Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1994


Without Warning (1994 film)

Buy Without Warning (1994 film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'Without Warning' is an American television film directed by Robert Iscove. It follows a duo of real-life reporters covering breaking news about three meteor fragments crashing into the Northern Hemisphere. It aired on CBS on October 31, 1994, and is presented as if it were an actual breaking news event, complete with remote reports from reporters. The executive producer was David L. Wolper, who produced a number of mockumentary-style films since the 1960s.

Plot



Broadcast of a murder mystery film starring Loni Anderson, titled 'Without Warning', is interrupted with a news bulletin of a series of three earthquakes, one of them located in the Thunder Basin National Grassland area of Wyoming. The film resumes but a few moments later is interrupted for good as coverage, led by Sander Vanocur and Dr. Caroline Jaffe, begins of a Halloween night meteor impact on the United States. Additional impacts are reported in southern France and a remote area of China. Lone survivors are found at the Wyoming and France impact sites, a girl and a young man, respectively. The girl had been reported missing from a city hundreds of miles away from the impact. Both survivors are badly burned and their speech is unintelligible.

The three impact sites begin broadcasting an ear-piercing radio signal that cripples aircraft flying within latitudes immediately surrounding the impacts. Another larger object is detected moving towards the North Pole. The United States, despite protests from world leaders and scientists, orders several aircraft to intercept the object before it impacts with the earth and destroy it using nuclear weapons. The destruction of the larger object is successful, though the attacking aircraft are brought down by another radio signal broadcast by the object shortly before its destruction.

A scientist, named Dr. Avram Mandel, who has been studying the impacts, is flown by an F-16 to a U.S. military base where reporters are being briefed on the latest incident. He reveals that his determination is that the impacts were in fact an attempt at first contact by an alien species and that, by destroying the follow-up vehicle, Earth has declared war. Other mysteries occur. At one point, the population of the town of Faith, Wyoming, home to a devoutly religious community, vanishes without a trace.

Dr. Mandel's fears are confirmed when he later reveals that three more objects, each two miles wide, will soon impact Washington, D.C., Moscow, and Beijing - the capital cities of the only three nations capable of first-strike nuclear warfare. The survivors of the initial impacts are identified as Jean-Paul Chounard and Kimberly Hastings. They succumb to their wounds and die. Nuclear weapons are launched to intercept the three incoming objects, which are successfully destroyed. Scientists finally decipher Chounard and Hastings' speech. They are each speaking a fragment of a message. When combined, the message appears to be a recital of the message from the U.N. Secretary General that had been included on a special recording housed aboard 'Voyager 2'.

Moments later, astronomers detect hundreds more asteroids, all heading towards Earth. As a stunned Vanocur and Jaffe react to reports of cities and entire countries being destroyed worldwide, Vanocur solemnly quotes from William Shakespeare; "The fault, dear Brutus, lies not in our stars, but in ourselves" as a rumble is heard and the picture cuts to static.

Cast



* Sander Vanocur as Himself

* Jane Kaczmarek as Dr. Caroline Jaffe

* Bree Walker as Herself

* Dwier Brown as Matt Jensen

* Brian McNamara as Mike Curtis

* James Morrison as Paul Whitaker

* Ashley Peldon as Kimberly Hastings

* James Handy as Dr. Norbert Hazelton

* Kario Salem as Dr. Avram Mandel

* Spencer Garrett as Paul Collingwood

* Gina Hecht as Barbara Shiller

* John de Lancie as Barry Steinbrenner

* Patty Toy as Denise Wong

* Dennis Lipscomb as Dr. Robert Pearlman

* Ron Canada as Terrence Freeman

* Victor Wilson as Mark Manetti

* John M. Jackson as Dale Powell

* Ernie Anastos as Himself

* Phillip Baker Hall as Dr. Kurt Lowden

* Jim Pirri as Robert Marino

* Alan Scarfe as General Lucian Alexander

* Cynthia Allison as Herself

* Arthur C. Clarke as Himself

* Sandy Hill as Herself

* Michelle Holden as Herself

* Mario Machado as Himself

* Warren Olney as Himself

* Saida Pagan as Herself

* Richard Saxton as Himself

* Debra Snell as Herself

Co-starring

* Randy Crowder as Deputy Anson Peters

* Frank Bruynbroek as Jean-Paul Chounard

* Diana Frank as Sylvie Chounard

* Marnie McPhail as Donna Hastings

* Sherri Paysinger as Pamela Barnes

* Robert Peters as Dwayne Haskell

* Lou Beatty Jr. as Dr. Jonas Tremblay

* John DeMita as Major Powers

* Tyler Cole Malinger as Tyler O'Neal

* Marnie Mosiman as Annie O'Neal

* Armand Schultz as David Case

Legacy



The film employed "accelerated time" (i.e. events said to have taken place an hour apart actually take place a few minutes apart), among other storytelling devices to make it clear to viewers paying attention that it was not real. This, combined with the casting of Jane Kaczmarek, a recognizable actress, as well as several other well-known performers in secondary roles ('Star Trek: The Next Generation' guest star John de Lancie as a reporter), was expected to alleviate any concerns that the story being shown was actually happening. Ron Canada, who appeared in the film as a science author being interviewed by Sander Vanocur, had previously worked as a television news reporter for stations in Baltimore and Washington, D.C. during the 1970s before becoming an actor. However, the casting of noted (albeit retired) news anchor Vanocur and noted journalist Bree Walker (who had previously anchored for Los Angeles CBS O&O station KCBS-TV) in major roles portraying themselves, plus a faux interview with noted author Arthur C. Clarke, still left some viewers wondering.

In addition, when it originally premiered, CBS had warnings during the commercial breaks stating that the film was completely fictional, and that the events were not actually happening. Some CBS affiliates, such as KHOU in Houston, had similar warnings in the form of a news ticker "crawl" during the broadcast. The producers used actual CBS News graphics to help accentuate the feeling that it was real (though they used a different network logo, a sphere within an outline of a TV screen), however, leading to at least one uproar over the events. In Fort Smith, Arkansas, the CBS affiliate (KFSM-TV) reported that they had received dozens of calls regarding the incident and whether it was actually happening. The area's ABC, Fox, and NBC affiliates (respectively KHBS, KPBI and KPOM-TV) were also flooded with complaints, asking them why they were not covering this event at the same time that CBS was covering it. In several other markets, including Detroit, Michigan, and San Diego, California, the local CBS affiliates (respectively, WJBK, which would switch to Fox six weeks later, and KFMB-TV) refused to air this TV movie.

Some accused CBS of being irresponsible in showing the movie during the primetime hours, when some children were still out trick-or-treating (indeed, the film explicitly takes place on Oct. 31, with trick or treaters featured in several news reports within), but very few occasions have happened since Orson Welles' 1938 'The War of the Worlds' radio broadcast that so many people have been taken in by a production such as 'Without Warning'. The film borrowed one of the locations from Welles' broadcast. Welles used the village of Grover's Mill, New Jersey, as the first landing site of the martians in his tale. 'Without Warning' uses the fictional town of Grover's Mill, Wyoming, as an obvious homage to Welles' broadcast, and the original broadcast was preceded by a brief prologue referencing the 'War of the Worlds' broadcast, with the narrator reiterating that the film about to be shown was fiction and presented in the same spirit.

Other television productions that simulate devastating crises in a documentary format predate 'Without Warning'. 'Special Bulletin' featured a simulated newscast reporting on a nuclear terrorism incident in Charleston, South Carolina, and 'Countdown to Looking Glass', a Canadian production, combined simulated news footage with behind-the-scenes dramatics to tell the story of how a network covers the outbreak of a nuclear war. 'World War III' is a German television drama that depicts in documentary format the events immediately preceding a global thermonuclear showdown. Both 'Ghostwatch' and 'Alternative 3' were British faux documentaries that caused hysteria amongst viewers. 'Alternative 3' was broadcast in 1977 but to this day some conspiracy theorists insist the story was real.

At the end of the film, viewers hear radio reports indicating the destruction of major cities (just before Vanocur's sign off). The ending is very similar to the ending of the 1978 musical version of 'War of the Worlds' produced by Jeff Wayne.

Occasionally, DVD releases have included faux newscasts as special features to illustrate the apocalyptic events featured in the film as if the viewer were seeing the actual news reports. Examples include 'Independence Day', and the 2004 version of 'Dawn of the Dead'. Several early episodes of the 1980s TV series 'V' (about an alien invasion of earth) also began in faux-newscast style (featuring, like 'Without Warning', a real-life journalist, in the case of 'V', Howard K. Smith) until this gimmick was abandoned.

The film was released on DVD on July 8, 2003, nearly nine years after its initial, and only, showing on CBS. However, it has since been shown outside the United States, such as the United Kingdom where it aired on Sci-Fi, minus the commercial break warnings.

See also



* 'Alternative 3' (1977)

* 'Special Bulletin' (1983)

* 'Countdown to Looking Glass' (1984)

* 'Ghostwatch' (1992)

* 'World War III' (1998)


Buy Without Warning (1994 film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1994



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1109714082.