Insurance investigator must find out who is setting fires. Along the way he meets and works with a beautiful newspaper reporter and falls in love.Insurance investigator must find out who is setting fires. Along the way he meets and works with a beautiful newspaper reporter and falls in love.Insurance investigator must find out who is setting fires. Along the way he meets and works with a beautiful newspaper reporter and falls in love.
Donald Webster
- Peters
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
1971 Safe, fun and full of the beautifully scripted people with early 70s gadgets.
What is wrong with people who know how to play songs tapping drinks glasses...pitch perfect.
Never seen Roy K. As a cool post hippy artist. What a treat. Much better than Trip.
Love English girls in Orange faux leather and white boots and orange hat.
What is wrong with people who know how to play songs tapping drinks glasses...pitch perfect.
Never seen Roy K. As a cool post hippy artist. What a treat. Much better than Trip.
Love English girls in Orange faux leather and white boots and orange hat.
When London is hit by a series of arson attacks in shops and warehouses, Quentin Barnaby, an insurance investigator, "Daily Express" crime journalist Toby Collins and press photographer Jim Maxwell join forces to find out who is responsible. A sub-plot deals with the fact that both Barnaby and Maxwell are falling in love with Toby. (And no, this isn't a rare example of a film from the early seventies with a gay theme. Despite that masculine-looking Christian name, Toby is young, beautiful and female).
This is a British film with a British setting, but both the leading man (Chad Everett) and the leading lady (Anjanette Comer) are American, even though in both cases they are playing British characters. No doubt this was to increase the marketability of the film in America. In fact, there is something American about the whole style of the film. It is much faster-paced than most British films from this period and the highly dramatic, urgent musical score seems like another transatlantic touch.
Even in 1971, "The Firechasers" was probably little more than a standard programme-filler, and today it is largely forgotten. I am not surprised that mine is only the fourth review it has received. I caught it recently on "London Live", a TV channel which seems to specialise in reviving long-forgotten British movies. I had in fact seen it once before, in the eighties, only a decade or so after it was made, and even then it seemed rather dated. Today it looks very old-fashioned, not only in the costumes, sets and vehicles but also in the general style of its direction, making it look like an over-extended episode of "Softly, Softly" or some other crime drama of the era. The most one can say of it is that it is a reasonably exciting thriller with an unusual twist when the identity of the arsonist is eventually revealed. 5/10
This is a British film with a British setting, but both the leading man (Chad Everett) and the leading lady (Anjanette Comer) are American, even though in both cases they are playing British characters. No doubt this was to increase the marketability of the film in America. In fact, there is something American about the whole style of the film. It is much faster-paced than most British films from this period and the highly dramatic, urgent musical score seems like another transatlantic touch.
Even in 1971, "The Firechasers" was probably little more than a standard programme-filler, and today it is largely forgotten. I am not surprised that mine is only the fourth review it has received. I caught it recently on "London Live", a TV channel which seems to specialise in reviving long-forgotten British movies. I had in fact seen it once before, in the eighties, only a decade or so after it was made, and even then it seemed rather dated. Today it looks very old-fashioned, not only in the costumes, sets and vehicles but also in the general style of its direction, making it look like an over-extended episode of "Softly, Softly" or some other crime drama of the era. The most one can say of it is that it is a reasonably exciting thriller with an unusual twist when the identity of the arsonist is eventually revealed. 5/10
This film was made by Lew Grade for the bottom half of British cinema bills and for showing on CBS tv,hence the 2 bland American leads.The plot is poorly developed.We know very early on who did it,but not why.The leads wear a multitude of clothes,every scene something different.The only pleasure is in seeing so many familiar faces amongst the cast.Shows you the lack of imagination at Rank,showing this with Carry on Henry.Far too long for a supporting feature.
Years ago I saw this movie on television here in the United States. Although a fairly standard "private eye investigation - "who done it," the costumes and cinematography were gorgeous. Chad Everett. Anjanette Comer, and Joanne Dainton (where's she been?) never looked better. Chad is at his best playing a calm, self assured, leading man (Joe Gannon on Medical Center, among others). Also, the British have a seemingly inexhaustible supply of great character actors (Roy Kinnear, etc.) who do such great memorable work with small roles. I would like to see this movie released to DVD. Does anyone out there know anything about this possibility?
In reply to an earlier review Network DVD are going to release this on DVD on the 1st November 2010.
I remember seeing this TV movie on ITV one Christmas in the mid 1970s and thought it was fairly reasonable ITC fare. I have to agree with another reviewer that it was not difficult to work out who the culprit was, I can even remember the plot pretty well all these years later. I am looking forward to getting the DVD to see what I think of it some 35 years later. Network are initially releasing 'The Firechasers' as a "web site exclusive" so it won't be available at online stores like Amazon for a while yet.
I remember seeing this TV movie on ITV one Christmas in the mid 1970s and thought it was fairly reasonable ITC fare. I have to agree with another reviewer that it was not difficult to work out who the culprit was, I can even remember the plot pretty well all these years later. I am looking forward to getting the DVD to see what I think of it some 35 years later. Network are initially releasing 'The Firechasers' as a "web site exclusive" so it won't be available at online stores like Amazon for a while yet.
Did you know
- TriviaLast film of John Loder.
- GoofsToby opens the inside freight elevator gate when it gets stuck between floors near the end. A few seconds later, she opens the gate again.
- ConnectionsReferences Zabriskie Point (1970)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 41m(101 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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