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Du feu dans le ciel

Original title: A Fire in the Sky
  • TV Movie
  • 1978
  • 3h
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
722
YOUR RATING
Du feu dans le ciel (1978)
DramaSci-Fi

Astronomers discover a comet that they believe will crash into Phoenix, Arizona. They attempt to warn officials, but no one believes them.Astronomers discover a comet that they believe will crash into Phoenix, Arizona. They attempt to warn officials, but no one believes them.Astronomers discover a comet that they believe will crash into Phoenix, Arizona. They attempt to warn officials, but no one believes them.

  • Director
    • Jerry Jameson
  • Writers
    • Dennis Nemec
    • Michael Blankfort
    • Paul Gallico
  • Stars
    • Richard Crenna
    • Elizabeth Ashley
    • David Dukes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    722
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jerry Jameson
    • Writers
      • Dennis Nemec
      • Michael Blankfort
      • Paul Gallico
    • Stars
      • Richard Crenna
      • Elizabeth Ashley
      • David Dukes
    • 18User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Primetime Emmys
      • 2 nominations total

    Photos7

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    Top cast39

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    Richard Crenna
    Richard Crenna
    • Jason Voight
    Elizabeth Ashley
    Elizabeth Ashley
    • Sharon Allan
    David Dukes
    David Dukes
    • David Allan
    Joanna Miles
    Joanna Miles
    • Jennifer Dreiser
    Lloyd Bochner
    Lloyd Bochner
    • Paul Gilliam
    William Bogert
    William Bogert
    • Wayne Lustus
    Nicolas Coster
    Nicolas Coster
    • Governor
    Diana Douglas
    Diana Douglas
    • Mrs. Reardon
    Andrew Duggan
    Andrew Duggan
    • President
    Marj Dusay
    Marj Dusay
    • Ellen Gilliam
    Cindy Eilbacher
    Cindy Eilbacher
    • Paula Gilliam
    • (as Cynthia Eilbacher)
    John Larch
    John Larch
    • Johnson
    Kip Niven
    Kip Niven
    • Mac
    Jenny O'Hara
    Jenny O'Hara
    • Ann Webster
    Merlin Olsen
    Merlin Olsen
    • Stan Webster
    Maggie Wellman
    Maggie Wellman
    • Carol
    Michael Biehn
    Michael Biehn
    • Tom Reardon
    Bill Williams
    Bill Williams
    • Dale Turner
    • Director
      • Jerry Jameson
    • Writers
      • Dennis Nemec
      • Michael Blankfort
      • Paul Gallico
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    5.9722
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    Featured reviews

    rcw-5

    Guilty pleasures

    As a kid, I saw two movies in the late 70's about celestial bodies heading towards earth, A Fire In the Sky and Meteor. This movie was quite different from Meteor in premise alone. This was not about a collective effort to avert a disaster; it was about how to collectively get the hell out of town. Richard Crenna played Jason Voight, an astronomer who somehow knew that this desert metropolis was doomed the split second after the words were uttered from the Presidents mouth, as he explained to a group of scientist that the comet was probably heading for earth. Although this movie to me was extremely cheesy, over acted and sometime under acted, and you got to see down town Phoenix high-rises crumble one by one, I liked it. I would have to say that it is one of my GUILTY PLEASURES
    10cowbells

    One of the best, first in it's subject matter.

    Considering that this movie was aired in 1978, I feel it far exceeds any expectations of a movie today for its genre. Richard Crenna (always an actor highly underrated) gave a superb performance. Story line was based upon facts we had never considered in that time period. Crenna's character was not only significant as a scientist for this movie, but also put that special "personal touch" feel as he sacrificed his own life in the end for a small group of Indians in the desert. I think this movie should be on DVD and available to all of us who remember it fondly and also for those who have never had the opportunity to see it before. It far surpassed any expectations in 1978 for a made for TV movie. I have been searching for this movie for years and highly recommend it........P.S.--Just found my copy this month (July 2005) on EBAY. Woo-hoo!!!
    7virek213

    Phoenix In The Cometary Crosshairs...And Nobody Can Do A Thing About It!

    Before such films as METEOR, NIGHT OF THE COMET, Armageddon, or DEEP IMPACT (though after films like DELUGE or WHEN WORLDS COLLIDE), there was the 1978 made-for-TV sci-fi/disaster movie A FIRE IN THE SKY, which depicted a collision between our planet and an interstellar visitor, specifically a meteor, an asteroid, or a comet.

    In the case of A FIRE IN THE SKY, it's a comet that is not only pinpointed at Earth, but at one specific target: Phoenix, Arizona. And there's only one sharp-eyed astronomer (Richard Crenna) who believes and realizes that fact, while everyone else refuses to believe, or wants to cover it up. Of course, this latter plot line is a common one among most disaster films, whether for the big screen or the small screen: a sort of post-Watergate "Enemy Of The People" situation, one far different from the situations seen in METEOR or DEEP IMPACT, where joint operations to stop these potentially cataclysmic deep-space visitors are put into effect.

    At the same time, however, A FIRE IN THE SKY, for all the flaws it shares with a lot of other disaster films made for the small screen, including some ripe overacting and dialogue that is a little bit too unintentionally humorous at times (even though the screenplay is based on a story by Paul Gallico, whose 1969 novel "The Poseidon Adventure" provided the basis for the classic 1972 disaster film of the same name), is boosted by some really effective matte work and special visual effects that one would not have ordinarily found in a made-for-TV film of the late 1970s. And it may as well be said that the director, Jerry Jameson, was known for being a specialist in this genre, with films like 1974's HURRICANE and TERROR ON THE 40TH FLOOR, as well as (for the big screen) 1977's AIRPORT '77.

    Crenna, always a very underrated actor (he may be most remembered for being Sylvester Stallone's commanding officer in the "Rambo" films, though he also starred with Steve McQueen in Robert Wise's 1966 classic THE SAND PEBBLES), gives a fairly good performance even with the sometimes dodgy dialogue; and the cast includes Elizabeth Ashley, Merlin Olsen, Lloyd Bochner, Kip Niven, and John Larch (who played the mayor of San Francisco in the original DIRTY HARRY back in 1971). The scenes of destruction and the cometary impact on Phoenix, while they may not match what was seen in DEEP IMPACT, are sufficiently spectacular to overcome the bumps and grinds of the screenplay, which merits my giving A FIRE IN THE SKY a solid rating of seven out of 10.
    Newfarmer

    Transcendental trash

    This is perhaps my all-time favorite trash-TV movie. I have a theory that all of us secretly cherish at least one utterly indefensible object of art or entertainment - something we know is simply awful, but which we love nonetheless. Maybe it's pro wrestling, maybe it's "The Dukes of Hazzard." For me, it's this TV movie.

    I'm something of an amateur astronomy buff, so that may explain part of my attraction to this movie. However, virtually every moment, every plot device, every line of dialogue, every scene and every revelation of character in "A Fire in the Sky" is so stultifyingly formulaic that you wonder if the people who wrote it even graduated from grade school. It's no exaggeration to say that, twenty minutes into the movie, you can accurately predict the final outcomes of each of the several subplots. The characters are not the least bit real; they are complete and absolutely transparent stereotypes. And adding an element of incongruity to the movie is the fact that the actors attack their roles with surprising vigor. Richard Crenna and Elizabeth Ashley, in particular, seem to think they're in "King Lear," not this hokey, connect-the-dots, pre-fab drama.

    The result is a production that is not in on its own joke. It doesn't seem to know how bad it really is. It's a professional product that seems to have been offered seriously. And yet it's awful. The result is that it achieves a kind of exquisite stupidity. We're not laughing with it; we're laughing at it. And as such, for me, at least, it transcends its own badness and becomes highly entertaining.

    What can I say? There's no good reason anyone should like something this dumb. And yet I do.
    7shuz

    Meteor takes out Phoenix!

    Classic schlock TV movie about a meteor heading for Phoenix. If you enjoy campy '70's disaster movies you will like this one. When it hits, the city is pretty much destroyed. There are some great scenes of people running and screaming as buildings fall on them, just what you'd want from a disaster film. Watch for a very young Michael Biehn.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The TV station in the movie, KTAR-TV, is the real life NBC affiliate for Phoenix, now known as KPNX.
    • Goofs
      In the scenes from the control room for the rocket that will carry the nuclear warheads to the comet, a computer screen is shown with a graphic of what is presumably the rocket. Actually, the graphic on the screen is a distillation column connected to two kettle reboilers, commonly seen in control rooms for chemical processing plants.
    • Quotes

      Ann Webster: My husband, my son and four other boys are out in the desert camping somewhere. They have no idea what's going on here. Look at me! Please. I've been to every other agency in the city for help. All I've gotten is the runaround. Now I want to know EXACTLY what you're going to do to find them!

      Wayne Lustus: Nothing.

      Ann Webster: What do you mean?

      Wayne Lustus: What I mean is I only have so much time and so much manpower, and I cannot afford the luxury of chasing around for...

      Ann Webster: THEY"RE CHILDREN!

      Wayne Lustus: Five children. Only five. I've got a whole city to worry about.

    • Alternate versions
      In the movie's premiere telecast, the sequence showing the impact and results lasted 4 minutes. In subsequent airings, the sequence was shortened to 2 minutes.
    • Connections
      Featured in Nostradamus 1999 (1981)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 26, 1978 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • A Fire in the Sky
    • Filming locations
      • Sonoran Desert, Arizona, USA
    • Production companies
      • National Broadcasting Company (NBC)
      • Columbia Pictures Television
      • Bill Driskill Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 3h(180 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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