Heroes of Fire

Mittie 2022-12-19 17:20:03

Disaster movies are not to my appetite, and I feel tedious and tedious. The early foreshadowing is too long and it does not look like a disaster movie at all. It is also very boring. It is unexpected but not a surprise.

Maybe it’s because I’m going to make a firefighting movie recently and I watched many related movies, but it wasn’t until the moment when two firefighters risked their lives to search and rescue their wounds, I realized the greatness of firefighters a little bit.

The raging fire, that is the burning hell. Running out to escape is the instinct of a person to survive. Fire fighting itself is a job that violates the instincts of human beings and all conscious species. Because they are going to the front line, the most dangerous place, it is possible to go to the purgatory on earth, which requires not only courage, but also the responsibility to integrate blood and blood.

From quantitative change to qualitative change, it takes a process, and only then can it be achieved at that moment, and only then can it be realized.

Really, I think they are great.

As long as the works that are excellent at least touching people's hearts, they all reveal their true feelings and have real emotions in them.

As the creator of a work, if he didn't have that kind of emotion when he created it himself, didn't move himself, or didn't identify with his protagonist, how could he impress the audience?

I think I identify with this special group of people, the Red Gate Warriors.

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Extended Reading

The Towering Inferno quotes

  • [Duncan is talking about Roberts' unemployment after the Tower job]

    James Duncan: You know, there's a saying that goes "No matter how hot it gets up there during the day...

    James DuncanDoug Roberts: [in unison] There isn't a damn thing you can do at night."

    James Duncan: That's right. Now what the hell are you going to do at night in the middle of nowhere?

    Doug Roberts: Sleep like a winner.

  • [the firemen are trapped in an elevator shaft]

    Chief O'Hallorhan: We'll go down by rope. We're gonna rappel down to 65, get on top of that elevator, use it as an exit.

    Young Fireman: I can't make it. I'll fall. I know I'll fall.

    Chief O'Hallorhan: Okay. Then you better go first. That way when you fall, you won't take any of us with you.