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Film & TV on DVD - John Doe News & Reviews

 
Greetings Film Fiends and welcome to John Doe's Film Blog. 30 years of dedicated celluloid obsession has meant that I have seen a few films. Drawing attention to some of the lesser discussed gems that I love. Cult classics, obscure curios and quality genre pictures. This blogs purpose is to translate some of my passion for these films and with luck, inspire you the reader to go check em out.
Dog Day Afternoon DVD
2 Disc Special Edition available in Australia
Director:Sidney Lumet
Writer:Frank Pierson
Starring:Al Pacino, John Cazale, Charles Durning



“No, I don't want to be paid, I don't need to be paid. Look, I'm here with my partner and nine other people, see. And we're dying, man. You know? You're going to see our brains on the sidewalk, they're going to spill our guts out. Now are you going to show that on television? Have all your housewives look at that? Instead of As The World Turns? I mean what do you got for me? I want something for that.”Sonny


Based on a true story, Dog Day Afternoon is cinema verite that lets you invest in the characters because of an unblinking fly on the wall reality. This crackling bank robbery thriller with a dramatic back hander is the stuff of legend, to be discussed and dissected.

It’s looks like a typical summers day in New York City 1972, as the camera gives us a tour of the city that ends in Brooklyn when we meet Sonny (Al Pacino) and Sal (John Cazale).
“Uh, no. Doing what? You know if you want a job you've got to be a member of a union. See, and if you got no union card you don't get a job.”Sonny

Screwed by the system and struggling they have decided to rob a bank in broad daylight. Sonny is the kinetic man with the plan. Sal is the volatile ingredient required to make sure the hostages take notice.

As the police surround the area and the news crews turn up a media frenzy erupts. The captured bank employees and customers begin to see that they may get out alive.
“At the airport. We get on the plane, check it out, and if it's all okay we'll send them out. Except one.” - Sonny

As the day progresses the two gentle meaning crooks nervous energy rises. Sonny talks to the police, the media and his captives as he tries to survive, but nobody could see where this perspiring tension was going to end.
“So what country do you want to go to?” - Sonny


Dog Day Afternoon Al Pacino
'Attica, Attica, Attica, Attica'



John Doe says:
As the vice slowly gets turned and the automatic weapon has its safety switched off this creatively engineered story drags you into its gritty realism dowsed in an atmosphere of claustrophobic suspense.

Observant and comedic at times, the man with his hands on the ratchet is Director Sidney Lumet who caresses us through the powerful drama with dashes of blue black real life absurdity.

Air tight execution means that the sincere attention to detail just pulls you in further. The long silent pauses benefit from a lack of any background music other than what is in the frame. The viewer is allowed to subjectively perceive the sometimes improvised moments that come out of Frank Pierson’s (Cool Hand Luke, The Anderson Tapes) Oscar winning screenplay.

The documentary cinematography brings out the carefully tapered performances that unconditionally convince. Edited to an organic rhythmn as the seconds tick away the complex and involving lead characters gain a hyper real honesty.

Al Pacino had already created unforgettable characters as a young Michael Corleone, and in uncorruptable cop Frank Serpico when he took on the part of Sonny. His dynamic inhibition free portrayals that fearlessly remain morally conflicted are his best and in Director Sidney Lumet’s Dog Day Afternoon his performance confirms his reputation in the 70’s.

Unfaltering, John Cazale had such a tragically short career and life, but what a resume. If your only going to star in 5 feature films let them be Francis Ford Coppolla’s The Godfather I & II, The Conversation, Michael Cimino’s the Deer Hunter and Sidney Lumet’s Dog Day Afternoon!

Al Pacino has never been better as a tightly compressed panther inverted by Cazales jittery hyena with an itchy trigger finger and together they are combustible on screen.

This is a film where John Doe struggles to breathe as the oxygen is taken from his lungs with each passing tick of the clock. The acting is free and loose yet deliberate and everything around it follows suit. Dog day Afternoon matches any thriller of ever made because it captures the one thing special effects can never do, intellectual gut emotions that is true.


Watch the Trailer


Heres a heated scene from the film
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Miami Blues (1990) - Trailer Included

August 30th 2007 05:08
Hot times in Miami's vice.

Miami Blues DVD
DVD Cover
Writer/Director: George Armitage
Starring: Alec Baldwin, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Fred Ward, Charles Napier


“Thinking he is alone... breaking, entering... the dark and lonely place-places... ... finding a...big gun…... smelling like a rose.”Junior improvised Haiku

Occasionally a screenplay foresees the direction that film culture is heading and post dates a genre revolution (EG: A Clockwork Orange). So hip and cinematically symbiotic that only those looking for the fresh original material can begin to appreciate it, Miami Blues was that film in 1990.

Based on the first book in Charles Willeford’s Hoke Moseley detective series this quirky, black comedy mixes crime and unpredictable violence into a cocktail of visceral thrills.
“Now I'll tell you what I want you to sew my eyebrow back on.” - Junior

It’s the 80’s and a volatile sociopath Frederick J. Frenger Jr. (Alec Baldwin) is fresh out of the joint and heads to Miami Florida. Not for the sun and fun but to launch a frenzied crime wave. Entering the airport it isn’t long before he commits his first homicide, breaking the fingers of a Hari Krishna who goes into shock and dies of a heart attack.

Assigned the case is aging, haggard detective Hoke Mosley (Fred Ward), slipping in his false teeth he is soon in pursuit of Junior. Meanwhile our unhinged thief has hooked up with Susie (Jennifer Jason Leigh), a trusting, easily led student who works as a prostitute to pay the bills.
“The first thing they shoulda told you at your hooker classes is that you shouldn't ask so many fucking questions.” - Junior

As Mosley closes in on his prey Junior’s rampage escalates when he ferociously bashes the cop and steal his badge and gun. Now no one is safe as the warped hoodlum begins exploiting his new found artificial authority and targets anyone who gets in his way.
“He got your gun... your badge... and your teeth? You are a disgrace to the police force.”Sergeant Lackley


Miami Blues Baldwin Leigh
I'm sorry you looked like Billy, or is it Stephen?


John Doe says:
Immediately establishing a tone of dangerous, pulp hyper-reality with Norman Greenbaum “Spirit in the Sky” blaring over the opening credits. Miami Blues edgy humour, eccentric characters and colourful staging all create a mood of spontaneity seldom achieved in this type of film. Brash and occasionally outlandish, stringently avoiding formula effectively circumventing stereotype.

Roger Corman alumni Director George Armitage (Grosse Point Blank) is obviously open to ideas, confidently keeping the narrative purposefully loose and skilfully embracing the craziness inherit in the screenplay. Managing to surprise with each new scene, the actors are given free reign becoming fictional individuals each with unique traits.

The often wooden Alec Baldwin (Hunt For Red October, Heavens Prisoner, BeetleJuice, Talk Radio, Thick as Thieves, State and Main, The Cooler, The Departed) lodges his most defined performance this side of Glengarry Glenross. In his hands the twisted morality of Junior is made plausible, emoting charismatic intelligence like a DNA mix of Tyler Durden and Patrick Bateman.

The actress of her generation, Jennifer Jason Leigh (Last Exit to Brooklyn, The Hitcher, Kansas City, Flesh and Blood, Palindromes, Existenz, Georgia, Hudsucker Proxy, fast Times at Ridgemont High, Short Cuts, Rush) is as always bold with her body language and manages to play naïve without stupidity, charming without sugar.

Often ignored Fred Ward (The Right Stuff, Tremors, Uncommon Valor, Southern Comfort, Remo:Unarmed and Dangerous, Henry and June, The Player, Bob Roberts, Short Cuts) balances a tough guy exterior with sly comedy to become the ideal foil to Baldwin’s necessary screen hogging.

Miami Blues is regularly mentioned by John Doe alongside the likes of Things to Do In Denver when Your Dead as a modern unsung gem of the genre. Avoiding Tarantino’s derivative style that would arrive 2 years later, there is a distinct personal flavour to the film taht sets it apart from all that came before or followed.


The DVD:
Transfer: 16:9 Widescreen/Dolby Digital 2.0
Extras: Nil


The Trailer


An alternate Trailer

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