Firestorm (1998 film)
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Firestorm | |
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Directed by | Dean Semler |
Written by | Chris Soth |
Produced by | Joseph Loeb III Matthew Weisman Thomas M. Hammel |
Starring | Howie Long Scott Glenn William Forsythe Suzy Amis |
Cinematography | Stephen F. Windon |
Edited by | Jack Hofstra |
Music by | J. Peter Robinson |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date |
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Running time | 89 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $19 million[1] |
Box office | $8,165,212[2] |
Firestorm is a 1998 action thriller film directed by Dean Semler, and starring Howie Long, Scott Glenn, William Forsythe and Suzy Amis.
Plot
The plot involves a group of Wyoming State convicts who stage an escape with the help of an arsonist on the outside who sets fire in the forest for the prisoners to be taken there to help firemen, giving the prisoners chance to escape. The story begins when Alexander Earl Shaye (William Forsythe), who had stolen 37 million dollars four years previously and hidden it in the Wyoming forest, escapes from prison with five other convicts to retrieve the money.
Earlier, Shaye killed his cell mate and took his identity, as Shaye knew he couldn't be trusted. They pose as Canadian firefighters and take Jennifer (Suzy Amis), a bird watcher, hostage along the way. Unbeknownst to all of them, another forest fire has started due to a lightening strike from a week earlier.
Jesse Graves (Howie Long) is a smokejumper, who must find a way to stop Shaye and his group of convicts and save Jennifer at the same time. Over the course of the film, Shaye starts to kill off his men in order to collect the money himself, starting with fellow prisoners Wilkins, a mapmaker and Karge, a former wrestler, but finds out that the money was destroyed in the fire. He then proceeds to kill Loomis, a former Air Force pilot by pushing him off a cliff to make it look like an accident, and shoots Packer after he gets caught in a spring trap set up by Jesse. Wynt Perkins (Scott Glenn), Jesse's mentor and friend, does everything he can to help Jesse, and to save Jennifer.
Jennifer tells Jesse that she was a Marine, before she became a bird watcher. She and Jesse try to give out smoke signals to have his friends find him before the two separate forest fires will collide and will suck up all the oxygen. Wynt arrives to save a busload of prisoners and fire fighters when they were forced at gunpoint to get inside the vehicle. He hotwires the bus and drives it away to safety. Wynt then catches up with Jesse and comes up with a plan. Jesse begins to realize his friend knew that there was a fire from the beginning and never told anyone.
Wynt tells Jesse he started the forest fire in order for a land developer to build a training school for fire fighters, but knew nothing of the prison break. Jesse tells him it wasn't his fault and promises he will keep his crime a secret from his friends. Wynt confronts Shaye by telling him Shaye's lawyers set him up to take the fall. He shoots Shaye in the leg, but is killed in the process. Jesse throws a fire axe into Shaye's chest, causing him to fall off the boat he and Jennifer were in. Jesse and Jennifer use the boat as an air pocket to keep from drowning, and to prevent themselves from getting burned alive. Suddenly, gunshots start coming from underneath them and a couple of bullets make a hole in the boat.
Shaye survives his injury and plans on killing Jennifer and Jesse. Jesse gets the upper hand and kills Shaye by shoving his head through the hole under the boat, causing his face to burn till there's nothing left. Heavy rainfall then drowns out the fire and Jesse and Jennifer swim to shore, where they wait to be rescued. Jennifer also realizes that the eggs she had with her have hatched, much to the pleasure of Jesse.
Cast
Actor | Role |
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Howie Long | Jesse Graves |
Scott Glenn | Wynt Perkins |
William Forsythe | Randall Alexander Shaye |
Suzy Amis | Jennifer |
Christianne Hirt | Monica |
Garwin Sanford | Pete |
Sebastian Spence | Cowboy |
Michael Greyeyes | Andy |
Barry Pepper | Packer |
Vladimir Kulich | Karge |
Tom McBeath | Loomis |
Benjamin Ratner | Wilkins |
Jonathon Young | Sherman |
Chilton Crane | Tina’s Mom |
Robyn Driscoll | Tina’s Dad |
Alexandria Mitchell | Tina |
Terry Kelly | Lawyer |
David Fredericks | Guard |
Gavin Buhr | Childs |
Danny Wattley | Moody |
Derek Hamilton | Dwyer |
Adrien Dorval | Belcher |
Jon Cuthbert | Davis |
Sean Campbell | Deputy |
Deryl Hayes | Sheriff Garrett |
- Scott Glenn, who played the firefighter turned arsonist in the film, also starred in Backdraft (1991), where, coincidentally, also played the part of a Chicago firefighter who was an arsonist.
Production
The screenplay for the film, written on spec, by Chris Soth as his thesis for the MFA Screenwriting program at USC, was originally purchased the now defunct Savoy Pictures. When Savoy had the project, the film was going to be more epic in scale, with comprehensive visual and computer effects. Savoy even offered Sylvester Stallone $20 million to star, which he accepted. However, the studio went bust before the film was made. Twentieth Century Fox picked up the script from "turnaround" and fashioned it into a more intimate, smaller budgeted movie as they were looking to only spend $30 million on the picture. Graham Yost did an uncredited production polish on the script, which was also rewritten by four other writers on the way to production .[3]
Reception
The film opened to very negative reviews, receiving a Rotten Tomatoes rating of 12%.[4]
Box office
The film was a bomb at the box office. It opened in 7th place with a paltry $3.8 million (behind six films that had all been released at least three weeks earlier) and took in only $8.1 million in the United States during its theatrical run.[5]