the film are particularly strong and some hardly falter ...sometimes (I facepalm everytime I have to watch the slow-mo scenes). As usual, Robert De Niro and Donald Sutherland give excellent performances in their small, but appreciated roles as a Inspector and Arsonist with a history. Kurt Russell and William Baldwin have a great chemistry as brothers --even moreso when they fight--, the two play off of each other quite well. Yet, the only actor that seems to do well on his own is Russell. As the eldest McCaffrey, he is a reckless firefighter, who isn't afraid to take the fire head-on (A trait that plays both to his advantage and disadvantage), yet cannot seem to get his personal life together even if he tried. Kurt Russell plays both the comic and dramatic sides of his character with such ease, its hard not to love Stephen, even when he's being a jerk. (I really can't comment on Russell's performance as the McCaffrey bros. Dad, as he was gone as soon he appeared. He played the 'father' role well, I'll say that much.) Kurt proves time and time again why he's such an excellent actor and this movie is only one example. This isn't to say Baldwin as Brian is horrible, no. He does remarkably well in this movie, but half the time he doesn't seem to be trying in some scenes and Brian was someone I could never connect with properly until the end of the movie. If a scene lingered too long on him, I was sorely tempted to fast forward.
Scott Glenn, despite his great performance, is the most under-used actor in the entire movie; which I suppose works to his character's, Axe, advantage in some ways, still it would've been nice to see more of him. Rebecca De Mornay (Risky Business) and the late J.T. Walsh, played Helen McCaffrey and Martin Swayzak with relative ease as well; Walsh played the deplorable character you automatically hated the moment he opened his mouth without trouble. Mornay was a convincing wife and mother, fed up with her husband's reckless behavior. And while I generally liked her character, I never understood why she rejected Stephen when he tried to come back, outside of her own fears and not so much the welfare of their son.
Lastly, the score, composed by Hans Zimmer, suited the every scene in the film to a tee. Emotional or action-packed, Zimmer doesn't fail to play on the emotion of a scene and intensify it tenfold. Granted, there was that all too familiar "Zimmer" theme that reappears in the films The Rock and Pirates of the Pirates of the Caribbean - The Curse of the Black Pearl, but that can be easily overlooked. Overall, Backdraft is a excellent Multi-genre Adventure film that never fails to deliver on what it promises the viewer. Performances are strong and the fire sequences are some of the best around. You won't look at fire the same way in a movie again. However, it is among the many "Love it or Hate it" films, so depending on your person, you may or may not love this film. I highly recommend it to anyone curious enough to watch despite its flaws. ----- [5 out of 5] - September 24th, 2008 Summary: "...Some guys on this job, the fire owns them...the only way to truly kill it is to love it a little..."
Rating - 4 Date: 2008-08-26 Content: Great flick . . . a classic. Likely the most realistic depiction of fire I have ever seen Summary: Backdraft
Rating - 4 Date: 2008-08-08 Content: Nothing personal Mr. Gary F Taylor, but the condition they portray in the film IS a Backdraft. Maybe your father was a firefighter, that does not make you one, I AM a professional firefighter. A flashover is when the temperature of a room reaches the point that it causes all of the pyrolytic gasses of the contents of the room to spontaneously ignite, this usually occurs between 1000 and 1400 degrees F. A backdarft is a fire that has darkened down due to a lack of oxygen. When oxygen is suddenly introduced to said room the built up, superheated fire gasses explode or "combust in a rapid and uncontrolled manner".
The scene of the rookie opening the door without first checking for heat and being caught in the sudden explosion is a TEXTBOOK EXAMPLE of a backdraft.
Beyond that, yes the movie is unrealistic, IT'S A MOVIE! What movie is NOT unrealistic in at least some aspect? It is entertainment NOT a documentary! From an entertainment standpoint it was very captivating.
So how about quit trying to be something you are not and just ENJOY THE MOVIE! Summary: Reply to Gary F. Taylor
Rating - 5 Date: 2008-07-06 Content: This movie was released in theaters on May 24 1991 starring Kurt Russell as Stephen Bull McCaffery, William Baldwin as Brian McCaffery, and Robert DeNiro as Donald Shadow Rimgale. As a firefighter son Brian McCaffery always knew that one day his father wouldn't come home from fighting a fire. His brother Stephen whose nickname is the Bull has already started to follow in his fathers foot steps has already become a firefighter. Now Brian has graduated from rookie school and ends up at the same firehouse that his brother Stephen is. It doesn't take long before the two realize that they can't work together in the same fire house. However, there's a problem growing in the South side of Chicago as a series of Suspicious fires start to surface which forces Brian who still remembers how his dad died to join the investigative office to find out why and how these fires are getting started. As the evidences starts to mount it take Brian to an area where he doesn't want to go. Now a few thoughts on this movie! This is one of those movies where you start on the edge of your sit and you never move. The action and drama in this picture was fantastic. This picture also was great without a leading lady. Based on this, I give this movie 10 weasel stars. Summary: EXCELLANT
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