IMDb RATING
5.8/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
After a shooting, Jo's family vacations turns into turmoil.After a shooting, Jo's family vacations turns into turmoil.After a shooting, Jo's family vacations turns into turmoil.
Browse episodes
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe lady in crocks, hiding behind the curtain was a real hotel maid working at the location and not an actress.
- GoofsWhen the helicopter is first seen arriving at the hotel, you can see several cars passing on the road outside. It's made out that they're in a very remote area but civilisation is just outside the gate.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Jeremy Vine: Episode #5.190 (2022)
Featured review
From the beginning I found the demographic of the family/friends ensemble totally unconvincing.
It was so confusing and even at the end I had no idea who the children's parents were.
The rest of it was unconvincing as well. A load of people running around acting scared did not actually convey the horror of the situation. One assumes this was based on the attack on tourists in Tunisia in 2015 when 38 people were murdered.
A much more convincing film of this genre is the Norwegian film, Utøya 22. Juli (2018).
I don't know whether it is the writing, storyboarding or editing that is at fault, but there was a distinct lack of continuity.
You have terrorists shooting people indiscriminately and without any forethought except when they are faced with a featured cast character ... then they don't shoot them. They allow themselves to be engaged in pointless dialogue. Then there was the clichéd scene of a terrorist and tourist grappling on the floor trying to wrestle a gun free, with the usual inevitable result.
The scene when the tourist looks on dumbly at a terrorist confrontation and walks stupidly into a knife is just embarrassing.
Why did Keely Hawes character receive a police commendation when she was not a serving police officer and it happened in a foreign land?
At best it would surely have been a civil award.
And her going back into the force just seemed unbelievable.
I really lost interest as the three part drama progressed, particularly the last episode which was boring.
It was so confusing and even at the end I had no idea who the children's parents were.
The rest of it was unconvincing as well. A load of people running around acting scared did not actually convey the horror of the situation. One assumes this was based on the attack on tourists in Tunisia in 2015 when 38 people were murdered.
A much more convincing film of this genre is the Norwegian film, Utøya 22. Juli (2018).
I don't know whether it is the writing, storyboarding or editing that is at fault, but there was a distinct lack of continuity.
You have terrorists shooting people indiscriminately and without any forethought except when they are faced with a featured cast character ... then they don't shoot them. They allow themselves to be engaged in pointless dialogue. Then there was the clichéd scene of a terrorist and tourist grappling on the floor trying to wrestle a gun free, with the usual inevitable result.
The scene when the tourist looks on dumbly at a terrorist confrontation and walks stupidly into a knife is just embarrassing.
Why did Keely Hawes character receive a police commendation when she was not a serving police officer and it happened in a foreign land?
At best it would surely have been a civil award.
And her going back into the force just seemed unbelievable.
I really lost interest as the three part drama progressed, particularly the last episode which was boring.
- How many seasons does Crossfire have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Fuego cruzado
- Filming locations
- Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain(location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content