Dog Day Afternoon
is a 1975 American crime drama film directed by Sidney Lumet and written by Frank Pierson. The film stars Al Pacino, John Cazale, Chris Sarandon, James Broderick, and Charles Durning. Based on the events of a bank robbery that took place on August 22, 1972, Dog Day Afternoon
tells the story of John "Sonny" Wortzik, who, with his partner Salvatore Naturile, holds the employees of a Brooklyn, New York bank hostage. [1] The title refers to the "dog days of summer".
The film was inspired by P.F. Kluge's article "The Boys in the Bank", which tells a similar story of the robbery of a Brooklyn bank by John Wojtowicz and Salvatore Naturile. This article was published in Life
in 1972. [2] The film received generally positive reviews upon its September 1975 release by Warner Bros. Pictures, some of which referred to its anti-establishment tone. Dog Day Afternoon
was nominated for several Academy Awards and Golden Globe awards, and won one Academy Award.
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DOG DAY AFTERNOON TICKETS
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Plot
First-time crook
Sonny Wortzik (Pacino) and his friend Sal (Cazale) show the intentions of robbing a Brooklyn bank, only to discover that it has very little money at the time. Their third accomplice loses his nerve, and runs off during the raid. They are then informed that the police have been tipped off and have the bank under siege. Unsure what to do, the two robbers camp out in the bank, holding all the workers hostage.
Detective Moretti (Durning) calls the bank to tell Sonny that the police have arrived. Sonny warns that he and Sal have hostages and will kill them if anyone tries to come into the bank. Detective Moretti acts as
hostage negotiator, while
FBI Agent Sheldon monitors his actions. Howard, the security guard, has an
asthma attack, so Sonny releases him when Moretti asks for a hostage as a sign of good faith. Moretti convinces Sonny to step outside the bank to see how aggressive the police forces are. After a moment, Sonny starts his now-famous "Attica!" chant, a reference to the recent
Attica Prison riot in which 39 people were killed, and the civilian crowd starts cheering for Sonny.
After realizing they cannot make a simple getaway, Sonny demands transportation: a jet to take them out of the country. When a tactical team approaches the back door, he fires a shot to warn them off. Moretti tries to persuade Sonny that those police were a separate unit that he was not controlling. Later, Sonny incites the crowd by throwing money over the police barricades. Some overrun the barricade and a few are arrested. When Sonny's wife, Leon Schermer (a
transwoman) arrives, he reveals to the crowd and officials one of Sonny's reasons for robbing the bank is to pay for Leon's
sex reassignment surgery, and that Sonny also has a legal wife, Angie, and children.
As night sets in, the lights in the bank all shut off. Sonny goes outside again and discovers that Agent Sheldon has taken command of the scene. He refuses to give Sonny any more favors, but when the bank manager Mulvaney goes into a diabetic shock, Agent Sheldon lets a doctor through. While the doctor is inside the bank, Sheldon convinces Leon to talk to Sonny on the phone. The two have a lengthy conversation that reveals Leon had
attempted suicide to "get away from" Sonny. He had been hospitalized at the
psychiatric ward of
Bellevue Hospital until the police brought him to the scene. Leon turns down Sonny's offer to join him and Sal to wherever they take the plane. Sonny tells police listening to the phone call that Leon had nothing to do with the robbery attempt.
After the phone call, the doctor asks Sonny to let Mulvaney leave and Sonny agrees. Mulvaney refuses, instead insisting he remain with his employees. The FBI calls Sonny out of the bank again. They have brought his mother to the scene. She unsuccessfully tries to persuade him to give himself up and Agent Sheldon signals that a limousine will arrive in ten minutes to take them to a waiting jet. Once back inside the bank, Sonny writes out his
will, leaving money from his
life insurance to Leon for his sex change and to his wife Angie.
When the limousine arrives, Sonny checks it for any hidden weapons or
booby traps. When he decides the car is satisfactory, he settles on Agent Murphy to drive Sal, the remaining hostages and him to
Kennedy Airport. Sonny sits in the front next to Murphy while Sal sits behind them. 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, Agent Sheldon forces Sonny's weapon onto the dashboard, creating a distraction which allows Murphy to pull a
pistol hidden in his armrest and shoot Sal in the head. Sonny is immediately arrested and the hostages are all escorted to the
terminal. The film ends with Sonny watching Sal's body being taken from the car on a
stretcher.
Historical event
The movie was based on the story of
John Wojtowicz and adheres to the basic facts of what happened, according to the
Life
article "The Boys in the Bank". According to the article, Wojtowicz, along with Sal Naturile, held up a
Chase Manhattan Bank branch in Brooklyn, New York on August 22, 1972.
After being apprehended, Wojtowicz was convicted in court and sentenced to twenty years in prison, of which he served fourteen.
[3]
Wojtowicz wrote a letter to
The New York Times
in 1975 out of concern that people would believe the version of the events portrayed in the film, which he said was "only 30% true". Some of Wojtowicz's objections included the portrayal of his wife Carmen Bifulco, the conversation with his mother that Wojtowicz claimed never happened, and the refusal of police to let him speak to his wife Carmen (unlike what was portrayed in the film). He did, however, praise Al Pacino and Chris Sarandon's portrayals of him and his wife Ernest Aron as accurate.
[4] Also, Sal was 18 years old, yet is played in
Dog Day Afternoon
by a 39-year-old.
The film shows Sonny making out a
will to give Leon his life insurance. Even if Sonny should be killed, Leon might still be able to pay for the operation. The real-life Wojtowicz was paid $7,500 plus 1% of the film's net profits for the rights to his story, $2,500 of which he gave to Ernest Aron to pay for her sexual reassignment surgery.
[unreliable source?] [5] Aron became
Elizabeth Debbie Eden [6] and lived out the rest of her days in
New York. She died of complications from
AIDS in
Rochester in 1987.
[7] Wojtowicz himself died of
cancer in January 2006.
The bank where the robbery took place was a branch of the
Chase Manhattan Bank, at Avenue P in Brooklyn, at the cross street of East 3rd Street, in
Gravesend Brooklyn.
[8]
Production
The original inspiration for the film was an article written by
P. F. Kluge and Thomas Moore for
Life
in September 1972. The article included many of the details later used in the film and noted the relationship which Wojtowicz and Naturile developed with hostages and the police. Bank manager Robert Barrett said, "I'm supposed to hate you guys [Wojtowicz/Naturile], but I've had more laughs tonight than I've had in weeks. We had a kind of camaraderie." Teller Shirley Bell said,"[I]f 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,
Leslie Waller.
The film has no
musical score other than the
Elton John song "
Amoreena" (which first appeared on John's 1970 album
Tumbleweed Connection
) in the opening credits, as well as the
Uriah Heep song "
Easy Living" which briefly plays on the radio during a scene inside the bank.
[9] Although many scenes within the bank establish that it was quite hot during the robbery, some outdoor sequences were shot in weather so cold that actors had to put ice in their mouths to stop their breath from showing on camera.
[unreliable source?] Exterior shots were filmed on location on
Prospect Park West between 17th and 18th Street in
Windsor Terrace of Brooklyn. The interior shots of the bank were filmed in a set created in a warehouse.
[10] [11]
Cast
The
Life
article described Wojtowicz as "a dark, thin fellow with the broken-faced good looks of an Al Pacino or
Dustin Hoffman"
. Hoffman would later be 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.
[12] The table below summarizes the main cast of
Dog Day Afternoon
.
[13]
| Character
| Actor/Actress
| Role
| Similar person from Life
article
|
| Sonny Wortzik
| Al Pacino
| Bank robber
| John Wojtowicz
|
| Salvatore "Sal" Naturile
| John Cazale
| Sonny's partner in the robbery
| Salvatore Naturile
|
| Detective Sgt. Eugene Moretti
| Charles Durning
| Police detective who originally negotiates with Sonny
| James McGowan
|
| Agent Sheldon
| James Broderick
| FBI agent who replaces Moretti in negotiations
| Agent Richard Baker
|
| Agent Murphy
| Lance Henriksen
| FBI agent/driver
| Agent Murphy
|
| Leon Shermer
| Chris Sarandon
| Sonny's preoperative transsexual wife
| Ernest Aron
|
| Sylvia "The Mouth"
| Penelope Allen
| Head teller
| Shirley Bell (Wojtowicz also called her "The Mouth")
|
| Mulvaney
| Sully Boyar
| Bank manager
| Robert Barrett
|
| Angie
| Susan Peretz
| Sonny's estranged divorced wife
| Carmen Bifulco
|
| Jenny "The Squirrel"
| Carol Kane
| Bank teller
|
|
| Stevie
| Gary Springer
| Robert Westenberg
| Robert left soon after John and Salvatore held up the bank
|
| Howard Calvin
| John Marriott
| Unarmed bank guard
| Calvin Jones
|
Response
Dog Day Afternoon
, released in 1975, is based on events that took place in 1972. During this era of heavy
opposition to the Vietnam war, "anti-establishment" Sonny repeatedly reminds people he is a Vietnam
veteran and repeats the counter-cultural war cry of "
Attica!"
[14] in reference to the
Attica Prison riots.
Critical reactions
Upon its release,
Dog Day Afternoon
received generally favorable reviews.
Vincent Canby called it "Sidney Lumet's most accurate, most flamboyant New York movie" and praised the "brilliant characterizations" by the entire cast.
[15] Roger Ebert called Sonny "one of the most interesting modern movie characters" and gave the movie three-and-a-half stars out of four.
[16] As time has passed, the film continues to generate a positive critical reception. For example,
Christopher Null has said that the film "captures perfectly the
zeitgeist of the early 1970s, a time when optimism was scraping rock bottom" and that "John Wojtowicz was as good a hero as we could come up with".
[17] P.F. Kluge, author of the article that inspired the film, believed that 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".
[18] Dog Day Afternoon
also ranks 443rd on
Empire magazine's 2008 list of the 500 greatest movies of all time.
[19] Vrij Nederland
named the bank robbery scene the third best bank robbery in film history, behind bank robbery scenes from
Raising Arizona
(1987) and
Heat
(1995).
[20]
Awards and honors
Dog Day Afternoon
won the
Academy Award for
Writing - Original Screenplay (Frank Pierson) and was nominated for other Oscars:
[21]
- Best Picture
- Best Director (Sidney Lumet)
- Best Actor in a Leading Role (Al Pacino)
- Best Actor in a Supporting Role (Chris Sarandon)
- Best Film Editing (Dede Allen)
The film was also nominated for the following seven
Golden Globes, winning none:
- Best Motion Picture - Drama
- Best Director - Motion Picture (Sidney Lumet)
- Best Motion Picture Actor - Drama (Al Pacino)
- Best Screenplay - Motion Picture (Frank Pierson)
- Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture (Charles Durning)
- Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture (John Cazale)
- Best Acting Debut in a Motion Picture - Male (Chris Sarandon)
The film won other awards, including an
NBR Award for Best Supporting Actor (Charles Durning) and a
Writers Guild Award for Best Drama Written Directly for the Screen (Frank Pierson) as well as the British Academy Award for Best Actor (Al Pacino). The film is also #70 on AFI's
"100 Years... 100 Thrills" list.
[22] In 2006,
Premiere
magazine issued its "100 Greatest Performances of All Time", citing Pacino's performance as Sonny as the 4th greatest ever.
Notes
- Charm City North
- "The Boys in the Bank" by P.F. Kluge and Thomas Moore for ''Life'', September 22, 1972, Vol. 73(12).
- Federal Bureau of Prisons Inmate Locator Results for John Stanley Wojtowicz
- Real ''Dog Day'' hero tells his story by John Wojtowicz from Jump Cut, no. 15, 1977, pp. 31–32. Retrieved March 13, 2007
- {{Verify credibility|date=August 2009}}Trivia from ''Dog Day Afternoon'' for IMDb. Retrieved April 24, 2006.
- Liz Eden Papers
- Dog Days Afternoon Remembered
- An Insider is Sought in Bank Holdup]
- http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072890/soundtrack
- 1975: "Dog Day Afternoon" Filmed in Brooklyn
- The bank and street from ''Dog Day Afternoon'' for Mark Allen Cam by Mark Allen on February 20, 2006. Retrieved April 28, 2006.
- Lumet, Sidney. ''Dog Day Afternoon'', feature commentary
- Full Credits for ''Dog Day Afternoon'' from IMDb. Retrieved April 27, 2006.
- 10 Best Heist Movies Ever for Movie Magic. Retrieved April 28, 2006.
- Screen: Lumet's ''Dog Day Afternoon'' by Vincent Camby for The New York Times on September 22, 1975. Retrieved June 3, 2006.
- ''Dog Day Afternoon'' by Roger Ebert for the Chicago Sun-Times on January 1, 1975. Retrieved June 3, 2006.
- ''Dog Day Afternoon'' Reviews on Rotten Tomatoes, quote by Christopher Null. Retrieved April 28, 2006.
- The Write Stuff: Magazine articles that make it to the Big Screen
- Title Unavailable
- The 5 Best Bank Robberies in Film History
- Awards for ''Dog Day Afternoon'' for IMDb. Retrieved April 24, 2006.
- 100 Years...100 Thrills for the AFI on June 13, 2001. Retrieved May 9, 2006.