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Old 11-02-2025, 12:03   #5
Dude111
An Awesome Dude
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 4,908
Dude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appeal
Dude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appealDude111 has a bronzed appeal
Wow thats interesting thank you!!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris
Personally I think the original film is most interesting because it is a good example of the early days of film-schooled directors making films (as opposed to theatre-trained ones) as well as the super-pessimistic ‘these great big things we’ve built are going to be the death of us!!!’ approach that Hollywood took to disaster movies in the 1970s (see also: The Towering Inferno).
Ya I havent seen the towering inferno. Steve is in that isnt he?

Is that a good film also Chris? (I hear its quite long)

Quote:
This premise was eventually used in the Rob Cohen film Daylight (1996) with Sylvester Stallone.
Might be a good one to see Steve..
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