The Towering Inferno

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

James Duncan: Oh, come on. Now just how bad is it?
Chief O'Hallorhan: It's a fire, mister, and all fires are bad.

A 1974 Disaster Movie, co-directed and produced by Irwin Allen, and starring Steve McQueen and Paul Newman (as well as having two directors, it was also the first Hollywood movie to come from two major studios - it was a co-production between Twentieth Century Fox and Warner Bros). It was taken from two books, The Tower and The Glass Inferno. Both books were bought by each studio, then someone realized that two movies about a skyscraper on fire would basically cannibalize both films, so it would be better for both studios to combine resources to make one BIG picture (on a side note, The Glass Inferno was co-written by Thomas N. Scortia, who tends to write a lot of books about out of control fires).

A red-carpet party is being held in San Francisco to celebrate the opening of the world's largest skyscraper, the 138-story Glass Tower. One of the few not celebrating is the architect, Doug Roberts (Paul Newman), who's still upset that developer/builder Jim Duncan (William Holden) cut corners in its construction. He's particularly annoyed at the building's electrical contractor Roger Simmons (Richard Chamberlain) who was instructed by Duncan to "shave off a lot of money from the budget", and also happens to be Duncan's son-in-law. Faye Dunaway also appears as Newman's fiancee.

Sure enough, because of the faulty wiring resulting from said cut corners, a short circuit in a janitor's closet grows into a massive fire. As the guests become trapped in the building, it falls on Fire Chief O'Hallorhan (McQueen) and the San Francisco Fire Department to help save the day.


Tropes used in The Towering Inferno include:

"I sure hope that fire is on the first floor."

  • Precision F-Strike: "Oh, shit!," said by Chief O'Hallorhan when he realizes the top SFFD brass have no way to get him down from the top of the building after he sets the bombs to blow up the water tanks there to extinguish the fire.
    • Roberts uses one on Duncan when chewing him out about cutting corners on the building.
    • "Tie yourselves down, Goddammit!!!"
    • "Oh they'll find some dumb sonnuvabitch to do it."
  • Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony
  • Stuff Blowing Up
  • Take Care of the Kids: An explosion knocks the scenic elevator off its track. Lisolette is holding Angela and shoves her into someone else's arms before the older woman falls from the glass elevator to her death.
  • Those Two Guys: The two firefighters who volunteer to go up the stairs.
  • Too Dumb to Live: The men are looking to see where a fire alarm is being triggered from, and one man proceeds to just open the door on a closet (which, as it turns out, is where the fire is) without checking the door to see if it's hot. The head of maintenance, Will Geddings, tries to stop him, and instead gets burned.
  • Water Tower Down: The fire is resolved by blowing up the huge water tanks on the top of the building.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: So what happened to Wes (the utility guy) and all the people in the power room? And what became of Maureen McGovern?
    • The power room was below the floors where the fire started, so they were just evacuated with everyone else.
    • Almost happens, but averted at the very end with Jernigan and the cat. We see Jernigan save the cat early in the film, he's still in the building when we last see him, but don't see either again until the very end.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: O'Hallorhan gives one of these to Roberts.