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Running time125 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget$1.8 millionBox office$50 millionDog Day Afternoon is a 1975 American film directed by, written by, and produced by and Martin Elfand. The film stars,. The title refers to the sultry ' of summer.The film was inspired by 's article 'The Boys in the Bank' in magazine, about a similar robbery of a bank by and on August 22, 1972.The film received critical acclaim upon its September 1975 release by, some of which referred to its tone. Dog Day Afternoon was nominated for several and awards, and won the. In 2009, the film was deemed 'culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant' by the and selected for preservation in the.
Contents.Plot On August 22, 1972, first-time crook, his friend, and Stevie attempt to rob the First Brooklyn Savings Bank. The plan immediately goes awry when Stevie loses his nerve and flees, and Sonny discovers they have arrived after the daily cash pickup, finding only $1,100 in cash.Sonny takes the bank’s and burns the register in a trash can, but the smoke raises suspicion outside, and the building is surrounded by police. The two panicked robbers take the bank employees hostage.Police Detective Sergeant Eugene Moretti calls the bank and Sonny bluffs that he is prepared to kill the hostages. Sal assures Sonny that he is ready to kill if necessary. A security guard has an attack and Sonny releases him as a display of good faith. Moretti convinces Sonny to step outside. Using the head teller as a shield, Sonny begins a dialogue with Moretti that culminates in his shouting 'Attica!
To invoke the recent. The crowd begins cheering for Sonny.Sonny demands a vehicle to drive himself and Sal to the airport so they can board a jet. He also demands for pizzas to be brought for the hostages, and for his wife to be brought to the bank. Sonny's wife, Leon Shermer, a, arrives and reveals that the robbery was intended to pay for her. She divulges that Sonny has children with his estranged wife, Angie.As night sets in, the bank’s lights are shut off as Agent Sheldon takes command of the scene.
He refuses to give Sonny any more favors, but when the bank manager Mulvaney goes into diabetic shock, Sheldon lets a doctor inside. Sheldon convinces Leon to talk to Sonny on the phone; she reveals that she attempted suicide to escape the abusive Sonny, and was hospitalized at when police found her.
Leon turns down Sonny's offer to join him and Sal in their escape. Sonny tells police that Leon had nothing to do with the robbery.Sonny agrees to let Mulvaney leave, but he refuses to leave his employees. The FBI calls Sonny out of the bank to talk to his mother, who unsuccessfully tries to persuade him to give himself up. Back inside, Sonny writes out his will, leaving money from his life insurance to Leon for her surgery and to Angie.When the requested limousine arrives, Sonny checks for hidden weapons or booby traps, and selects Agent Murphy to drive himself, Sal, and the remaining hostages to. Sonny sits in the front beside Murphy with Sal behind. Murphy repeatedly asks Sal to point his gun at the roof so Sal won't accidentally shoot him.As they wait on the airport tarmac for the plane to taxi into position, Sal releases another hostage, who gives him her rosary beads for his first plane trip.
Murphy again reminds Sal to aim his gun away. Sal does, and Sheldon seizes Sonny's weapon, allowing Murphy to pull a revolver hidden in his armrest and shoot Sal in the head. Sonny is immediately arrested, and the hostages are freed.The film ends as Sonny watches Sal's body being taken from the car on a stretcher.
Subtitles reveal that Sonny was sentenced to 20 years in prison, Angie and her children subsisted on welfare, and Leon, who changed her name to Elizabeth, had the surgery.Cast The LIFE article described Wojtowicz as 'a dark, thin fellow with the broken-faced good looks of an Al Pacino or '. Hoffman was later offered the role when Pacino briefly quit the production. An 18-year-old actor was originally to be cast in the role of Sal to match the age of the actual Salvatore.
The table below summarizes the main cast of Dog Day Afternoon. CharacterActorRoleSimilar person from Life articleSonny WortzikBank robberSalvatore 'Sal' NaturaleSonny's partner in the robberySergeant Eugene MorettiPolice Sergeant who originally negotiates with SonnyNYPD Police Chief of Detectives Louis C. The location of the actual event, 450 Avenue P, Brooklyn, New York (1975 photo).The film is based on the story of. It adheres to the basic facts of what happened, according to a article published on September 22, 1972, entitled 'The Boys in the Bank'. Wojtowicz, along with Sal Naturale, held up a branch in, on August 22, 1972.After being apprehended, Wojtowicz was convicted in court and sentenced to 20 years in prison in 1973, of which he served five.Wojtowicz wrote a letter to in 1975 claiming that the events of the film were 'only 30% true.' Some of Wojtowicz's objections to the film's accuracy included the portrayal of his ex-wife, whose real name was Carmen Bifulco, the conversation with his mother and the refusal of police to let him speak to Carmen (Angie).
He did, however, praise Al Pacino and Chris Sarandon's portrayals of himself and Elizabeth Eden. Also, although Sal was 18 years old at the time of the robbery, he is portrayed in the film by then 39-year-old John Cazale.The film shows Sonny making out a will to give Elizabeth his so that if Sonny were killed, she might still be able to pay for the operation. The real-life Wojtowicz was paid $7,500 ($38,100 today) plus 1% of the film's for the rights to his story, from which he gave to Eden enough to pay for her. She died of complications from in Genesee Hospital, in, in 1987. Wojtowicz died of cancer in January 2006.The robbery took place at the branch at 450 Avenue P in Brooklyn on the cross street of East 3rd Street, in. ( )Production The original inspiration for the film was an article written by and Thomas Moore for in September 1972.
The article included many of the details later used in the film and noted the relationship which Wojtowicz and Naturale developed with hostages and the police. Bank manager Robert Barrett said, 'I'm supposed to hate you guys Wojtowicz/Naturale, but I've had more laughs tonight than I've had in weeks. We had a kind of camaraderie.' Teller Shirley Ball said, 'If they had been my houseguests on a Saturday night, it would have been hilarious.' The novelization of the film was penned by organized crime writer.The film has no other than three songs, which are: during the opening credits, Sonny, Sal, and Stevie are listening in their car to ' by (which first appeared on his 1970 album ); during scenes inside the bank, the song ' and ' by both briefly play on the radio. Although many scenes within the bank establish the temperature was quite hot during the robbery, some outdoor sequences were shot in weather cool enough that actors had to put ice in their mouths to stop their breath from showing on camera. Exterior shots were filmed on location on Prospect Park West between 17th and 18th Street in.
The interior shots of the bank were filmed in a set created in a warehouse.Though the actors kept to the basic text of the script as written by Frank Pierson, director Lumet encouraged them to improvise and workshop scenes to create more natural dialogue. Changes made through this process included Cazale's memorable reply when asked what country he'd like to go to ('Wyoming'), and Durning and Pacino's aggressive dialogue after shots are fired within the bank.
Response Although Dog Day Afternoon was released nationally in 1975, it is based on events that took place in Brooklyn three years earlier, in August 1972. During this era of strong, 'anti-establishment' Sonny repeats the counter-cultural war cry, ', in reference to the of September 1971. Critical reception Upon its release, Dog Day Afternoon received largely positive reviews. The film holds a 95% 'fresh' rating on. Called it 'Sidney Lumet's most accurate, most flamboyant New York movie' and praised the 'brilliant characterizations' by the entire cast.
Called Sonny 'one of the most interesting modern movie characters' and gave the movie three-and-a-half stars out of four. He would later add this film to his list of awarded four stars out of four, calling it a 'superb' film with a performance by Pacino that 'made me believe the unbelievable.' He placed it fourth on his year-end list of the best films of 1975. Gary Arnold of called it 'a triumphant new classic of American movie naturalism.'
Of wrote, 'Though the farcical tone of the movie is blusterous, falling into the common show-biz habit of supplying energy in place of intent, the movie succeeds, on the whole, because it has the crucial farcical value of not faltering.' The film has continued to generate a positive critical reception. For example, wrote in 2006 that the film 'captures perfectly the of the early 1970s, a time when optimism was scraping rock bottom and John Wojtowicz was as good a hero as we could come up with'.P.F.
Kluge, coauthor of the LIFE Magazine article that inspired the film, believed the filmmakers 'stayed with the surface of a lively journalistic story' and that the film had a 'strong, fast-paced story' without 'reflection' or 'a contemplative view of life'.Dog Day Afternoon ranks 443rd on 's 2008 list of the 500 greatest movies of all time. Named the bank robbery scene the third best bank robbery in film history, behind (1987) and (1995).
Accolades Dog Day Afternoon won the for and was nominated for five other Oscars:. ( and Martin Elfand). The film was also nominated for the following seven, winning none:. (Al Pacino). Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture. The film won other awards, including an for Best Supporting Actor (Charles Durning) and a for Best Drama Written Directly for the Screen (Frank Pierson) as well as the (Al Pacino).
The film is #70 on 's list. Also Al Pacino's quote, 'Attica!
Placed at #86 on AFI's. It was nominated for AFI's in 1998 and 2007. In 2006, Premiere magazine issued its '100 Greatest Performances of All Time', citing Pacino's performance as Sonny as the fourth-greatest ever. In 2012, the listed the film as the 20th-best edited film of all time based on a survey of its membership. See also. Retrieved January 22, 2012.; Ward, Elizabeth; eds.
Film Noir: An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style (3rd ed.). Woodstock, New York:. ^ Rayburn, Nina. New York Review of Magazines.
Archived from on January 11, 2006. Retrieved August 9, 2009. 'Holly Woodlawn, from A Low Life in High Heels'. The Stonewall Reader. Penguin Classics.
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by John Wojtowicz from Jump Cut, no. 15, 1977, pp. Retrieved March 13, 2007. ', October 1, 1987.
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'An Insider is Sought in Bank Holdup'. Lumet, Sidney. The Making of Dog Day Afternoon, Special Feature on Dog Day Afternoon (Two-Disc Special Edition) DVD. Blair, Cynthia (2007).
Archived from on September 30, 2007. Retrieved August 9, 2009. for Mark Allen Cam by Mark Allen on February 20, 2006. Retrieved April 28, 2006. From the director's commentary on the DVD release. for Movie Magic.
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Today Dog Day Afternoon is an unabashed classic, a template by which other movies are based and a formula which is periodically tweaked and refined. There are few things you can complain about in Dog Day - a second act that relies on a few too many variations of the same 'the cops are scheming' bit, and that's about it. But Pacino's fiery performance and Sidney Lumet's perfect direction does more than create a great crime movie. It captures perfectly the zeitgeist of the early 1970s, a time when optimism was scraping rock bottom and John Wojtowicz was as good a hero as we could come up with. Retrieved August 9, 2009. Porcelijn, Max (April 26, 2008). 'The 5 Best Bank Robberies in Film History'.
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Retrieved May 9, 2006. May 18, 2010, at the. August 7, 2011, at the. September 19, 2009, at the. Retrieved July 4, 2014. Editors Guild Magazine. Archived from on March 17, 2015.
Retrieved April 19, 2017.External links Wikiquote has quotations related to:. on. at the. at.
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