| Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
| Kurt Russell | ... |
Stephen McCaffrey
|
|
| William Baldwin | ... | ||
| Robert De Niro | ... | ||
| Donald Sutherland | ... | ||
| Jennifer Jason Leigh | ... | ||
| Scott Glenn | ... | ||
| Rebecca De Mornay | ... |
Helen McCaffrey
|
|
| Jason Gedrick | ... |
Tim Krizminski
|
|
| J.T. Walsh | ... |
Marty Swayzak
|
|
|
|
Anthony Mockus Sr. | ... |
Chief John Fitzgerald
(as Tony Mockus Sr.)
|
|
|
Cedric Young | ... |
Grindle
|
|
|
Juan Ramírez | ... | |
|
|
Kevin Casey | ... |
Nightingale
|
| Jack McGee | ... |
Schmidt
|
|
| Mark Wheeler | ... |
Pengelly
|
|
A rookie firefighter tries to earn the respect of his older brother and other firefighters while taking part in an investigation of a string of arson/murders. This detailed look into the duties and private lives of firemen naturally features widespread pyrotechnics and special effects. Written by Keith Loh <loh@sfu.ca>
It's weird to think that when I went to see "Home Alone" in the theaters, "Backdraft" was advertised right before the movie came on. The whole thing is a little grimmer than we usually expect from Ron Howard. It focuses on mutually hostile brothers Stephen (Kurt Russell) and Brian McCaffrey (William Baldwin), both firefighters in Chicago having to put aside their differences to fight an arson outbreak.
True, it doesn't really sound like much of a plot, but Howard knows how to keep everything going. Stephen is the sort of guy with a bad attitude whom you can't help but respect. Brian mainly shows that there was once a time when Alec Baldwin's brothers could act. As for the climax, that is really something that is likely to shock you royally. But don't get me wrong. This is a good movie. Maybe not any kind of masterpiece, but worth seeing nevertheless. Above all, it's not a disaster movie (the less said about "The Towering Inferno" the better). Also starring Robert DeNiro, Donald Sutherland, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Scott Glenn, Rebecca DeMornay and J.T. Walsh.