9 / 10
The Towering Inferno is the best disaster film of the 1970s and the model against which every subsequent disaster film has been measured. John Guillermin directed the dramatic scenes and Irwin Allen directed the action sequences. Paul Newman plays Doug Roberts, the architect who designed the Glass Tower. Steve McQueen plays Mike O’Hallorhan, the San Francisco fire chief who has to put out the fire. The Glass Tower is the world’s tallest building. It catches fire on its opening night during a black-tie gala on the top floor. The fire spreads down. Most of the celebrities at the gala die.
The cast is the largest A-list assembled for a disaster film in the era. William Holden as the developer. Faye Dunaway as Doug’s fiancée. Fred Astaire (Oscar nominated) as the con man swindling the rich widow. Robert Wagner. Robert Vaughn. Richard Chamberlain. O.J. Simpson as the security chief. Jennifer Jones in her final role. Susan Blakely. The film delivers a star in almost every scene. Several of them die.
The Construction Failure
The fire happens because the building’s electrical contractor cut corners. Richard Chamberlain plays the son-in-law contractor whose substandard wiring causes the initial short circuit. The setup is laid in patient detail during the first half hour. Doug Roberts the architect repeatedly tries to flag the safety issues. The developer overrules him. The opening gala happens anyway. The wiring fails.
This is a film with a clear and specific antagonist that is not a person. The antagonist is corner-cutting greed in a commercial construction project. The script names the cause. The cause has consequences. The consequences are paid for by people who had nothing to do with the decision. The film is one of the more politically pointed disaster movies because it lets its cause be a real one.
For Writers
A disaster needs a cause to mean anything. Random disasters have less narrative weight than disasters someone caused. The Towering Inferno names its villain in the first act. The fire is not bad luck. The fire is the predictable result of a specific person’s specific decisions. The lesson is that even in a disaster story, attribution matters. The reader wants to know who is responsible. Make the cause specific and the disaster becomes a tragedy with a moral spine.
Newman and McQueen
The casting of Newman and McQueen was the major Hollywood event of 1974. Both stars insisted on equal billing. Both demanded the same number of lines, the same number of close-ups, the same compensation. The compromise was that Newman’s name appears slightly higher on the left of the poster, McQueen’s slightly lower on the right. The same alternation runs through the credits. Each star received the same compensation. Both got the same dressing room facilities.
The on-screen result is two great stars dividing the film cleanly. Newman is the architect. McQueen is the fireman. They share the screen in the climactic third-act sequences. Their interactions are professionally cordial and not particularly warm, which is exactly correct for two competent men working under pressure. The film does not bond them artificially. It lets them be two professionals doing different jobs.
For Writers
Two protagonists in the same story can avoid the usual buddy-movie chemistry if the story justifies their professional distance. Newman’s architect and McQueen’s fireman do not become friends. They do not bond. They work together because the situation requires it. The lesson is that not every co-protagonist relationship needs to deepen across the story. Some relationships are professional and stay professional. Honor that and the work is more believable.
The Body Count
The film kills off a remarkable percentage of its name cast. Fred Astaire’s love interest dies. The wedding party in the elevator dies. Robert Wagner dies. Susan Blakely’s character has one of the most visually striking deaths in 1970s cinema. The film does not protect its stars. The Glass Tower kills celebrities because the Glass Tower is on fire and the fire does not care.
This commitment to consequence is what separates the film from later disaster movies, where audience favorites are usually saved through implausible third-act rescues. The Towering Inferno lets the wrong people die. The deaths are mostly meaningless. That is the point. Building failures kill the people in the building, not the people who deserved to die.
For Writers
Random death in a disaster story is more honest than narratively motivated death. The Towering Inferno’s deaths are mostly meaningless. They happen because the fire reached those floors. The film does not assign moral weight to who lives and dies. The lesson is that a disaster that mostly kills the innocent is closer to reality than a disaster that conveniently kills the deserving. The audience may prefer karma. The truth is closer to physics.
Craft Note
John Guillermin directed dramatic scenes. Irwin Allen directed action. Stirling Silliphant wrote, adapted from two competing novels (The Tower by Richard Martin Stern and The Glass Inferno by Thomas N. Scortia and Frank M. Robinson). Paul Newman and Steve McQueen co-led. William Holden, Faye Dunaway, Fred Astaire (Oscar nominated), Robert Wagner, Robert Vaughn, Richard Chamberlain, Susan Blakely, Jennifer Jones, O.J. Simpson. John Williams scored. Released December 1974. Approximately fourteen million dollar budget. Two hundred and three million worldwide gross. Eight Oscar nominations, three wins.
The Verdict
9/10. The best disaster film of the 1970s and one of the best of the genre ever made. The script is patient. The cast is enormous. The deaths are real. Newman and McQueen are professional adversaries who become professional collaborators without ever becoming friends. Watch it.
FAQ
Is it based on real events?
No. The story is fictional. The film was adapted from two novels published around the same time that the studios bought together to avoid competing productions.
How did Newman and McQueen share top billing?
Through extensive contractual negotiation. The compromise diagonally staggered their names so that neither was definitively above the other, with the alternation continuing throughout the credits.
Is O.J. Simpson really in it?
Yes, as the security chief. This was during his early acting career.
Did the film influence building codes?
Yes. The film is often credited with raising public awareness of skyscraper fire safety issues. Several jurisdictions strengthened fire codes for high-rises after its release.
How does it compare to Earthquake?
The Towering Inferno is the better film. Earthquake is the more influential template for the genre because it killed major cast members earlier.
Is the ending optimistic?
Not really. The fire is extinguished. The architect and the fire chief survive. Many supporting characters do not. The film ends with a warning rather than a celebration.
Should I watch this?
Yes. Essential viewing for the genre.