
Color, 1979, 106m.
Directed by Alvin Rakoff
Starring Barry Newman, Susan Clark, Shelley Winters, Leslie Nielsen, James Franciscus, Ava Gardner, Henry Fonda
Scorpion Releasing (Blu-ray & DVD) (US RA/R1 HD/NTSC) / WS (1.78:1) (16:9)
The big-budget American disaster movie was on its last legs at the end of the ‘70s as films like Beyond the Poseidon Adventure, The Swarm, Meteor, The Concorde… Airport ’79, and When Time Ran Out… each nose dived at the box office before Airplane! finally put a nail in its coffin for good. Stuck in this final stretch of titles was an oddball Canadian offering, City on Fire, essentially an urban variation on one of those Irwin Allen made-for-TV disaster semi-spectacles, Fire!, from 1977. Here audiences got to marvel at a roster of Hollywood guest stars fretting around a growing conflagration that threatens to wipe out a city, and most particularly, a hospital filled with its most vulnerable citizens. More of interest to cult movie fans, the film happened to be co-scripted by the legendary Jack Hill (Foxy Brown, Switchblade Sisters) and TV episode gun for fire David P. Lewis, who followed this up with Death Ship.
be a complete jerk. Soon the oil is seeping into the sewage system and posing an incendiary threat to the population at large, with news anchor Maggie (Gardner) covering the escalating panic as attendees at a mayoral
press conference have to seek shelter in a hospital where heroic Dr. Frank Whitman (Vanishing Point’s Newman) spearheads the effort to save as many lives as possible when he isn’t trying to romance Diana (Clark) and grousing about the lacking building materials chosen by people who obviously never saw The Towering Inferno.
giving it any sort of life
for years after its initial opening. The 2016 release from Scorpion Releasing as separate Blu-ray and DVD editions fills in this missing piece of the disaster movie puzzle for what will likely be a fresh viewing experience for many viewers. The 1.78:1 anamorphic transfer looks perfectly satisfactory all things considered, with a warning opening notice about multiple film sources cobbled together here lowering expectations far more than necessary. Colors and detail are solid, print damage is mostly minimal, and it all looks quite authentic for a ‘70s indie film if quite a few steps removed from the glossy, pristine look of some studio films from the same period. The DTS-HD MA 2.0 English audio also gets the job done just fine without going beyond the call of duty. Extras include a TV spot and bonus trailers for Barbarosa, Firepower, and Killer Force.