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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#4131 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Orlando, FL
Posts: 2,852
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I've even gone to the extent of reading Arthur Hailey's Airport novel. the movie is a pretty faithful rendering of it. For that matter, i read both of the novels that inspired The Towering Inferno. (The Tower and The Glass Inferno) As soon as I run across a used paperback copy, I can't wait to read Arthur Herzog's The Swarm. From what I've heard, it bears little relation to the awesome crapfest that Irwin Allen unleashed on the public.
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#4132 |
Kink of Swank
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Hahah, I read those two towering inferno-inspiration novels, too.
And I liked the Arthur Hailey Airport novel so much, I read a few of his others as well. (Airport was a pretty faithful adaptation; Hotel not so much.) |
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#4133 |
You broke your Ramadar!
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...and Arthur Hailey also wrote "Runway Zero-Eight", which was based on his script for the 1957 movie Zero Hour!, the movie that Airplane! spoofs.
(According to Wikipedia, the story first appeared as a CBC TV Movie called Flight Into Danger, which I've never seen).
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#4134 | |
Doing The Job
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: In a state
Posts: 3,956
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Quote:
Towering Inferno had arrogance but not a great natural force. Poseidon had both a natural force and man's greed/complacency in that the ship was insufficiently ballasted because they wanted to get it to port faster to scrap it. If peril and complacency are enough, then maybe a little movie like "The Incident" is a disaster film: New Yorkers terrorized by thugs on a subway train. Or is that urban horror or a monster movie? Is "Alien" a disaster movie or a monster movie or both? Apollo 13 was exciting, I suppose, but I don't think it inspired much reflection. You have 45 minutes. You may begin.
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#4135 |
You broke your Ramadar!
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I think scale plays a big part in defining a Disaster Film. Towering Inferno counts.
Alien (the first one), is famously an "Old Dark House" variant in outer space. So a horror movie, not a Disaster flick. I'd imagine that the more fantastic the peril, the less it becomes a Disaster Movie. Perhaps the peril must be elemental: Earth, Air, Fire, Water...
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#4136 |
Kink of Swank
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The peril must be over-the-top. An All-Star-Cast of stereotypes must be employed. It must be fiction.
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#4137 |
8/30/14 - Disneyland -10k or Bust.
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So a movie about The Twin Towers, Chernobyl or the 2004 Tsunami could not be disaster movies?
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#4138 |
Kink of Swank
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No.
Disaster movies must be fictional. No exceptions. The "disaster" is not the only requirement of the genre. Too many movies would qualify. There is a certain "quality" (usually a lack of) that denotes Disaster Movie. |
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#4139 |
You broke your Ramadar!
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Well, maybe there are a couple of exceptions.
The San Francisco Earthquake, the Titanic etc. could be used as backdrops for Disaster Movies. so could: ![]()
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#4140 |
I Floop the Pig
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Well, Krakatoa is actually west of Java, so the one depicted in the movie is clearly fictional.
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