Michael Scott
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Growing up IN Arizona during the 80s and 90s hearing about Travis Walton and his alien abduction during the UFO phenomenon of the 1990s was a staple campfire story for years. We all heard about the local boy who got abducted back in they 1970s, and once I grew up and realized that most of the Ed and Lorraine Harris and Travis Walton’s were scam artists I promptly forgot about it. But part of me still remembers watching Fire in the Sky back in the late 90s on VHS and being all wide eyed and nervous about being out in the Arizona desert late at night. 20+ years later I have to admit that the film hasn’t aged well, and has a hokey sort of 1990s charm to it that is hard to ignore, but also hard to not get a chuckle out of too. Scream Factory brings the near 30 year old film back with a new exclusive 4K remaster and a nice boatload of new extras to enjoy, so fans of the movie should be well pleased.
Taking place in northern Arizona (although it was filmed in Oregon for the most part. All but a few courthouse and hotel scenes), the film tells the story of Travis Walton circa 1975 (D.B. Sweeney playing the role of Travis). Travis and his buddy Mike (Robert Patrick) are loggers taking care of brush for a government contract when Travis is taken by a UFO like object. Suddenly Mike and the rest of the logging crew are under suspicion of murder, as the local Detective (James Garner) and local cops think that they just killed Travis and buried the body.
However, sticking to the truth turns out to be a 5 day nightmare, as no one will believe Mike and his men. That is, until Travis shows back up in town after 5 days with nary a stitch of clothing and no memory of what happened to him. Taking a lie detector test the boys seem to be telling to the truth, but it’s not until some regressive hypnosis on Travis that the real truth comes out. He was taken up into the UFO and experimented on by little gray men (no rectal probing at least).
It also doesn’t help that we don’t really get to see any aliens or any creepy stuff till the hour and twenty minute mark, where Travis’s story takes over and he remembers what happened to him up there. At the end of the day it’s a silly alien move with a SUPER low budget, decent acting, and a sort of unhinged lunacy that goes along with these alien abduction “true stories”.
Rating:
Rated PG-13 for sci-fi violence
Video:

Audio:

Extras:

• NEW Interview with Director Robert Lieberman
• Interview with Actor D.B. Sweeney (2020)
• Interview with Actor Robert Patrick (2020)
• Interview with Composer Mark Isham (2020)
• Photo Gallery
• Theatrical Trailer
Final Score:

Fun, silly, cheap, ludicrous, you name it. Fire in the Sky has been called all of those names and more over the years. However, the flick has garnered a bit of a cult following among the UFO crowd and sci-fi fans alike. Personally I’m of the opinion that the movie is really only for the fans hokey old low budget sci-fi romps, but I know there’s a lot of people who think I’m crazy for not loving it (my brother being one of those). Scream Factory luckily brings us a brand new 4K remaster, a good set of extras and a new DTS-HD MA 5.1 mix to enjoy, so fans of the movie will definitely love the Blu-ray package.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: D.B. Sweeney, Robert Patrick, Craig Sheffer
Directed by: Robert Lieberman
Written by: Travis Walton (Book), Tracy Torme (Screenplay)
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 AVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1, English DTS-HD MA 2.0
Subtitles: English SDH
Studio: Scream Factory
Rated: PG-13
Runtime: 109 minutes
Blu-Ray Release Date: June 21st, 2022
Recommendation: For the Fans
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