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Ladder 49 (2004)

Ladder 49
"I just had the damn thing? Oh well I'll just use Ladder 50?"

Starring:

Joaquin Phoenix
John Travolta
Robert Patrick
Jacinda Barrett

Released By:

Touchstone Pictures

Released In:

2004

Rated:

PG-13

Reviewed By:

Adam Mast

Grade:

B+


Ladder 49 is a surprisingly effective drama. I say surprising, because the trailer for the film was incredibly weak, making it look like it might be a watered down version of Backdraft. While there are obvious similarities between the two films, Ladder 49 is more about the people fighting the fires rather than the fires themselves.

As the picture opens, firefighter Jack Morrison (Joaquin Phoenix) is involved in an incredibly ferocious blaze that has engulfed a massive structure in the city. As he struggles to save lives and put out the flames, an explosion causes the top floor of the building to give way, sucking Jack down several floors beneath. As he lay injured and helpless waiting for aid to arrive, we are told his story via flashbacks which showcase everything from his rookie year with the department to his marriage to Linda (Jacinda Barrett) to the birth of his kids.

Ladder 49 wears it's heart on it's sleeve. It has all the elements you'd expect from a movie about fire fighters - heroism, a sense of family, tragedy and, of course, heat. What really took me by surprise was the sense of humor this picture has to offer. There's a lot of stuff in the first half of Ladder 49 that's really funny. Most of it is derived from the badgering of rookies. But mostly, I appreciated this movie's honesty. While it isn't entirely unpredictable, it doesn't sugarcoat the proceedings either.

Joaquin Phoenix is the key here. There are moments in Ladder 49 that easily could have slipped into the melodramatic (including a big speech given by John Travolta), but Phoenix's portrayal keeps the entire picture grounded in reality. What's more, this terrific actor doesn't overplay the part. He's subtle and earnest. This is a man who was born to save lives, and it isn't for glory or a paycheck. It's because it's the noble thing to do. There is no one he wouldn't put his life on the line for and this really shines through. I really can't wait to see Phoenix's turn in the upcoming Johnny Cash biopic. This talented actor is the real deal.

Travolta is likable as Captain Mike Kennedy. I've always liked the Saturday Night Fever icon (Pulp Fiction is one of my all time favorite films), but quite often, I find him sorely miscast (I didn't buy him as a lawyer in A Civil Action or a military man in Basic and The General's Daughter). When I heard he'd be playing a firefighter, my eyes rolled into the back of my skull. Happily, he's really strong here as Kennedy, a source of great strength for the department and the voice of reason. The scenes in which he boosts the moral of his men and keeps everything together, really work, and ultimately, Travolta's Kennedy becomes the personification of everything a Captain should be. Terrific performance.

The actors that make up the fire fighters are all solid and endearing in their own right, and the commraderie amongst the cast is picture perfect. These men are family and that really comes across.

Ladder 49 is depressing. It's a movie about firefighters, and there are characters who die and others that are seriously injured, but none of this stuff seems overly manipulative. These guys constantly put there life on the line, and that's really what the movie's about.

The screenplay is strong and doesn't fall back on a half-baked mystery (I always felt that Backdraft's revelation of an arsonist on the loose, took away from that film's human story). Ladder 49 pays tribute to the fire fighters themselves. Even the more obvious scenes I thought might make me cringe (watch for the "red car" sequence), didn't because I got caught up in the lives of these characters.

The fire fighting sequences are energetic, and evoke a sense of claustrophobia. While they aren't as flashy and grand as the ones on display in Ron Howard's Backdraft, they aren't meant to be. As I previously stated, this is more a movie about people.

I really got pulled into the drama of Ladder 49, and I attribute most of this to solid acting and terrific cast commraderie. I really cared about these men. Even the one's that acted inappropriately on occasion (such as a flawed but dedicated Lenny Richter -winningly played by Robert Patrick).

Ladder 49 is the first big surprise of the fall movie season, and proof that you can't always judge a picture by it's trailer. This is a terrific film.

:: zBoneman.com Reader Comments ::

Claude Chabrol

Claude Chabrol

Not buying it! This movie sucks plain and hard. I don't need to rely on the shopworn cliches of Gene Shalit or Dr. Mast to tell you how either. If you want to get your post-9/11 jollies off and worship firemen then watch Rescue Me on FX. I would like the tepid, unflushed crap that is Ladder 49 to be erased from my memory. And while we're at it can someone remove the part of my experience that contains Joaquin Phoenix? That sad hump of an actor has brought his bohemian upbringing to bear on a generation of unsuspecting moviegoers. I, for one, object to his Marlon Brando cum Downs syndrome sufferer style of acting. At least it's good to see John Travolta act a little between trips to the craft service table. He gets fatter and his hair gets faker. I simply yearn for a movie that doesn't blow.

Jacob's Ladder!

Jacob's Ladder!

Claude Chabrol? Is that even a real name. Have you even seen Ladder 49. BY what you wrote, I guess no.I went in thinking it would suck just like Adam did, but it was actually really good. Joaquin Phoenix is a good actor. John Travolta is surprisingly good. It is a predictable movie but it works because the acting is strong. Is Gene Shalit that dorky guy with a mustache that they make fun of on Saturday Night Live. Zboneman.com doesn't talk about movies like that guy. You are crazy.

Claude Chabrol

Claude Chabrol

Jacob's Ladder? Is that even a lousy movie you want to call yourself? Do us a favor and search for Claude Chabrol on imbd.com. Open yourself up to a world of film that is above the level of network television + cursing. I am not satisfied by "strong" acting that carries a lame movie. Great film makers didn't need virtuoso acting to carry their films (Hitchcock, Welles, etc). Nevertheless, the acting in Ladder 69 could hardly be called strong or virtuoso. Give me something good...something original. If a director insists on making another formulaic genre pic then at least make it significantly better or more original than what has gone before. Otherwise, what the hell is the point? You've wasted my time as a viewer and you've wasted my money.

Frank

Frank

As a firefighter myself, I was somewhat insulted by the films portrayal as fireman being drunks who carouse and misbehave. Firefighting is a job - you don't have to drink in order to handle it. I did enjoy much about the movie, I liked it's old fashioned ending and it's straight forward look at the job. Still I wish they would have left out some of the more cliched bits. It would have played just as well without them.

Louise Marchant

Louise Marchant

The one thing Mr. Mast failed to mention was that Ladder 49 was a very effective love story. That was the part of the film that worked the best I thought. The relationship Phoenix and his wife Jacinda Barrett was well drawn from their courtship days to the tensions of parenthood. I thought Jouquin's terrific star turn was matched scene-by-scene by Barrett, whom I don't know much about. the way she evolves from her single gal days to being a worried mother was wonderful. I'd like to know more about her. You're right it's a great film.

Hello?

Hello?

Everybody keeps talking about how old fashioned Ladder 49 is, I couldn't agree more. In the real new fashioned world women fight fires too - what's up with that?

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