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  • During the unsettled atmosphere of the late 1960s and the 1970s, films dealing with people victimized by natural and unnatural disasters were all the rage, and this tale of several couples trapped at the top of a tall burning building is an undistinguished example. An obvious attempt to capitalize upon the box-office success of THE TOWERING INFERNO, this effort, titled BLAZING TOWER before sagely being changed, is set in an unidentified New York City, on the opposite coast from the former production's San Francisco. Occurring upon Christmas Eve, the script follows obligatory romantic entanglements involving three pair of illy-matched employees during a company's annual holiday party, and with a much smaller budget than INFERNO, this work made for television displays lesser lights in its cast. Television film director Jerry Jameson routinely leads many of this type of calamity narrative, and mediocre describes this affair, although the skillful editing, largely by Jameson, effectively moves the action past points of tedium. While John Forsythe and Anjanette Comer are edging toward an adulterous romance, Don Meredith and Joseph Campanella are helping themselves to proffered charms from others of the secretarial class as the holocaust approaches. While actual New York City firemen struggle manfully with the encroaching blaze, flashbacks are utilized so that we may fully appreciate the risks, romantic and otherwise, milked by the threatened sextet. It is best to overlook some flawed tactical firefighting operations as presented in order to develop a sense of suspense as to the picture's outcome, but in any case the trite romantic machinations take precedence in the scenario. The cast performance is of a piece with its non-demanding script wherein lack the seeds to garner deep interest of performers, although Forsythe is as unruffled as ever.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    TERROR ON THE 40TH FLOOR is the budget television movie version of THE TOWERING INFERNO, made on a fraction of that classic disaster flick's budget and without anything approaching the style or finesse. However, it's not quite as bad as I expected it to be, once you get over the various shortcomings. These include an overreliance on flashbacks to reveal the back stories of the main characters, a technique which quickly becomes tiresome when you want the story to focus on the main action. As usual, a small group of characters (including familiar television faces like John Forsythe and Joseph Campanella) are trapped when a fire breaks out below and gradually rises. The firefighting scenes have an appropriate fierceness to them, and once the characters realise their plight there are some good set-pieces, like the attempted escape in the elevator shaft.
  • BandSAboutMovies3 January 2021
    Warning: Spoilers
    How can this be a ripoff of The Towering Inferno when it came out a few months before that movie? I assume that they read in Variety about that film and said, "Let's get this on TV in a hurry!" That's not a bad thing, though.

    Director Jerry Jameson made Hurricane, Heatwave!, The Deadly Night Tower, Superdome, Raise the Titanic! and Airport '77, so he knows all about disasters (he also made The Bat People and The Secret Night Caller, so he's a favorite around here). He's working from a script by Jack Turley (Prey for the Wildcats, Empire of the Ants) and Edward Montagne.

    A Christmas party goes on way too long, which leads to a fire starting in the basement and making it to, well, the fortieth floor. But if you love disaster movies, you know that the plot is secondary to the cast of stars who will be sacrificed for our entertainment.

    This one has Dynasty star John Forsythe, TV movie vet Joseph Campanella, Lynn Carlin, Anjanette Comer from The Baby, Monday Night Football announcer Don Meredith, Pippa Scott, Bon Hastings (who also faced death in The Poseidon Adventure) and more. Yeah, it's not the kind of cast that Irwin Allen would have assembled. Even stranger, only one person dies. Come on - have we learned nothing from movies like Earthquake, where Hollywood favorites are snuffed out with impunity?
  • This is basically a TV movie version of the 70's theatrical disaster classic "The Towering Inferno". Naturally, it's much lower budgeted than its inspiration, so the high-rise fire in this building is much less towering and not so much of an inferno. (Of course, people that grew up after the advent of CGI probably wouldn't find even the big-budget spectacle of the original film that impressive today, and even many of us who were born before CGI ironically find ALL special effects pretty unimpressive now since any doofus with a good computer program can create just about anything these days).

    The plot involves a group of characters who are having a smaller, private party in the boss's high-rise suite after the official office Christmas party breaks up. They become trapped by a fire started by a dimwitted janitor. The fire department comes to the rescue, but they are unaware of the trapped people. The characters consist of the boss (John Forsythe) who is being tempted towards infidelity by a luscious, predatory secretary (Anjanette Comer). There is a lower level executive (Joseph Campanella)who convinces another secretary to break into his personnel file, and then spends the rest of the movie pouting that he is not getting a promotion. There is another executive hitting on a yet another naive secretary. Finally, there is another older secretary (Lynn Carlin) who is struggling with guilt over a recent abortion.

    Of course, this movie doesn't have nearly the star power of "The Towering Inferno". Forsythe, Campanella, and Comer are not Paul Newman, Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway. But the bigger problem is the characters they play. I didn't really care whether any of these corporate cretins or office drones lived or died--well,except perhaps Anjanette Comer whose gold-digging character is totally unsympathetic, but she is wearing this slinky red dress that clings to every mouth-watering curve. . .But with all due respect to Ms. Comer, when you're drooling over a fully-clothed actress in 70's made-for-TV movie, it's probably a good indication you're NOT being too entertained otherwise. Besides, while I'm not so sure about Forsythe and Campanella, if you've seen Comer in the cult film "The Baby" or Lynn Carlin in the horror classic "Deathdream", you know that even some members of this relatively low-watt cast are capable of much more when they're given good material to work with. It is really the material and the thinly-drawn characters--not the special effects or the star power--that let's this movie down.
  • boblipton4 January 2009
    The Disaster Movies of the late 1960s and 1970s seem to owe their success to the spectacle involved. If you have a really big building on fire or a gigantic ship sinking at sea or an earthquake ripping down a city, it's very impressive. But once you get past the big set piece, you still have to photograph people and stories in interesting ways or you don't really have anything.

    John Ford was once asked why he took his film crews out to Monument Valley for westerns. Instead of speaking of the beauty of the location, the fact that other other sites for westerns were too familiar, he replied "To photograph the most interesting thing in the world: a human face."

    Unfortunately, while there are a lot of human faces in this movie, they don't seem to be doing anything we haven't seen a hundred times and more. The lines are well read, John Forsythe speaks his lines meaningfully, Joseph Campanella plays a jerk as well as he ever did, but nothing is ever meaningfully solved. Oh, under the stress of Imminent Death and 1970s pre-disco music, people Figure Out What Is Really Important. But six months afterwards, they probably change their minds.

    So all you're left with of potential interest is the fire. And you've seen a fire, haven't you?
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Hollywood was notorious in the 1970's for finding out about big projects going on and rushing a "B" version of the same story out, seemingly to sabotage their rivals. With Irwin Allen's "The Towering Inferno" in the process of being edited, television producers rushed to get out a "B" version of the same story, taking John Forsythe to the top of the corporate ladder years before he assumed the head of a Denver based oil company on TV's "Dynasty". Like "The Towering Inferno", it is the night of a big party inside the Los Angeles based sky-scraper, and fire breaks out, trapping the unknowing guests inside. There's tons of soapy subplots and corporate intrigue to go on to fill a two-hour "Dynasty" season finale, yet that was done much better on the glamorous soap which had audiences hooked week after week throughout the 1980's.

    Some of the effects are adequately done with some grizzly deaths providing shock, but with "Earthquake" already having shown similar scenes the previous year and "Inferno" about to do the same thing (much better), this tower ends up being quite unmemorable, even if there are some good performances by some familiar faces (mostly from T.V. guest appearances). The fault lies with a rushed together script that seems to have taken pre-release press sheets of "Inferno" and tossed a screenplay together faster than a fireman tosses water on flames.
  • virek2131 January 2018
    Warning: Spoilers
    Disaster films were a big staple of the 1970s, but they weren't limited to the big screen. In point of place, there were far more of them being done for television. The constructions of these small-scale productions, however, wasn't substantially altered from their bigger brethren: place a bunch of all-stars in a cataclysm; spice some personal melodrama and soap opera theatrics in there; get the special effects onto the screen; and then get out of the way. Such was the case with "Terror On The 40th Floor", which aired on September 17, 1974.

    Perhaps designed specifically to jump the gun on "The Towering Inferno", this TV opus, like that big-screen disaster classic, focuses on a Christmas Eve party in a high-rise, this time a 40-story building in the Big Apple. But when a maintenance worker (Tim Herbert) is killed by an explosion near the ground floor of the building, a fire erupts within the building's interior and, as in "Inferno", it begins a night of soul-searching and personal drama for the cast, as the fire inches closer to their 40th floor locale. And it's a pretty big cast we have here: John Forsythe (known for his roles on "Father Knows Best" and "Dynasty", but also on the big screen for his portrayal of Kansas lawman Alvin Dewey in the 1967 crime classic "in Cold Blood"; Joseph Campanella; Don Meredith (former Dallas Cowboys legend and then-current NFL broadcaster); Lynn Carlin; Anjanette Comer; Kelly Jean Peters; Pippa Scott; and Tracie Savage.

    Given that the film can't really overcome most of the typical disaster film soap opera stuff inherent in the Jack Turley teleplay, the film does have a certain panache to it, thanks in large part to a good cast and the sure-footed direction by TV (and occasional big screen) veteran Jerry Jameson, who did many such made-for-TV disaster flicks during the decade ("Hurricane"; "A Fire In The Sky:; "Starflight One"; "Heat Wave"), while also helming a big screen entry into the genre in 1977's "Airport '77". And the scenes involving the fire in a direct way are effective enough, even if they don't quite match what would be done in "The Towering Inferno", or the later 1991 Ron Howard offering "Backdraft".

    So while "Terror On The 40th Floor" isn't on the level of "The Towering Inferno", I am willing to give it a '6' rating for effort.
  • If anything else, this film and other disaster pictures shall serve as a tribute to the local Fire Departments putting their lives on the line to rescue people in such awful circumstances. This picture shall serve as such a tribute.

    It's basically the story of several guys and gals who stay behind after the Christmas Office Party has broken up. Unfortunately, it is not realized that several people are trapped on the top floor until the fire has really spread.

    Naturally, those who stayed behind are unhappy during this season of love for a variety of reasons and effective flashbacks show us what brought these people to their current dangerous situation.

    Yes, this is the typical disaster film of the 1970s but it is done well and is nicely paced. John Forsyth, as the company's vice president, along with employee Joseph Campanella, who is annoyed that he will be passed up for a promotion, deliver fine performances.
  • Seven stragglers at a Christmas Eve office party are trapped when fire breaks out in their Art Deco high-rise, and no one knows they are up there.

    This darkly lit, small scale TV version of The Towering Inferno also throws in moments from Earthquake (attempts to scale the elevator shaft), and The Poseidon Adventure (lots of Christmas tree imagery - I thought at one point they were even going to use the tree itself to climb down the elevator shaft).

    A news reporter on the scene helpfully explains that despite little external evidence of a fire, it is raging over several floors inside. The TV budget clearly didn't extend to burning skyscraper model shots. We do get several blazing office interiors.

    It is not terrible, though the final segment drags. The actors play their parts well and I did care about the characters. There are some ridiculous bits of padding around commercial break cliffhangers and interoffice tensions resurface as colleagues argue about what they should do. The soap opera-style flashbacks are mercifully brief.

    Pippa Scott's short scenes are the funniest.
  • The 1970s produced some fine made-for-television movies like "Brian's Song" and "Dr. Cook's Garden". However, it seems that for every good made- for-television movie like those, there was a stinker like "Terror On The 40th Floor". My guess is that this movie was rushed into production to take advantage of the publicity building for the theatrical movie "The Towering Inferno". I guess that, because the story and characters in this imitator are sorely lacking. The characters in this movie are a boring lot. I didn't care about them, and they seem pretty dim-witted. Why don't they use the fire escape stairs? Why don't they break a window and send "Help!" messages to the streets below? Those and other questions are never answered. And no doubt because of the low budget, the fire footage is infrequent and lacking in power during the few times it's displayed. The end result is a very tedious and boring effort, so it's no wonder why there was apparently no one keeping track of it to prevent it from being in its now public domain status.