अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंJust as Jeremy Jackson attempts to become the first male firewoman in New York, fires begin mysteriously erupting from toilets all over the City and Fire Marshal Marc Marshall is called in t... सभी पढ़ेंJust as Jeremy Jackson attempts to become the first male firewoman in New York, fires begin mysteriously erupting from toilets all over the City and Fire Marshal Marc Marshall is called in to investigate.Just as Jeremy Jackson attempts to become the first male firewoman in New York, fires begin mysteriously erupting from toilets all over the City and Fire Marshal Marc Marshall is called in to investigate.
J. Christian Ingvordsen
- Tom Tobias (Ted Levis)
- (as John Christian)
Michele Miller
- Katie
- (as Michelle Miller)
Tracy Douglas
- Colleen
- (as Tracy Douglass)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
I very wonder why some familiar stars have participated this lousy film. It is really a time waster!
Frankly I could not watch the film from the beginning to the end, but probably three-fourth. I think the problems of the film was mainly the director and the script writer could not develop the story from the theme--a man try to become a fireman in the world where only women can do. In spite of the story theme was odd, it could be developed in a very interesting way as long as the director can rationalise the story and made the gags in proper order. And if he could have managed the scenes presented in coherent manner.
Some scenes that should be aimed to make people laugh indeed worked controversially. For example, a group of people walked out form the limo should be a poor replicate from other film (the name I have forgotten). 'Copying' is not necessary bad but in this film, the director could not make the copying or mimicking with a new touch . I feel very sorry for the investors.
Frankly I could not watch the film from the beginning to the end, but probably three-fourth. I think the problems of the film was mainly the director and the script writer could not develop the story from the theme--a man try to become a fireman in the world where only women can do. In spite of the story theme was odd, it could be developed in a very interesting way as long as the director can rationalise the story and made the gags in proper order. And if he could have managed the scenes presented in coherent manner.
Some scenes that should be aimed to make people laugh indeed worked controversially. For example, a group of people walked out form the limo should be a poor replicate from other film (the name I have forgotten). 'Copying' is not necessary bad but in this film, the director could not make the copying or mimicking with a new touch . I feel very sorry for the investors.
I happened to see this movie on cable TV. I was surprised I had never heard of it, and it turned out to be quite funny. It's a parody of "Backdraft" in the tradition of "Airplane" and similar spoofs, and though it doesn't quite reach the levels of excellence of "Airplane," it does have several genuinely laugh-inducing moments. So see it if you get the chance.
The jokes in this movie generally fall into one of the four following categories: obvious ("Your back!" - "Yes, I'm back" - "No, your BACK"), crude (a coroner biting off a piece of a corpse), repetitive (every time an expression is used, it is then demonstrated literally: for example, a man says "Don't put words into my mouth", then pulls out a piece of paper with "words" written on it), and derivative ("I have to take this to the city hall" - "What is it?" - "It's a big building where the mayor has his office, but that's not important right now"). Of course when you have so many gags one will work every once in a while, and I did laugh a couple of times. There is also some mild eye-candy from Kathy Ireland, but the appearance of three screen legends - Mitchum, Savalas and Winters - doesn't add anything to the film, in fact it detracts from it as all three seem to be in poor health (and this was indeed Savalas' last film role). (*1/2)
"Backfire!" is currently holding a 2.8 user average on IMDb. I understand that many of the site's lowest rated films are bad comedies ("Epic Movie", just to name one rightful claim). But this is not quite that sort of a thing. The relatively low-budget film was the feature film debut of director A. Dean Bell. It is the kind of film that will divide audiences based on their taste in matters relating to humor, but it knows what kind of a comedy it wants to be. Therefore I don't see the low user average as deserved, since this film does what it wants to do just fine, it just happens to be for a niche audience. Let me show you what I mean.
The film, a parody of Ron Howard's "Backdraft" (1991, remember that?), takes place in a universe where all firefighters are female. Jeremy Jackson (Josh Mosby) wants to be the world's first male firewoman. He has his reasons. All his life he has been blamed for the death of his firefighter mother, not least by his firefighter sister (Mary McCormack). Jeremy tries to overcome all the prejudice, and goes on to discover a dangerous conspiracy...
Now let's talk about the humor. It's not as low-brow as you would expect. Instead it's puns and dad jokes, jokes so bad you laugh because of the badness. The main way of constructing comedy comes in the way of wordplay, or actually in the film's way of taking wordplay literally. Here's two examples of jokes: 1) Jeremy tells the story of his dead mother, and rubs salt to his wounds. LITERALLY. 2) Someone says: "I won't stand for this". AND SITS DOWN. If you're the kind of person who finds dumb word/proverb/saying/language -related humor funny, then this film has a lot of it. I'm usually more of a "Frasier" kind of guy when it comes to my comedic preference, but this film had me laughing all the way through. I was simultaneously embarrassed and endeared by the film. Somehow they have also managed to lure in several older stars, like Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters and Telley Savalas. The old-timers seemed to have a good time, especially Mitchum.
This may be a dumb comedy, but it's one with a good heart and nice atmosphere. You might not like the majority of the word puns, put you got to give the film this. It sticks with the bit. It is a dedicated production, that doesn't feel studio-mandated, but instead a silly passion project. I recommend it.
The film, a parody of Ron Howard's "Backdraft" (1991, remember that?), takes place in a universe where all firefighters are female. Jeremy Jackson (Josh Mosby) wants to be the world's first male firewoman. He has his reasons. All his life he has been blamed for the death of his firefighter mother, not least by his firefighter sister (Mary McCormack). Jeremy tries to overcome all the prejudice, and goes on to discover a dangerous conspiracy...
Now let's talk about the humor. It's not as low-brow as you would expect. Instead it's puns and dad jokes, jokes so bad you laugh because of the badness. The main way of constructing comedy comes in the way of wordplay, or actually in the film's way of taking wordplay literally. Here's two examples of jokes: 1) Jeremy tells the story of his dead mother, and rubs salt to his wounds. LITERALLY. 2) Someone says: "I won't stand for this". AND SITS DOWN. If you're the kind of person who finds dumb word/proverb/saying/language -related humor funny, then this film has a lot of it. I'm usually more of a "Frasier" kind of guy when it comes to my comedic preference, but this film had me laughing all the way through. I was simultaneously embarrassed and endeared by the film. Somehow they have also managed to lure in several older stars, like Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters and Telley Savalas. The old-timers seemed to have a good time, especially Mitchum.
This may be a dumb comedy, but it's one with a good heart and nice atmosphere. You might not like the majority of the word puns, put you got to give the film this. It sticks with the bit. It is a dedicated production, that doesn't feel studio-mandated, but instead a silly passion project. I recommend it.
Compared to backdraft and ladder 49 this is by far the most realistic firefighting movie
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाTelly Savalas's final film.
- क्रेज़ी क्रेडिट"Let Them Eat Cake" Marie Antoinette (listed in Soundtracks)
- कनेक्शनEdited into Absolute Aggression (1996)
- साउंडट्रैकSmoke Gets in Your Eyes
Written by Jerome Kern and Otto A. Harbach
Published by Polygram International Publishing, Inc.
Performed by The Platters
Licensed From The San Juan Music Group
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How long is Backfire!?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Firehouse II: Planet of Women
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- उत्पादन कंपनियां
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 33 मिनट
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
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