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This unexceptional made-for-TV
effort was clearly intended as a low-budget knockoff of the two
spring 1997 releases, DANTE'S PEAK and VOLCANO, which were supposed
to resurrect the late, unlamented disaster-movie genre.
The California ski resort of
Angel Lakes is enjoying its best tourist season in years, making the
mayor (Don Davis) and a businessman, Corbin (John Novak), eager to
unleash development. The police chief (Brian Kerwin) and his sister,
Kelly (Cynthia Gibb), of the Mountain Patrol are concerned about
dead animals felled by carbon dioxide leaks and two missing skiers,
who've fallen into a fissure created by seismic activity on the
mountain named Angel Peak.
State geologist Peter Slater
(Dan Cortese) is monitoring the seismic situation from afar. After
failing to convince his boss that an eruption is imminent, he
returns to his native Angel Lakes in time to save his bitter
ex-girlfriend, Kelly, from being asphyxiated by gas from the
mountain. They warn the mayor, who does nothing. Angel Peak erupts,
trapping tourists and townspeople. This scuttles Corbin's attempt to
land a big investor; in his home, Corbin's alienated wife is
seriously injured and eventually rescued by Peter and Kelly. The
police chief's pregnant wife, Beth (Kendall Cross), caught in a rock
slide, gives birth with the aid of Corbin's son, Jason (Micah
Gardener), who has left his mother to find help. Everyone has taken
shelter in the ski lodge when the major eruption occurs. With the
lodge directly in the lava's path, the cowardly Corbin tries to
escape and is killed. Peter and Kelly must act fast: using dynamite,
they set off an avalanche of snow that successfully blocks the lava.
They ski to safety in front of the avalanche and their romance is
rekindled.
The predictability of VOLCANO:
FIRE ON THE MOUNTAIN's story line is accentuated by gaping holes,
such as the sudden birth of a healthy child (which happens
off-screen, presumably during a commercial break) in a remote
visitor's center. That said, the avalanche climax is a nifty
solution and within the realm of possibility. The script is no more
or less pedestrian than is the standard for the disaster genre, with
its share of clinkers. ("Angel's gonna blow," "Something bad is
coming and God help us if we don't get out of its way!") The special
effects are adequate, but the opening scene registers as the low
point, since tremors accompanying the volcanic activity clearly have
been generated by shaking the camera. Most of the destruction is
photographed using medium shots with a liberal use of models; what
little lava is shown looks real enough. The direction by Graeme
Campbell is efficient, with the film containing the requisite number
of fearful reaction-shots.
--
www.tvguide.com
A dashing geologist discovers
with horror that a peaceful resort is actually a throbbing hotbed of
subterranean volcanic mayhem waiting to explode. But the powers that
be don't believe him--until the lodge's staff and guests are all in
terrible danger from the resultant tides of marauding magma. Is it
too late?
-- www.cduniverse.com
-- www.eonline.com
--
www.ifilm.com
--
www.rottentomatoes.com
-- www.videoflicks.com
No one will listen to the
warnings of a geologist when he discovers that a popular ski resort
is sitting on top of a long-dormant volcano that's about to
blow--until the mountaintop erupts and threatens everything and
everyone in sight! Exciting actioner stars Dan Cortese, Cynthia Gibb
and Brian Kerwin. 98 min.
--
www.moviesunlimited.com
Made-for-TV movie in which a scientist tries to convince local
residents that a nearby volcano is on the verge of eruption.
--
www.reel.com |