Durante la notte dell'inaugurazione in un grattacielo di 138 piani, divampa un incendio che intrappola la gente agli ultimi piani del grattacielo e accende diverse storie di eroismo e perdit... Leggi tuttoDurante la notte dell'inaugurazione in un grattacielo di 138 piani, divampa un incendio che intrappola la gente agli ultimi piani del grattacielo e accende diverse storie di eroismo e perdita che vedono come protagonisti un pompiere, un architetto, intrappolati nell'inferno di ac... Leggi tuttoDurante la notte dell'inaugurazione in un grattacielo di 138 piani, divampa un incendio che intrappola la gente agli ultimi piani del grattacielo e accende diverse storie di eroismo e perdita che vedono come protagonisti un pompiere, un architetto, intrappolati nell'inferno di acciaio e vetro.
- Vincitore di 3 Oscar
- 13 vittorie e 14 candidature totali
- Paula Ramsay
- (as Sheila Mathews)
- Giddings
- (as Normann Burton)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizBoth novels were inspired by the construction of the World Trade Center in the early-1970s, and what could happen with a fire in a skyscraper. In Richard Martin Stern's novel "The Tower", the fictional 125-story building was set next to the north tower of the World Trade Center. The climax of the novel was centered around a rescue mounted from the north tower.
- Blooper(at around 2h 35 mins) At the end of the movie the tower seems to be well lit despite the power outage caused by the fire.
- Citazioni
Doug Roberts: I don't know. Maybe they just oughta leave it the way it is. Kind of a shrine to all the bullshit in the world.
- Curiosità sui creditiThe 20th Century Fox and Warner Bros. Pictures logos don't appear in the beginning.
- Versioni alternativeThe film was re-dubbed in 2003 for the German DVD release. All subsequent releases on DVD and Blu-ray feature this new dubbing, many TV airings as well.
- ConnessioniEdited into A cuore aperto: The Abby Singer Show (1988)
- Colonne sonoreWe May Never Love Like This Again
Sung by Maureen McGovern
Words and Music by Al Kasha and Joel Hirschhorn
Newman plays architect Doug Roberts who has been away in the jungle somewhere but is returning home just in time for the grand opening of the tallest building ever to grace California that he just happened to have designed. Doug is also returning home to his mistress played by Faye Dunaway to persuade her to join him on his next project. The head of the company building the tower is James Duncan(William Holden) whom has left a lot of the details of the construction of the tower to his no good son-in-law, Roger Simmons(Richard Chamberlain). That turns out to be bad news for everyone unfortunate to find themselves in The Tower. After some of the wiring in the building begins to have a major meltdown, Doug investigates to find that Roger has cut so many corners it could lead to a major catastrophe. Was there any doubt?
Despite the abundance of headlining actors in Towering Inferno, the true star of the film is the disaster itself, just as it is in any of these concoctions. Allen directed the action sequences with John Guillerman handling the rest of the chores. Allen does himself proud. Although we know of course that The Tower is not truly as tall as the filmmakers would have us believe, it's not obvious enough to detract from the film. It doesn't matter though, as most of the action takes place inside the building or near the suite at the top where most of our stars end up trapped. Of course this being a disaster film, we do get the privilege of watching flaming bodies fall over a hundred stories, be it it outside or down an elevator shaft.
Allen also does well at piling on the suspense and keeps you on edge for long moments, with such things as a long climb up a flaming stare well and a long decent down a scenic elevator that will have you wringing your hands. The fire sequences are all well staged as you can almost feel the flames leaping through the screen and smell the smoke circling around the room.
The problem with most disaster films is that with the good, there is generally some bad and Inferno is no exception. Some of the dialog in this film is truly horrendous.
Example:
Duncan: How bad is it? Halloran: It's a fire. All fires are bad
James Duncan: Give me the architect that designed you, and who needs Doug Roberts? Susan: I do.
In one truly silly moment, after Dan Bigelow(Robert Wagner) and his secretary Lorrie (Susan Flannery)have just finished love making, the fire has engulfed the room next to theirs. Lorrie, being the ever observant secretary and mistress sniffs and delivers this line: "Did someone leave a cigarette burning?"
The best of the actors is easily Steve McQueen. As Chief Michael O'Hallorhan who is called to put the fire out, he seems to relish has role as a fire department head. Paul Newman on the other hand is a mixed bag. When he's playing his scenes with McQueen, Holden, Dunaway, or Chamberlain, he's OK. In other scenes, especially when the fire initially breaks out, he appears stiff and uncomfortable. Fred Astaire is on hand as the whimsical con artist Harlee Claiborne out to bilk Lisolette Mueller (Jennifer Jones)with some phony stocks. Jones is one of the best things going in this movie, turning out to be quite the heroine. Dunaway as Robert's girlfriend Susan is dry enough that we wish they could have brought Joanne Woodward in to give the relationship some real spark (no pun intended). Wagner as Dan Bigelow is a charmer but we just can't buy into his relationship with Lorrie (Susan Flannery). Susan Blakely as Patty Simmons, Holden's spoiled daughter and the wife of Roger (Richard Chamberlain)has nothing much to do except chastise her husband for causing Daddy a big headache. Chamberlain, on the other hand, seems to like playing the role of the villain and he does it well. You'll have no trouble believing just how big of a jerk Roger is. Last , is O.J. Simpson as the security guard who seems to be smarter than everybody else. The role requires little and in his big screen debut, Simpson gives it just that.
No matter. The Towering Inferno will still entertain you. At 165 minutes, you'll only be looking at your watch in the first half hour or so as you wait for that one tiny spark to ignite a night of suspense. Irwin Allen put quite a spectacle on the screen, but unfortunately never again duplicated it and with each subsequent film his product went from bad to being truly mediocre. Considering how much I really liked this film, it's a shame. Now, please put out that cigarette.
My Grade: B
- clydestuff
- 1 feb 2004
- Permalink
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Infierno en la torre
- Luoghi delle riprese
- 2898 Vallejo Street, Pacific Heights, San Francisco, California, Stati Uniti(Roger and Patty Simmons' house)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 14.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 116.000.000 USD
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 116.001.993 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione2 ore 45 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 2.39 : 1