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Into the Fire Poster

Into the Fire

A smouldering passion. A deadly secret.
1988 | 88m | English

(256 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 0.7 (history)

Director: Graeme Campbell
Writer: Jess Ballard
Staring:
Details

Out of work and driving aimlessly, a man pulls into the "Wolf Lodge" and ends up with a job. When he wakes nightly to the sounds of icy voices and screams he decides he can no longer be an innocent bystander.
Release Date: Sep 01, 1988
Director: Graeme Campbell
Writer: Jess Ballard
Genres: Crime, Drama, Horror, Thriller
Keywords hotel, neo-noir
Production Companies SC Entertainment, Manor Road
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Jan 30, 2026
Entered: May 05, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Susan Anspach Rosalind Winfield
Art Hindle Dirk Winfield
Olivia D'Abo Liette
Lee Montgomery Wade Burnett
Maureen McRae Vivian
Steve Pernie Policeman
John Dondertman Jimmy
Alice O'Neil Liette's Mother
Bill Norman Liette's Father
Name Job
Alison Reid Stunts
Graeme Campbell Director
Jess Ballard Writer
Andy Thompson Original Music Composer
Rhett Morita Director of Photography
Drew Struzan Art Designer
Name Title
Nicolas Stiliadis Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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Reviews

Wuchak
4.0

**_The wintry ambiance is good, but the story isn't_** A young musician (Lee Montgomery) drifts into a Northeastern town in the Winter and takes a job by a guy (Art Hindle) who has issues with his inebriated wife (Susan Anspach). The guitarist & his dog stay at the small rental house adjacent to ... their huge home, Wolf Lodge, which looks like it was really something back in the day. The wife is intrigued by the rock stud, but he's more interested in a local waitress (Olivia d'Abo). "The Legend of Wolf Lodge," aka "Into the fire," was actually released to some theaters in 1988. Yet, aside from the tame nudity, it feels like a TV movie, and not a good one, which isn't to say it doesn't have some positive qualities. Someone criticized it on the grounds that the only likable character is the dog, and this is pretty accurate. Montgomery, in his final film, is always likable, but his character here is so stupid he loses the viewer's sympathy. For instance, the husband proves himself to be a masculinity-on-overdrive man and yet the rocker willingly makes out with his wife when the guy's barely around the corner. It's not just stupid, it's unbelievable. However, Montgomery is such a quality protagonist that you tend to overlook it, sort of. Speaking of unbelievable, the final act spirals out of control on this front. Olivia d'Abo is in her prime here and there's some tame top nudity of her and Anspach, but the latter's character is so questionable it's difficult to see her as alluring. What makes this B flick worth maybe catching is the effective Winter ambiance, shot in Kirkfield Ontario in the middle of Winter. The blaring 80s score often detracts, but it has some interesting elements as well. Although I appreciated these factors, my wife gave me a look when the credits rolled that said: "You made me sit through THAT?" It short 'n' sweet at 1 hour, 18 minutes, but has too many uninteresting stretches. GRADE: C-

Jan 31, 2025