The essence of 70's disaster movies
Lately and for no apparent reason, I find myself to be quite massively obsessed with disaster movies from the 70s decade. These flicks guarantee spectacular action and thrills but, admittedly, its also a sub genre that can all too easy be labeled as inferior and derivative. Its undeniable that you can summarize practically all 70s disaster movies by listing just a handful of recurring trademarks.
#1: without producer Irwin Allen, there wasnt a budget for special effects and thus no movie.
#2: all disaster movies star one major star (especially Charlton Heston and Paul Newman were prime choices) and a long list of secondary (like Ernest Borgnine, Leslie Nielsen,..) stars.
#3: The characters are usually split into two camps with completely opposite ideals and/or initiatives. The camp with the lead star is obviously the triumphant camp.
#4: Regardless what type of disaster were dealing with, variants of the exact same perilous situations are always applicable.
#5: always remember that, when the situation appears to be at it worst, it can and will still get even worse!
Any more?
Movie I had in mind when listing these 'rules' : The Towering Inferno, The Poseidon Adventure, Aiport '75 & '77, When Time Ran Out, Earthquake, Fire!, The Night the Bridge Fell Down, Flood!, Two-Minute Warning, Avalanche ...
I felt the knife in my hand
and she laughed no more