for those of you interested in this friday's release, we showed it as a sneak last night, and i have a mixed review. ok, first of all, lemme admit i hate "hollywood happy endings/feel good" films. that creates a certain prejudice for me in saying anything truly complementary about Backdraft. and lemme also admit i would have never gone to see it (based on the way it is advertised) if it hadnt been free. that aside... ron howard is not an awful director. he uses some interesting camera trackings, close-ups et al. but he uses slow-mo and mellow- dramatics that create an over-all cheesy tone to this movie. the story of the life of a fireman is a (somewhat) interesting and new subject manner, but this film tries to do too many things at once. the subplots of affairs, marrital problems, and the *completely ripped off* use of Donald Sutherland as a pyromaniac consulted exactly as Hannibal Lector is consulted makes the whole film seem disjointed. these tangents were unnecessary and made the film longer than it need be. i believe it was 2hrs+!!! there were also problems in the story's abuse of legal factors in what firemen are able to get away with. william baldwin (who isnt half bad despite the fact that he is riding on his looks) jumps back and forth into the responsibilities of a fireman, and i know (due to a brother-in-law who is a fireman in the chicago area) that one cannot so easily "jump on the truck" legally anyway. robert deniro is obviously underemployed in this film. he is the only interesting actor, but again, he is assigned lines like "cmon...youre clever, but so am i" speaking *to the fire* that could not help but be reminiscent of Manhunter or Silence. donald sutherland, despite his unnecessary role, is very good. kurt russel just comes across as a big sized little boy who plays tough guy lieutenant who will risk "going down with his burning ship" in this case, warehouse. i dunno...its probably what you expect it will be... a feel good, cheesy, hollywood film. Its cinematography makes fire look beautiful and alive. just beware of hollywood hang-ups in a big way. suzanne [log in to unmask]