IMDb RATING
5.2/10
241
YOUR RATING
In 1978, a Spanish coastal campground full of German tourists exploded after a tragic accident. This is their story.In 1978, a Spanish coastal campground full of German tourists exploded after a tragic accident. This is their story.In 1978, a Spanish coastal campground full of German tourists exploded after a tragic accident. This is their story.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 2 nominations total
Photos
Anne-Luise Tietz
- Maike
- (as Anne Luise Tietz)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaBased on the Los Alfaques Disaster, a truck road accident which happened on 11 July 1978 near Tarragona, Spain and killed 217 people on a campsite.
- GoofsAfter the disaster happened and the victims are being brought to the hospitals, an approaching plane is visible and the character Walter Köhler tells his son that this is a plane of the German military, coming to help.
But the plane in the movie is an Airbus A320 which can be recognized by the typical wingtips. The A320, which was the first of the narrow body Airbus aircraft family, wasn't existing at the time of the accident in 1978.
Rollout of the first A320 Prototype happened February 14th, 1987. First A320 was delivered to an airline in 1988. Other versions of the "A320 family" are A318, A319 and A321 which vary e.g. in the size of fuselage.
Also the German military had no plane of the A320 family until they got the A319 in 2010, the A321 in 2018.
Featured review
I missed the first 10-15 minutes of this film, such that it was a while before I cottoned on to what the film was about; when I did catch on I was utterly disheartened.
The film is loosely based on real facts: one dreadfully fateful day, just thirty years ago, a large tanker truck laden with highly combustible fuel went out of control, charged off the road and ploughed into the middle of a packed camping-site called "Los Alfaques" near Tarragona, Spain. The result was a couple of hundred killed and a couple of hundred others injured, mostly from burns, from the ensuing frightful explosion.
That such a horrendous subject matter should become the attention of some TV-film company near 30 years later is evidently open to very heavy criticism, to say the least. It is an appalling affront to anyone's sensibilities who can clearly remember that inferno on our TV screens at news-time, especially as it happened not very long after that terrible aviation accident at "Los Rodeos" Airport, Tenerife, Canary Islands, when two planes collided on the ground - and remains to this day the worst aviation disaster in history. Anybody want to make a film about that, too? Or do we need films about the attacks on the World Trade Center, New York, or on the public transit systems in Madrid and London?
I sincerely hope not: dramatised little stories trashed up and served for sensationalist tremendist appetites is more than somewhat unsavoury. This TV film is fairly well made in certain aspects, and rather weak in others. Acting and interpretation is too stereotyped into classical TV formulas, despite it being a German production (very many of the victims were indeed German people).
However, the scene-setting was more or less right, with just a few big faults. Firstly, there are only dead and injured bodies lying around in specific scenes, but not any can be seen in the more general shots of the camp-site burning hell. Secondly, the well-chosen vehicles of 30 years ago were using number plates which could only have appeared years later than this terrible tragedy.
It should be obvious that I do not like anything or anybody capitalising on true-story human tragedies.
The film is loosely based on real facts: one dreadfully fateful day, just thirty years ago, a large tanker truck laden with highly combustible fuel went out of control, charged off the road and ploughed into the middle of a packed camping-site called "Los Alfaques" near Tarragona, Spain. The result was a couple of hundred killed and a couple of hundred others injured, mostly from burns, from the ensuing frightful explosion.
That such a horrendous subject matter should become the attention of some TV-film company near 30 years later is evidently open to very heavy criticism, to say the least. It is an appalling affront to anyone's sensibilities who can clearly remember that inferno on our TV screens at news-time, especially as it happened not very long after that terrible aviation accident at "Los Rodeos" Airport, Tenerife, Canary Islands, when two planes collided on the ground - and remains to this day the worst aviation disaster in history. Anybody want to make a film about that, too? Or do we need films about the attacks on the World Trade Center, New York, or on the public transit systems in Madrid and London?
I sincerely hope not: dramatised little stories trashed up and served for sensationalist tremendist appetites is more than somewhat unsavoury. This TV film is fairly well made in certain aspects, and rather weak in others. Acting and interpretation is too stereotyped into classical TV formulas, despite it being a German production (very many of the victims were indeed German people).
However, the scene-setting was more or less right, with just a few big faults. Firstly, there are only dead and injured bodies lying around in specific scenes, but not any can be seen in the more general shots of the camp-site burning hell. Secondly, the well-chosen vehicles of 30 years ago were using number plates which could only have appeared years later than this terrible tragedy.
It should be obvious that I do not like anything or anybody capitalising on true-story human tragedies.
- khatcher-2
- Jan 24, 2008
- Permalink
Details
Box office
- Budget
- €9,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime3 hours 1 minute
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Tarragona: Paradise on Fire (2007) officially released in India in English?
Answer