Firestorm: 72 Hours in Oakland (TV Movie 1993) Poster

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5/10
insiders view
hfites28 July 2008
I have a somewhat different view of this film from most as I have an insider's experience. The film centered on real people on a real street within the fire called Charing Cross Road. I lived on Charing Cross and was one of the last to get out that day. In the movie, for reasons I will never understand, they were very accurate about the name of every street except mine which they fictionalized to "Holly Ridge Road" or something close to that. They also padded really minor details like the size of my neighbors boat. In real life a small row boat in the film a 40 foot yacht. I guess the real story didn't have enough drama in it. Unlike one of the other reviewers I felt the movie was padded out to the full 2 hours. Since the subject was really Charing Cross Road the film should have lasted about 15 minutes which is about the time it took for Charing Cross to become history.

My middle ground rating of the film is based on my love of bad films. This is a bad film but I'm sure that was not their intention. As somebody that went through the fire it's nice to have something like this movie to look at and get a laugh.
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6/10
Jill Clayburgh Gives a Good Performance
dennisleecleven22 October 2011
It took me ages to watch this film which I expected to be worse than what it really was. The introduction of the primary characters was not well scripted at all. It was rather embarrassing. Two-time Oscar Nominee Jill Clayburgh does give a good performance considering the script she had to work with which was not that great. Why she was in a wheelchair wasn't revealed until the end of the film. The three family stories were interwoven clumsily and their actions of evacuating their homes didn't seem all too realistic. Still, after I got engrossed in the scenes of the real fire scenes, I came to like the film. LaVar Burton provided a good performance along with Jill Clayburgh's. I don't think it was as bad as some reviewers have written despite inaccuracies. I am giving it six stars because of the footage of the real fire and for the performances of Jill Clayburgh and LaVar Burton. I've seen far worse TV films than this one.
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5/10
TV movie retelling of a true event
Leofwine_draca7 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
FIRESTORM: 72 HOURS IN OAKLAND is a TV movie retelling of some bush fires that assailed California in 1991. The film has a realistic touch given that most of the scenes involving fire fighting and the like are stock footage taken from the actual news at the time; even some radio announcements are the real thing. The rest is the usual mix of family drama and emotion which is the bread and butter of the TV movie genre because of how cheap it is to film such scenes. Suspense is added by the plight of a disabled woman caught in the middle of the fires while STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION's LeVar Burton plays the fire chief.
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2/10
Fire is bad!
Nikos75 February 2000
I wouldn't have normally spent time commenting on this film but I just wasted 2 hours watching it so I said, "What the heck! An extra 10 minutes of bashing wouldn't hurt!" Well, this looks like a film prepared for school auditoriums, made to show you how bad and dangerous fire can be and what can happen to you if you don't take it seriously! The actors are all amateur (if not, they completely got me fooled!) and, last but not least, be careful: Fire is bad! Really bad!
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1/10
Dreadful rubbish.
joegarbled-7948220 September 2023
Warning: Spoilers
I found this movie to be dreadful rubbish. I was sorely tempted to quit watching at around the fifty minute mark but as I'd decided to leave a review, I felt it was only fair to experience the whole rotten thing.

I don't mind movies made for television, especially if they're based on fact, low budgets don't always equal "clunker" but this was one of those failures and I wondered who it was aimed at, as those most interested, appear to be locals to Oakland, who experienced the horrors of this fire. Well, the vast majority of us don't live anywhere near, and one brush fire is going to look much like any other.

The main characters...a wannabe earth mother, her son, his snarky girlfriend, the fire chief who's the new kid in town, and a few more thrown in to make up the numbers are annoying, totally two-dimensional and instantly forgettable. The acting was very very poor.

The lack of interest in the characters (and their fates) leaves the fire fighting scenes and those soon become tedious, even though this is genuine footage. This viewer assumed, correctly, that the fire would prove devestating, otherwise a movie about it would've been unwarranted, I just didn't expect such awful acting.

Fire is hell, so is war, looking at the damage it leaves is all very well, but if the viewer has zero connection, even a documentary has less meaning to outsiders, so that leaves very little entertainment value for the average watcher of this tv movie, hence my vote of the one star this website insists upon.
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3/10
Not like the real thing!
pzbpgpq14 January 2022
I lost my home and 26 of my neighbors in this fire in October 1991. This made for TV film began production only months after the actual events. There was resistance among homeowners to the making of this film. 3,300 homes had been lost and for the most part we were very traumatized especially those of use who had to escape under the fire which burned from the treetops down. I was one that was trapped on Charing Cross Road and one of the last to get out alive.

When this film was made the producers rebuilt one neighborhood street with false fronts (obvious in the film) they then burned it down. Talk about rubbing salt in open wounds.

Years have passed, life goes on for most of us and the film is still a campy mess. Inside info if you watch this thing. The Asian family (I lived on the same street) with the boat.... The actual boat was a tiny aluminum row boat. Evidently not enough drama in that.
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3/10
not real 72 hours in Oakland
snaggs126 February 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This movie makes the fire look smaller then it was. I know it was pressed for time but they turned a fire that lasted from Sunday October 20th to Wednesday October 23 and made look like it was so easy to fight in just on day. The real fire took more then 1500 men three days to fight. The acting did stink and it looked to well scripted. They act to calm for such a big fire to calm. The worst part of the film was the why the fire crews where pounded by the press at the end when the press had nothing but praise for way the fire was handle. Some did pound them but you will always get a few any way. The best part about this movie was the real fire footage and radio transmissions. If you want to get look at what the real fire was like do yourself a favor look it up don't see the movie. If you want to kill 2 hours watch the movie.
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7/10
Oakland's Urban Holocaust
virek21330 August 2015
California is the state in the U.S. that has historically been the most prone to devastating brushfires. Most often, they occur during the autumn months, in the weeks prior to the first rains of the winter, when hot, dry winds sweep down, turning the landscape tinder-dry. One such example of this was what happened in the hills of Oakland and Berkeley on October 19, 1991, when a small grass fire that was improperly extinguished near the intersection of State Highways 13 and 24 in northeast Oakland caught the scent of the Diablo winds (the Northern California equivalent of the Santa Ana winds that blow through Southern California), and literally exploded into a violent firestorm that burned for several days. By the time the fire was finally put out for real, over fifteen hundred acres had burned, the long-term property damage was $1.5 billion, and twenty-five people had lost their lives, with another 150 being injured.

This is the story told in the 1993 made-for-TV film FIRESTORM: 72 HOURS IN OAKLAND, which mixes in certain dramatic elements with real-life television news footage of the fire, which burned for three days and was, at the time, one of the most catastrophic urban fires in American history. A good cast, including LeVar Burton as Oakland fire chief J. Allan Mather, along with Jill Clayburgh, Keith Coulouris, Richard Yniguez, and Michael Gross, does a fairly good job working with basically an average script that does at times overdo the melodrama in the tradition of many disaster films, both for the small screen and the big screen. With something like the Oakland Hills firestorm, you don't really need it, because the disaster itself is plenty horrifying.

Still, there have been worse films, both for TV and for the big screen, that have been made about real-life disasters, which is why I'm giving FIRESTORM: 72 HOURS IN OAKLAND a '7'.
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7/10
I liked it
Schnigglefritz21 August 2014
Warning: Spoilers
I thought the integration of the real fire footage with the acting was amazing. I wonder how they had actors running around burning buildings. Typical of real life stories, the plot line was really weak. The fire shots are spectacular. There must have been a lot of footage taken of the real fire. At first I wondered how they got the fire footage and then I remembered the Oakland fire. They did put some questionable scenarios in the film. Was one of the problems a lack of efficient communication? Was the fire chief newly appointed? Then when some of the characters return to their homes must have been shot on the real areas. Did they really find their cat alive? Actually, I sort of dislike stories based on real events, like historical novels. One wonders where the reality leaves off and the fiction comes in.
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Best laid plains..
lowj25 August 2001
This looks like an attempt to make a movie out of fire footage, and when there wasn't enough, some actors were tossed in to tell the rest of the story. As the other comments say, the acting is terrifically poor and this film can't decide if it wants to be a drama or a documentary. At times it feels like this belongs on TLC, but then the real fire footage leaves the screen and you remember the amateur acting that's trying to tell the story of the fire's victims.
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