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Post by petrolino on Nov 19, 2017 5:37:14 GMT
Dog Days
John Cazale & Al Pacino
Sidney Lumet
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Post by OldAussie on Nov 19, 2017 6:20:28 GMT
Back in the 70s every Pacino movie was an event. We saw them all on the big screen as soon as possible. (Except Bobby Deerfield which I caught on tv a few years later.)
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Post by petrolino on Nov 19, 2017 6:28:34 GMT
Back in the 70s every Pacino movie was an event. We saw them all on the big screen as soon as possible. (Except Bobby Deerfield which I caught on tv a few years later.) It was the same in the '90s. I was born in the mid-70s. Pacino took 4 years off cinema and returned home to theatre in the wake of successive box-office disasters. His career was revived by genre specialist Harold Becker.
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Post by telegonus on Nov 19, 2017 8:25:29 GMT
Excellent film. I watch it whenever it's on. It's erratic at times, like life. The classic conflict between the local police and the feds is fascinating, intensifies as the film draws to a close. For the first time viewer the ending's probably somewhat of a shock. In retrospect everything makes perfect sense.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 19, 2017 9:41:09 GMT
Thanks, petrolino. DDA is one of my favorite Al Pacino‘s. He played it brilliantly. And John Cazale, too. What a great actor he was. He died much too early.
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Post by petrolino on Nov 19, 2017 12:08:16 GMT
Excellent film. I watch it whenever it's on. It's erratic at times, like life. The classic conflict between the local police and the feds is fascinating, intensifies as the film draws to a close. For the first time viewer the ending's probably somewhat of a shock. In retrospect everything makes perfect sense. The first time I saw it, it was dubbed in German. I knew a little German but not much. I was gripped though - couldn't tear my eyes away from the screen. And even though it was in German, I cried at the end of the movie. One of a small handful of films that always brings tears to my eyes - 'The Best Years Of Our Lives' (1946), 'The Last House On The Left' (1972), 'The Deer Hunter' (1978), 'Platoon' (1986) ...
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Post by petrolino on Nov 19, 2017 12:09:45 GMT
Thanks, petrolino. DDA is one of my favorite Al Pacino‘s. He played it brilliantly. And John Cazale, too. What a great actor he was. He died much too early. There's a nice documentary about John Cazale : Richard Shepard's film 'I Knew It Was You : Rediscovering John Cazale' (2009).
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Post by Lebowskidoo 🦞 on Nov 19, 2017 12:33:09 GMT
I was just thinking about Dog Day Afternoon the other day. It's featured heavily in the first episode of David Fincher's new Netflix series, Mindhunter.
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Post by gunshotwound on Nov 20, 2017 0:56:42 GMT
I saw DDA when it was first released. I liked it very much and each time I have seen it since I have liked it better and better.
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Post by them1ghtyhumph on Nov 20, 2017 0:59:47 GMT
Possibly Pacino's finest performance
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Post by teleadm on Nov 20, 2017 18:29:07 GMT
One of the great Bank Robbery movies. The reason for the robbery is so absurd, it just had to be based on a real story. Great acing and direction all around.
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Post by telegonus on Nov 21, 2017 8:25:22 GMT
Excellent film. I watch it whenever it's on. It's erratic at times, like life. The classic conflict between the local police and the feds is fascinating, intensifies as the film draws to a close. For the first time viewer the ending's probably somewhat of a shock. In retrospect everything makes perfect sense. The first time I saw it, it was dubbed in German. I knew a little German but not much. I was gripped though - couldn't tear my eyes away from the screen. And even though it was in German, I cried at the end of the movie. One of a small handful of films that always brings tears to my eyes - 'The Best Years Of Our Lives' (1946), 'The Last House On The Left' (1972), 'The Deer Hunter' (1978), 'Platoon' (1986) ... Wow! Dubbed in German, Petro? It's not an easy film to take in English,--riveting visually, it's difficult to understand much of what's being said in English--I can only imagine what it must sound like in German. Or Japanese. Arabic?
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Post by Stammerhead on Nov 21, 2017 12:44:32 GMT
I watched the documentary about John Wojtowicz on the BBC and highly recommend it.
Dog Day Afternoon was an event experience when I saw it at my local cinema.
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Post by petrolino on Nov 24, 2017 1:42:35 GMT
There's a nice documentary about John Cazale : Richard Shepard's film 'I Knew It Was You : Rediscovering John Cazale' (2009). It would be interesting to see this. I know Meryl Streep cared for him until the end, during the filming of The Deer Hunter. What a heartbreaking ending to a very talented life. Still, his legacy lives on. The story goes that cast and crew fought to keep John Cazale from being replaced by the studio on 'The Deer Hunter' due to failing health (deterioration from bone cancer). His best friend Al Pacino later said that Cazale taught him, it doesn't matter if you have a week left to live, or ten years left to live, you're still preparing for the inevitable. Cazale was a brilliant actor, as evidenced by his performance in 'The Deer Hunter'.
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Post by petrolino on Nov 24, 2017 1:46:56 GMT
The first time I saw it, it was dubbed in German. I knew a little German but not much. I was gripped though - couldn't tear my eyes away from the screen. And even though it was in German, I cried at the end of the movie. One of a small handful of films that always brings tears to my eyes - 'The Best Years Of Our Lives' (1946), 'The Last House On The Left' (1972), 'The Deer Hunter' (1978), 'Platoon' (1986) ... Wow! Dubbed in German, Petro? It's not an easy film to take in English,--riveting visually, it's difficult to understand much of what's being said in English--I can only imagine what it must sound like in German. Or Japanese. Arabic? In the early days of Sky broadcasting in the U K, there were Italian and German tv stations being signalled on freeview. The movie was screened by the 'RTL' network. I was struck by how palpable the atmosphere was despite the lack of background music. 'Dog Day Afternoon' later became one of several Sidney Lumet films selected as part of the 'Elite' masterpiece series released to VHS video here in U K. I snapped up a copy and was able to see it in its original form.
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Post by telegonus on Nov 24, 2017 4:02:18 GMT
Wow! Dubbed in German, Petro? It's not an easy film to take in English,--riveting visually, it's difficult to understand much of what's being said in English--I can only imagine what it must sound like in German. Or Japanese. Arabic? In the early days of Sky broadcasting in the U K, there were Italian and German tv stations being signalled on freeview. The movie was screened by the 'RTL' network. I was struck by how palpable the atmosphere was despite the lack of background music. 'Dog Day Afternoon' later became one of several Sidney Lumet films selected as part of the 'Elite' masterpiece series released to VHS video here in U K. I snapped up a copy and was able to see it in its original form. John Cazale is fondly remembered, still talked about to this day despite his brief career in films. His death was a great loss for films.
Yes, the lack of background music does make the movie feel more intense, like a docu-drama, which, thanks to Sidney Lumet's artistry, does not feel artificial. The immediacy is there. Even all the actors in support and small parts players are outstanding. No false notes or missteps,--in the movie, I mean--the main characters screw up royally.
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Post by petrolino on Apr 10, 2020 1:29:54 GMT
I watched the documentary about John Wojtowicz on the BBC and highly recommend it. Dog Day Afternoon was an event experience when I saw it at my local cinema.
I'm going to look for it this Easter weekend as I have some time off work, thanks.
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Post by WarrenPeace on Apr 11, 2020 1:27:32 GMT
I like this movie. Not enough to the point where I wanna buy it but enough to watch it when I see it on time to time. And I love Sidney Lumet. One of the best and most underrated. He belongs in the same circles of conversations with Scorsese and Kubrick. He has been behind the lens of many contemporary classics.
Chris Sarandon and Pacino nailed the phone conversation. Sarandon is great. Love him as the unstable troubled gay lover who wants a sex change.
Last time I watched Dog Day before then I didn't fully realize why Sonny rejected the black bus driver for the FBI one. Because he wanted them to end it. And poor Sal getting shot like that! I read somewhere the real "Sonny" was not happy how they portrayed him selling out like that and says he did not.
Great movie. Nice to see a post on it.
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Post by millar70 on Apr 11, 2020 1:33:31 GMT
Wyoming.
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Post by politicidal on Apr 11, 2020 14:24:22 GMT
7/10.
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