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Backdraft

Backdraft

Backdraft is a 1991 American action thriller film directed by Ron Howard and written by Gregory Widen.

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edited on 23 Feb, 2022
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Article

Backdraft isBackdrafts a 1991 American action thriller film directed by Ron Howard and written by Gregory Widen. The film stars Kurt Russell, William Baldwin, Scott Glenn, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Rebecca De Mornay, Donald Sutherland, Robert De Niro, Jason Gedrick, and J. T. Walsh, and follows Chicago firefighters on the trail of a serial arsonist. Filming in Chicago began on July 23, 1990, and was wrapped up on December 8, 1990. Before the filming was started, the main actors went out on calls with real Chicago firefighters. All of the main actors also went to the Chicago Fire Academy to learn how to be like firefighters in the film.

Table

Title
Date
Link

Backdraft Official Trailer

December 12, 2011

https://yandex.ru/video/preview/?filmId=2672605721569368838&from=tabbar&reqid=1645632757899737-10847450486642980798-vla1-4679-vla-l7-balancer-8080-BAL-3870&suggest_reqid=66483316161194461227573053552246&text=backdraft+%D0%BE%D1%84%D0%B8%D1%86%D0%B8%D0%B0%D0%BB%D1%8C%D0%BD%D1%8B%D0%B9+%D1%82%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%B9%D0%BB%D0%B5%D1%80

Infobox
Launch date
May 24, 1991
Genre
‌
Action film
Timeline

May 14, 2019

The film, titled Backdraft 2, was released direct-to-

May 24, 1991

Backdraft (1991) - IMDb
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edited on 23 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Infobox (+2 properties)
Timeline (-1 events) (-144 characters)
Article (-7399 characters)
Table (-161 characters)
Article

The film was released on May 24, 1991 to favorable reviews from critics, and grossed $152.4 million worldwide. The film received three Oscar nominations. The film also inspired a special effects attraction at Universal Studios Hollywood, which opened in 1992 and closed in 2010. It was followed by the sequel Backdraft 2 in 2019, with Baldwin and Sutherland reprising their roles.

Plot

Two firefighters of Engine 17 of the Chicago Fire Department are brothers. Lt. Stephen "Bull" McCaffrey, the elder, is experienced, while Brian has labored under his brother's shadow his entire life. Brian returns to firefighting after a number of other careers falter, though Stephen has doubts that Brian is still fit to be a firefighter. In 1971, Brian witnessed the death of their firefighting father, Captain Dennis McCaffrey, while accompanying him on a call. The longest-serving of all the men at Engine 17, John "Axe" Adcox, served under the McCaffreys' father, and was like an uncle to the boys when their father died. Adcox grows concerned about Stephen's unorthodox methods and disregard for safety procedures, as does Stephen's wife Helen, separating from Stephen to protect herself and their son Sean.

Inspector Donald "Shadow" Rimgale, a dedicated arson investigator and veteran firefighter, is called in because a number of recent explosive fires resemble those set by pyromaniac Ronald Bartel, who has been imprisoned for years. Brian is reassigned as his assistant after a falling out with Stephen. Rimgale manipulates Ronald's obsession with fire to ensure his annual parole application is rejected. It is revealed during an investigation that Chicago City Council alderman Marty Swayzak, who has supported fire department budget cuts, was paid off by contractors to shut down firehouses so they could be converted into community centers, with the contractors receiving contracts for the construction. Brian also rekindles a relationship with Jennifer Vaitkus, an aide to Swayzak.

When Engine 17 answers a call in a high-rise, Stephen urges them to move in quickly, despite Adcox's advice to wait for back-up. Brian's friend and fellow trainee, Tim Krizminski, opens a door, triggering a backdraft. His face is burned beyond recognition, and he barely survives. Adcox and Brian both condemn Stephen for what happened. Rimgale and Brian go to Swayzak's home to confront him after learning of his connection to the three backdraft victims Alan Seagrave, Donald Cosgrove and Jeffery Holcomb, interrupting a masked man about to set the place on fire. The latter attacks them with a flashlight but is burned on his shoulder by an electrical socket. Rimgale saves Brian and Swayzak from the house but is injured in an explosion. In his hospital bed, Rimgale tells Brian to visit Ronald again, who helps Brian realize that only a firefighter would be so careful as to not let backdraft fires rage out of control.

Brian suspects Stephen but spots a burn in the shape of an electrical socket on Adcox's back and reveals his suspicions to his brother just before an alarm. When Brian realizes that Adcox has heard their exchange, he jumps aboard Truck 46 after borrowing some turnout gear. Stephen confronts Adcox about the backdrafts during a multiple-alarm fire at a chemical plant. Adcox admits that he set the fires to kill Swayzak's associates, because Swayzak was benefiting from the deaths of firefighters and closing down firehouses. When an explosion destroys the catwalk they are on, Stephen grabs Adcox's hand while hanging on to the remains of the catwalk. Stephen refuses Adcox's advice to let go of him, and loses his grip on the catwalk. Stephen lands on the lower catwalk, but Adcox dies when he falls into fire. Stephen dies with Brian by his side on the way to the hospital, with his final request being that Brian must not reveal Adcox to be the perpetrator so as not to hurt the fire department's reputation.

After Stephen and Adcox's funeral, Brian and Rimgale, with the help of the police, interrupt Swayzak at a press conference. Rimgale questions Swayzak on a fake manpower study that led to the deaths of several firemen, including Stephen and Adcox. They also state that Swayzak engineered the downsizing of the Chicago Fire Department, destroying Swayzak's mayoral ambitions. Brian continues as a firefighter, carrying on his family's firefighting tradition despite the loss of his father and brother. The film ends as Brian helps a rookie firefighter with his turnout gear as the department responds to a call.

Cast

Kurt Russell as Lieutenant Stephen "Bull" McCaffrey

Russell also plays Captain Dennis McCaffrey

William Baldwin as Probationary Firefighter Brian McCaffrey

Robert De Niro as Inspector Donald "Shadow" Rimgale, Office of Fire Investigation

Donald Sutherland as Ronald Bartel

Jennifer Jason Leigh as Jennifer Vaitkus

Scott Glenn as Senior Firefighter John "Axe" Adcox

Rebecca De Mornay as Helen McCaffrey

Jason Gedrick as Probationary Firefighter Tim Krizminski

J. T. Walsh as Alderman Martin Swayzak

Cedric Young as Grindle

Jack McGee as Otis Schmidt

Ryan Todd as Brian, age 7

Johnny Baker as Brian Stunt double, age 7

John Duda as Stephen, age 12

Clint Howard as Ricco, morgue attendant

David Crosby as 70s hippie

Realism

Fire fighting professionals have noted that most real structure fires differ from what is shown in the movie by having smoke conditions that obscure vision inside the building almost completely.

The pictures of firefighters searching in movies like Backdraft do not really show what it is like to search in a fire. Firefighters are shown advancing through fully involved structure fires while not wearing the complete complement of protective gear (Nomex hoods, radios, PASS devices). Most scenes display firefighting without the use of SCBA [self contained breathing apparatus]. Realism in our case would make a very bad movie because the fact is that in almost every fire the smoke conditions completely obscure all vision.

"The movie ... came pretty close at times, but it also suffered from the very same, all too common shortcomings that any visual presentation was bound to encounter Smoke, steam and other miscellaneous factors usually combine to obscure almost everything that is taking place".

Furthermore, fire investigation professionals have dismissed the investigative methods shown in the movie as unscientific, in particular, the portrayal of fire as a living entity.

Music

Backdraft was scored by Hans Zimmer, and features two songs by Bruce Hornsby, "The Show Goes On" (which was previously released on his album Scenes from the Southside) and the new song "Set Me in Motion". Zimmer's score was pared to about 30 minutes for release on the soundtrack album, which also features both Hornsby songs. The soundtrack was issued by Milan Records on May 14, 1991. The track ‘Fighting 17th’ was used as the main theme for RTÉ’s Six Nations Championship coverage in Ireland.

Release

Home media

The film has been released on many formats with it first on VHS and then DVD. In 2006 a 2-disc DVD Anniversary Edition was issued. On January 4, 2011 Universal Pictures released a Blu-ray 'Anniversary Edition' with many of the features ported from the previous DVD release including four featurettes, 43-minutes of deleted scenes, a 3-minute Ron Howard introduction and trailers. It was released for the first time as a two-disc Ultra HD Blu-ray package on May 4, 2019.

Table

Name
Role
LinkedIn

J. T. Walsh

Alderman Martin Swayzak

https://twitter.com/J_T_Walsh

Jason Gedrick

Probationary Firefighter Tim Krizminski

https://twitter.com/gee_dunk

Kurt Russell

Lieutenant Stephen "Bull" McCaffrey

https://twitter.com/thekurtrussell

Rebecca De Mornay

Helen McCaffrey

https://twitter.com/rebeccademonray

William Baldwin

Probationary Firefighter Brian McCaffrey

https://twitter.com/williambaldwin4

Infobox
Country
United States
United States
Directed by
Ron Howard
Ron Howard
Timeline

March 2018

it was announced that Universal had tapped Spanish director Gonzalo López-Gallego to direct the sequel with William Baldwin reprising his role.
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Foly Flay
edited on 23 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Categories (+1 topics)
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Foly Flay
edited on 23 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Timeline (+2 events) (+197 characters)
Timeline

May 14, 2019

The film, titled Backdraft 2, was released direct-to-

March 2018

it was announced that Universal had tapped Spanish director Gonzalo López-Gallego to direct the sequel with William Baldwin reprising his role.
Edits on 20 Feb, 2022
Foly Flay profile picture
Foly Flay
edited on 20 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Table (+3 rows) (+6 cells) (+81 characters)
Table

Name
Role
LinkedIn

Clint Howard

Ricco, morgue attendant

David Crosby

70s hippie

John Duda

Stephen, age 12

Foly Flay profile picture
Foly Flay
edited on 20 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Table (+3 rows) (+6 cells) (+80 characters)
Table

Name
Role
LinkedIn

Jack McGee

Otis Schmidt

Johnny Baker

Brian Stunt double, age 7

Ryan Todd

Brian, age 7

Foly Flay profile picture
Foly Flay
edited on 20 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Table (+2 rows) (+5 cells) (+82 characters)
Table

Name
Role
LinkedIn

Cedric Young

Grindle

J. T. Walsh

Alderman Martin Swayzak

https://twitter.com/J_T_Walsh

Foly Flay profile picture
Foly Flay
edited on 20 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Table (+3 rows) (+8 cells) (+194 characters)
Table

Name
Role
LinkedIn

Jason Gedrick

Probationary Firefighter Tim Krizminski

https://twitter.com/gee_dunk

Rebecca De Mornay

Helen McCaffrey

https://twitter.com/rebeccademonray

Scott Glenn

Senior Firefighter John "Axe" Adcox

Foly Flay profile picture
Foly Flay
edited on 20 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Table (+2 rows) (+4 cells) (+66 characters)
Table

Name
Role
LinkedIn

Donald Sutherland

Ronald Bartel

Jennifer Jason Leigh

Jennifer Vaitkus

Foly Flay profile picture
Foly Flay
edited on 20 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Table (+2 rows) (+6 cells) (+171 characters)
Table

Name
Role
LinkedIn

Kurt Russell

Lieutenant Stephen "Bull" McCaffrey

https://twitter.com/thekurtrussell

William Baldwin

Probationary Firefighter Brian McCaffrey

https://twitter.com/williambaldwin4

Foly Flay profile picture
Foly Flay
edited on 20 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Article (+986 characters)
Article

Music

Backdraft was scored by Hans Zimmer, and features two songs by Bruce Hornsby, "The Show Goes On" (which was previously released on his album Scenes from the Southside) and the new song "Set Me in Motion". Zimmer's score was pared to about 30 minutes for release on the soundtrack album, which also features both Hornsby songs. The soundtrack was issued by Milan Records on May 14, 1991. The track ‘Fighting 17th’ was used as the main theme for RTÉ’s Six Nations Championship coverage in Ireland.

Release

Home media

The film has been released on many formats with it first on VHS and then DVD. In 2006 a 2-disc DVD Anniversary Edition was issued. On January 4, 2011 Universal Pictures released a Blu-ray 'Anniversary Edition' with many of the features ported from the previous DVD release including four featurettes, 43-minutes of deleted scenes, a 3-minute Ron Howard introduction and trailers. It was released for the first time as a two-disc Ultra HD Blu-ray package on May 4, 2019.

Foly Flay profile picture
Foly Flay
edited on 20 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Article (+1887 characters)
Article

Cast

Kurt Russell as Lieutenant Stephen "Bull" McCaffrey

Russell also plays Captain Dennis McCaffrey

William Baldwin as Probationary Firefighter Brian McCaffrey

Robert De Niro as Inspector Donald "Shadow" Rimgale, Office of Fire Investigation

Donald Sutherland as Ronald Bartel

Jennifer Jason Leigh as Jennifer Vaitkus

Scott Glenn as Senior Firefighter John "Axe" Adcox

Rebecca De Mornay as Helen McCaffrey

Jason Gedrick as Probationary Firefighter Tim Krizminski

J. T. Walsh as Alderman Martin Swayzak

Cedric Young as Grindle

Jack McGee as Otis Schmidt

Ryan Todd as Brian, age 7

Johnny Baker as Brian Stunt double, age 7

John Duda as Stephen, age 12

Clint Howard as Ricco, morgue attendant

David Crosby as 70s hippie

Realism

Fire fighting professionals have noted that most real structure fires differ from what is shown in the movie by having smoke conditions that obscure vision inside the building almost completely.

The pictures of firefighters searching in movies like Backdraft do not really show what it is like to search in a fire. Firefighters are shown advancing through fully involved structure fires while not wearing the complete complement of protective gear (Nomex hoods, radios, PASS devices). Most scenes display firefighting without the use of SCBA [self contained breathing apparatus]. Realism in our case would make a very bad movie because the fact is that in almost every fire the smoke conditions completely obscure all vision.

"The movie ... came pretty close at times, but it also suffered from the very same, all too common shortcomings that any visual presentation was bound to encounter Smoke, steam and other miscellaneous factors usually combine to obscure almost everything that is taking place".

Furthermore, fire investigation professionals have dismissed the investigative methods shown in the movie as unscientific, in particular, the portrayal of fire as a living entity.

Foly Flay profile picture
Foly Flay
edited on 20 Feb, 2022
Edits made to:
Description (+103 characters)
Article (+5155 characters)
Topic thumbnail

Backdraft

Backdraft is a 1991 American action thriller film directed by Ron Howard and written by Gregory Widen.

Article

Backdraft is a 1991 American action thriller film directed by Ron Howard and written by Gregory Widen. The film stars Kurt Russell, William Baldwin, Scott Glenn, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Rebecca De Mornay, Donald Sutherland, Robert De Niro, Jason Gedrick, and J. T. Walsh, and follows Chicago firefighters on the trail of a serial arsonist. Filming in Chicago began on July 23, 1990, and was wrapped up on December 8, 1990. Before the filming was started, the main actors went out on calls with real Chicago firefighters. All of the main actors also went to the Chicago Fire Academy to learn how to be like firefighters in the film.

The film was released on May 24, 1991 to favorable reviews from critics, and grossed $152.4 million worldwide. The film received three Oscar nominations. The film also inspired a special effects attraction at Universal Studios Hollywood, which opened in 1992 and closed in 2010. It was followed by the sequel Backdraft 2 in 2019, with Baldwin and Sutherland reprising their roles.

Plot

Two firefighters of Engine 17 of the Chicago Fire Department are brothers. Lt. Stephen "Bull" McCaffrey, the elder, is experienced, while Brian has labored under his brother's shadow his entire life. Brian returns to firefighting after a number of other careers falter, though Stephen has doubts that Brian is still fit to be a firefighter. In 1971, Brian witnessed the death of their firefighting father, Captain Dennis McCaffrey, while accompanying him on a call. The longest-serving of all the men at Engine 17, John "Axe" Adcox, served under the McCaffreys' father, and was like an uncle to the boys when their father died. Adcox grows concerned about Stephen's unorthodox methods and disregard for safety procedures, as does Stephen's wife Helen, separating from Stephen to protect herself and their son Sean.

Inspector Donald "Shadow" Rimgale, a dedicated arson investigator and veteran firefighter, is called in because a number of recent explosive fires resemble those set by pyromaniac Ronald Bartel, who has been imprisoned for years. Brian is reassigned as his assistant after a falling out with Stephen. Rimgale manipulates Ronald's obsession with fire to ensure his annual parole application is rejected. It is revealed during an investigation that Chicago City Council alderman Marty Swayzak, who has supported fire department budget cuts, was paid off by contractors to shut down firehouses so they could be converted into community centers, with the contractors receiving contracts for the construction. Brian also rekindles a relationship with Jennifer Vaitkus, an aide to Swayzak.

When Engine 17 answers a call in a high-rise, Stephen urges them to move in quickly, despite Adcox's advice to wait for back-up. Brian's friend and fellow trainee, Tim Krizminski, opens a door, triggering a backdraft. His face is burned beyond recognition, and he barely survives. Adcox and Brian both condemn Stephen for what happened. Rimgale and Brian go to Swayzak's home to confront him after learning of his connection to the three backdraft victims Alan Seagrave, Donald Cosgrove and Jeffery Holcomb, interrupting a masked man about to set the place on fire. The latter attacks them with a flashlight but is burned on his shoulder by an electrical socket. Rimgale saves Brian and Swayzak from the house but is injured in an explosion. In his hospital bed, Rimgale tells Brian to visit Ronald again, who helps Brian realize that only a firefighter would be so careful as to not let backdraft fires rage out of control.

Brian suspects Stephen but spots a burn in the shape of an electrical socket on Adcox's back and reveals his suspicions to his brother just before an alarm. When Brian realizes that Adcox has heard their exchange, he jumps aboard Truck 46 after borrowing some turnout gear. Stephen confronts Adcox about the backdrafts during a multiple-alarm fire at a chemical plant. Adcox admits that he set the fires to kill Swayzak's associates, because Swayzak was benefiting from the deaths of firefighters and closing down firehouses. When an explosion destroys the catwalk they are on, Stephen grabs Adcox's hand while hanging on to the remains of the catwalk. Stephen refuses Adcox's advice to let go of him, and loses his grip on the catwalk. Stephen lands on the lower catwalk, but Adcox dies when he falls into fire. Stephen dies with Brian by his side on the way to the hospital, with his final request being that Brian must not reveal Adcox to be the perpetrator so as not to hurt the fire department's reputation.

...

After Stephen and Adcox's funeral, Brian and Rimgale, with the help of the police, interrupt Swayzak at a press conference. Rimgale questions Swayzak on a fake manpower study that led to the deaths of several firemen, including Stephen and Adcox. They also state that Swayzak engineered the downsizing of the Chicago Fire Department, destroying Swayzak's mayoral ambitions. Brian continues as a firefighter, carrying on his family's firefighting tradition despite the loss of his father and brother. The film ends as Brian helps a rookie firefighter with his turnout gear as the department responds to a call.

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 Backdraft

Backdraft is a 1991 American action thriller film directed by Ron Howard and written by Gregory Widen.

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