Falling Fire (1997) Poster

(1997)

User Reviews

Review this title
9 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
Great Storyline, Poor Screenplay
claudio_carvalho17 March 2022
In 2051, Earth is completely depleted and exploring its resources in asteroids by ISA Corporation, while ecologists and eco-terrorists commanded by Lopez (Christian Vidosa) are against the procedure. First officer Daryl Boden (Michael Paré) of a mining spaceship is divorcing his wife Marilyn Boden (Heidi von Palleske), who is a former agent. He is working for a long period steering the asteroid MT-27 through explosions into Earth orbit, with the support of Engineer Rene Lessard (Zerha Leverman) and the crew, for ISA. When Captain Jimmy Rice (Morris Durante) orders a risky maneuver to comply with their schedule, Boden has a friction with him. Soon the crewmembers die one by one in strange accidents, and Boden suspects that one of the survivors might be a terrorist. Meanwhile Marilyn is kidnapped by Lopez, who discloses that he has an infiltrated mole on board of the starship to steer MT-27 to crash on Earth and destroy mankind to cleanse the planet.

"Falling Fire" is a Canadian-American sci-fi release on VHS in Brazil in the 90's. The complex storyline is great, but the screenplay is poor and the direction is slow-paced. This film deserved a better screenplay and edition, since the concept is excellent. My vote is five.

Title (Brazil): "Chuvas de Fogo" ("Rains of Fire")
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Falling Movie
dromasca25 June 2003
There is not too much to be said about this bad film. It's a science-fiction story, with ecological ambitions. Low on budget, and low on inspiration. The story line and the general idea are acceptable, but with the many space disaster movies having been made in the last ten years, and with the terrorism theme that much beaten in movies and in real life this film brings nothing new. I personally had a hard time fighting against falling asleep - even during what were supposed to be the top suspense scenes. A group of unknown actors get more screen time than they are used to, but none of them crosses the threshold of mediocrity. The effects are early 80s TV level. The director put some decency in his work, avoiding to let the film fall completely into ridicule, but this is not enough. 3/10 on my personal scale.
7 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
It's no Deep Impact, but it's a well written film
rdfranciscritic14 February 2023
I started out getting my joint Michael Pare/sci-fi fix with the Canadian-made Space Fury (1999), which aka'd in the good ol' USA on video as In the Dead of Space, but came to enjoy this not-so-bad asteroid-hits-the-Earth rip a hell of a lot more.

Once upon a time, producer Richard Zanuck and David Brown pitched Paramount Pictures with a remake of the studio's proto-disaster film, When Worlds Collide (1951). That late '70s-proposed project went through several screenplay drafts until it landed in "development hell." Zanuck and Brown's next attempt to get the film off the ground in the early '90s came by the way of Steven Spielberg. However, Spielberg has his own asteroid movie in the works when he bought the rights to Arthur C. Clarke's novel, The Hammer of God (1993) -- which itself reminds of Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle's award-winning novel, Lucifer's Hammer (1977), itself a post-apocalypse tale concerned with a rogue comet striking Earth. As result: both projects were combined as one film.

Sadly, that theatrical version of Clarke's work -- set in the year 2109, replete with rich characters, layered plot, political intrigue, and religious zealotry (the asteroid's arrival mixed with warmongering spawned a new world religion) -- was lost amid a series of rewrites that left us with a run-of-the-mill, present-day asteroid flick known as Deep Impact (1998). Then Disney's Touchstone Pictures developed their counter-programming Armageddon (1998) -- complete with Liv Tyler's perpetual-weeping eyes.

That backstory on Deep Impact brings us to this Roger Corman's New Horizon's Pictures-backed production originally known as The Cusp. Produced by Starfield Independent Studios for TMN-The Movie Network, a Canadian premium television network, they spent a mere $2 million -- against the $80 million for Deep Impact. The Cusp was the first of four sci-fi/space films by the joint venture. The others were Future Fear (1997; with Jeff Wincott) and Shepherd (1998; C. Thomas Howell and Roddy Piper), and Cybermaster (1999; aka Shepherd II, starring C. Thomas Howell and Heidi von Palleske, who also stars, here). Now, I haven't watched the other three films, but rest assure: there's prop and set recycling afoot. Plus, reading the synopsis on each: they share subplots of religious cults fighting against technology.

In the end: the closest you'll get to a theatrical version of the plot-complex The Hammer of God is The Cusp, which -- in a shorter, 80-minute joint US video and cable television release -- is known as the more common sense title of Falling Fire.

Set in the year 2051, the ISA (The International Space Agency) sends mining vessels to retrieve asteroids by using a series of detonations to guide them into Earth orbit for mineral stripping. Does it harm the environment? Maybe. But it creates millions of jobs in the process.

During the mission of the Spirit of 49's retrieval of MT-27, the crew begins to experience a series of questionable accidents; a double-agent from the "Children of Gaia," a religious-cum-environmental terrorist organization, is on board. Her orders, which include seducing Micheal Pare (in a sub-zero gravity sex scene one-upping the lame "Dance the Night Away" scene in 2000's Mission to Mars), is sending the asteroid -- and the vessel with its nuke armaments -- into the Earth as a form of "spiritual cleansing."

See, this sound a hell of lot better than putting up with two hours of Tea Leoni's and Elijah Wood's relationship drivel as Morgan Freeman croaks about an "Ark in the mountains" before the inevitable, happens.

Yeah, The Cusp takes a while to get going, but once it gets over the first-act set-up hump, a great story is discovered. The script offers interesting layers and where-is-this-going plot twists, and, most importantly: the relationship subplot between Pare's space-bound Daryl Boden and Heidi von Pallaeske as Pare's Earth-bound CIA agent-wife battling the religious terrorists (that have depth and aren't just slobbering maniacs) on Earth, doesn't derail the action.

What does derail one's watch: the poor CGI spaceship exteriors and asteroid, which, almost, made me turn off the movie. However, the wide-shot (the wider, the better in this case) space and asteroid walk scenes, and the related space suits, are as good any major studio sci-fi film. In addition, the Tubi upload was a grainy, VHS-emulsion scratched copy that's slightly fuzzy, throughout. Not every film can have a 4K digital restore, so beware.

All in all, this wasn't a bad Tubi discovery. As long as one goes in not comparing it to its Hollywood inspirations -- and, most importantly, watch the longer, easier-to-follow Canadian-cut under The Cusp, and not the shorter, Corman-cut known as Falling Fire -- you'll be entertained.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Even Paré is slumming here.
tarbosh2200029 June 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Unfortunately, "Falling Fire" is one of the biggest duds we've seen in a long time.

This 1998 Roger Corman New Horizons release is an unfocused, boring mish-mash. It is clearly a cash-in on the then-current rash of sci-fi hits such as Armageddon (1998), Deep Impact (1998), Johnny Mnemonic (1995), Starship Troopers (1997) Virtuosity (1995), Event Horizon (1997), Deep Rising (1998) and it even manages to rip-off the classic 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). It is especially similar to the more well-known Supernova (2000-filmed in 1998).

Set in space, the plot seems to be some twaddle about a ragtag team of explorers supposedly trying to stop a huge meteor from hitting earth. Meanwhile Captain Daryl Boden (Paré) is having family troubles back on earth. His wife (Von Palleske) even gets into some hot water herself when she gets shot in the foot by the main baddie. Will they save earth from impending destruction? Will Paré emote more than Jeff Fahey or a piece of wood? (Don't) find out tonight! Also trying to horn in on the "V.R. craze" of the mid-1990s, any episode of the kids TV show "V.R. Troopers" (1994-1996) is better than this dreck. The most positive aspect of the movie we can name is the special effects were probably decent for the budget they had and the time it was made. Sadly though, the finished product is tedious with characters talking about scientific gobbledygook instead of making sense or even having action scenes.

We believe we have come up with a reason why Fire is so disjointed and nonsensical and thus not engaging to the viewer: It seems the movie was longer at one point and was haphazardly edited down to a manageable length. The Canadian version under the odd title "The Cusp" has scenes not in the American release.

We all love Paré and even he is slumming this time around. It seems he is sleepwalking and this is not his best moment. He brings no energy, but that is quite apropos as the whole production has no life. Paré was just along for the slow space ride. We also suspect that the American title was changed to Falling Fire to cash-in on Paré's most well-known work Streets Of Fire (1984).

Apparently the chemistry of Paré & Heidi von Palleske was so great after their double whammy of Strip Search (1997) and 2013: The Deadly Wake (1997) it was decided they appear again together in this flick. They should have quit while they were ahead.

This has a direct-to-cable feel and this is an example of a movie that has a short running time but feels much longer. The effects make the asteroid in question look like a gigantic piece of burnt toast and it occurred to us that the entire movie is like one big piece of burnt toast.

Douse out this "Fire" tonight! For more insanity, please visit: comeuppancereviews.com
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Falling Fire has Hot Qualities
gajbard17 June 2003
I've seen the film twice now. I liked it the first time, it had good ideas, good special FX some interesting actors, and managed to keep you guessing.

I don't want to give away the end, but the set up is good, An asteroid being brought into Earth's orbit may be set up to collide with the planet instead causing destruction beyond recovery, that's not original , but the twists are neat- Ecological terrorist are behind it all. These terrorists are well thought out, inteligent, even disturbingly sympathetic. The hard questions about what we're doing to ur world, and the moral issues about extremeists are well woven into a fabric of action, suspense and good old whodunit.

I can tell its a good film, the second viewing still held surprises, suspense and good effects.
8 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A bit slow paced but very well written tale
asinyne17 November 2011
It took awhile (most of the first half of the film) for this one to get going but I stuck with it and felt rewarded later. The bad guys are eco- terrorists and really nasty. I really enjoyed it when they got theirs...ha! The production values were actually pretty well done considering this was a Roger Corman project. The cast was a bit uneven, either really good or pretty awful. The good girl lead was awful whilst the bad girl lead was excellent...and so it went. Pare was effective as usual.

I really thought the film told a compelling story, no shortcomings there. I recommend this movie if you enjoy somewhat low budget sci-fi that delivers a pretty big bang for the buck. Here is some clever film making...albeit it was a little to casual in the beginning. Pacing does matter! If you come across a copy somewhere check it out, I enjoyed it. It is definitely a lot better than the 4.4 it scored here.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
A.C. Clarke's "The Hammer of God" as a TV Movie
headfella5 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I'm obviously in the minority here, but I really enjoyed this film. Terrorism in Space. The religious terrorist cult aspect of the film is now (2007) more relevant than pre-911 which is when this movie was produced. Based on the user comments herein, it's unfortunate that Hollywood's 'big budget - big stars' treatment of asteroid doomsday impact seem to have biased the north American audience against a low budget version. I would recommend reading The Hammer of God and then seeing this film. Unfortunately the movie ends with the close encounter - atmospheric rebound as the asteroid glances off the earth's atmosphere. Even a near miss would be catastrophic with an object of this size. The final shot of the movie shows a minor streak high in the earth's atmosphere as children play on a beach. The meteor streaks by briefly. Earth is saved. The truth is even a near miss would have global climate impacts. The terrorists would win, but that's another movie I guess. ........
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Pretty good story with a different plot twist.
Byrd-224 February 1999
C'mon! It's not that bad. Oscar material, no, but as a human interest story it's actually pretty good. Different kind of twist with the male lead (Pare) involved shipboard with a girl who turns out to be a "baddie," while his soon-to-be-ex-wife back on earth helps save the day ...

If you take the story on its own and don't try to compare it to the blockbusters like "Armageddon" or "Deep Impact," it's really quite enjoyable. The effects are pretty good too. And the added dimension of environmental terrorism is quite nineties and, if you live in a "green-aware" place like I do, really quite unnerving and all too believable. Pare is a terrific actor and, though all too often unfortunately paired with lesser talents, nevertheless manages to give quite a good performance. Give it a try.
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A stink in space. It's no Deep Impact.
Tiny-1324 January 1999
Sci-fi filmmaking has hit a new low with this tired re-hashing of the "Armageddon" and "Deep Impact" genre. Not surprising as the film is one in a long line of bombs from Producers Network Associates ("Deadly Wake", "Future Fear", "Replikator", etc.). Yet again they have pulled in the talented Michael Pare and reduced his acting abilities to the lowest common denominator; good-looks and sex appeal.

Michael Pare who has shown his incredible capabilities in such hit films as "Eddie and the Cruisers" and "Hope Floats", is directed to mumble his way through this space adventure which, despite its dull and unbelievable plot, actually looks as though PNA put some dollars into the effects. The space walk scenes rival anything coming out of a major studio. Unfortunately that's as good as it gets and the audience will find themselves begging for the asteroid to destroy Michael Pare's spacecraft and put a quick end to this incredibly dull film.
5 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed