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Blow Out

 
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Blow Out

  • Director: Brian De Palma
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Thriller
  • Movie Type: Psychological Thriller, Paranoid Thriller
  • Themes: Witnessing a Crime, Conspiracies, Assassination Plots
  • Main Cast: John Travolta, Nancy Allen, John Lithgow, Dennis Franz, Peter Boyden
  • Release Year: 1981
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 107 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Brian De Palma's homage to Michelangelo Antonioni's classic art movie Blow-Up (1966) blends suspense and political paranoia when a Philadelphia soundman inadvertently records a murder. Former police technician Jack Terri (John Travolta) makes his living doing sound for slasher flicks. While recording new outdoor effects one night, Jack witnesses a couple's car careen off a bridge into a river, but he can save only the female occupant, Sally (Nancy Allen). Jack begins to suspect something when he learns that her dead companion was a Presidential hopeful. Re-playing his tape over and over, Jack thinks that he hears a gun shot before the crash-causing tire blow-out. When sleazy photographer Manny Karp (Dennis Franz) comes forward with photos of the accident, Jack discovers the real reason that the naïve Sally was in the car -- and also a way to prove his auditory suspicions through motion pictures. Even with all his surveillance talent, however, Jack cannot see (or hear) how dangerous the big picture really is until it's too late. Taking a break from horror films, De Palma turned his interests in technology and voyeurism toward more politically loaded subject matter at the dawn of the Reagan era; the film's red, white and blue mise-en-scène, "Liberty Day" celebration climax, and conspiracy surrounding political "dirty tricks" suggest that American politics are still rotten, seven years after Watergate, . Although Blow Out earned some favorable notice, particularly for Travolta's first "adult" performance, De Palma's downbeat film did not go over well with 1981 summer audiences. Rather than blockbuster escapism, Blow Out instead harks back to 1970s political thrillers like The Parallax View (1974), using cinematic fireworks to tell an unsettling story about one man's struggle against unstoppable corruption. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide

Review

Blow Out is Brian DePalma's glossy send-up of Michelangelo Antonioni's 1960s art-house classic Blow-Up. In Blow-Up, a London fashion photographer unwittingly shoots footage of a murder plot; in Blow Out, a movie sound technician records a killing that's part of a wide-ranging political conspiracy. The intricate plot is typical of DePalma and has unmistakable parallels with Francis Ford Coppola's The Conversation (1974), also a version of Blow-Up. The cast includes John Travolta in his first serious major role, as well as DePalma favorites John Lithgow and Nancy Allen, in her last memorable part. Blow Out has all of DePalma's flashy camera techniques but keeps the director's customary gratuitous violence under some control. Most critics thought it was one of his most successful and intriguing films, though it didn't do well at the box office. ~ Michael Betzold, All Movie Guide

Cast

Curt May - Frank Donohue; John Aquino - Detective; Ernest McClure - Jim; Dean Bennett - Campus Guard; Claire Carter - Joan; Tim Choate - Sailor; Amanda Cleveland - Coed Lover; Maurice Copeland - Jack Manners; Brian Corrigan - Cop at Karp's Office; Terrence Currier - Lawrence Henry; Tony Devon - Sailor's Friend; John Hoffmeister - George McRyan; James Jeter - Film Lab Man; Cindy Manion - Dancing Coed; Tom McCarthy - Policeman; Dick McGarvin - TV Newscaster; John McMartin - Lawrence Henry; J. Patrick McNamara - Nelson; David Roberts - Anchorman; Bud Seese - Corrupt Captain; Robin Sherwood - Screamer; Maureen Sullivan - First Murder Victim; Roger Wilson - Coed Lover; Deborah Everton - Hooker; Lori-Nan Engler - Sue; Archie Lang - Mixer

Credit

Ann Roth - Costume Designer, Vicki Sanchez - Costume Designer, Joe Napolitano - First Assistant Director, Brian De Palma - Director, Paul Hirsch - Editor, Fred Caruso - Executive Producer, Pino Donaggio - Composer (Music Score), Paul Sylbert - Production Designer, Vilmos Zsigmond - Cinematographer, Fred Caruso - Production Manager, George Litto - Producer, Jeannine Oppewall - Set Designer, Jim Tannenbaum - Sound Mixer, Brian De Palma - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

The Conversation; Dressed to Kill; Executive Action; Klute; The Man Who Knew Too Much; The Man Who Knew Too Much; The Manchurian Candidate; The Parallax View; Three Days of the Condor; Winter Kills; To Kill the King; Snake Eyes; People I Know; Eyewitness; The Manchurian Candidate; The Assassination of Richard Nixon; The Midnight Meat Train
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Wikipedia: Blow Out
Top
Blow Out
Directed by Brian De Palma
Produced by George Litto
Written by Brian De Palma
Starring John Travolta
Nancy Allen
John Lithgow
Dennis Franz
Music by Pino Donaggio
Cinematography Vilmos Zsigmond
Distributed by Filmways
Release date(s) July 21, 1981 (U.S. release)
Running time 108 min.
Language English

Blow Out is a 1981 thriller film, written and directed by Brian De Palma. The film stars John Travolta as Jack Terry, a movie sound effects technician from Philadelphia who, while recording sounds for a low-budget horror film, serendipitously captures audio evidence of a possible assassination. The supporting cast includes Nancy Allen, John Lithgow, and Dennis Franz.

Contents

Plot

While in post-production on a low-budget exploitation film, Philadelphia sound technician Jack Terry (Travolta) realizes that he needs to overdub an actress's scream. After leaving the studio to record potential sound effects at a local park, he sees a car careen off the road and plunge into a nearby lake. Jack dives into the water to help, discovering a dead man and a young woman, still alive, trapped inside the submerged car. He pulls her to safety and accompanies her to a local hospital.

Jack learns that the driver of the car was the governor (and a presidential hopeful); the girl was a prostitute named Sally (Allen). Associates of the governor attempt to whitewash the incident by concealing that Sally was in the car, and they convince Jack to smuggle Sally out of the hospital with him.

Jack listens to the audio tape he recorded of the accident, wherein he distinctly hears a gunshot just before the blow out that caused the accident. He sees a television report that, seemingly by coincidence, Manny Karp (Franz) was also in the park that night and filmed the accident with a motion picture camera. When Karp sells stills from his film to a local tabloid, Jack splices them together into a crude movie and syncs them with the audio he recorded, becoming even more suspicious that the accident was actually an assassination.

Unbeknownst to Jack, Sally and Karp were both co-conspirators in a larger plot against the governor. The gunman, Burke (Lithgow), intended that Sally also die in the crash. He begins murdering local prostitutes bearing a resemblance to Sally, whose deaths are attributed to a serial killer, "the Liberty Bell Strangler."

Jack draws Sally into his own private investigation of the incident. She steals Karp's film of the car accident, which, when synced to Jack's audio, clearly reveals the gunshot that anticipated the blow out. Nevertheless, nobody believes Jack's story, and every move he makes is immediately silenced by a seemingly widespread conspiracy.

Finally, Jack attempts to gather irrefutable proof of the assassination attempt, wiring Sally with a hidden microphone and sending her off to meet a purported media contact. Shadowing her from a distance, he is alarmed to see that his supposed contact is Burke, not the reporter. Sally is the last loose end for Burke to eliminate, and her death will be attributed to the "Strangler." Immediately realizing that she is in danger, Jack attempts to warn her, but Sally and Burke slip out of range and into a large Liberty Day crowd. Jack makes a mad dash across Philadelphia, attempting to head them off and rescue Sally. He crashes his Jeep, though and is knocked out. By the time Jack awakens, Burke has taken Sally to a rooftop where he attacks her. Still listening in on his earpiece, Jack spots them. He hears Sally screaming as he rushes to save her, but he is too late. He arrives just after Burke has strangled her to death and is marking her body with the Strangler's signature bell pattern. Jack takes Burke by surprise and kills him, then, devastated, takes Sally's body in his arms.

Sally's death is attributed to the Strangler, and his to her, completing the cover up of the governor's assassination. Jack is condemned to relive his complicity in Sally's death, which he recorded through the wire, and which he replays continuously over the coming days. He finally punishes himself by overdubbing Sally's final scream into the motion picture on which he was working during the film's opening. The producer is elated at Jack's work and replays it over and over in the mixing booth until Jack covers his ears to keep the sound from tormenting him any further.

Production

After completing Dressed to Kill, De Palma was considering several projects, including Acts of Vengeance (later produced for HBO starring Charles Bronson and Ellen Burstyn), Flashdance, and a script of his own titled Personal Effects.[1] The story outline for Personal Effects was similar to what would become Blow Out, but was set in Canada.[1]

De Palma scripted and shot Blow Out in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, his home town.[1] The film's $18 million budget made Blow Out De Plama's biggest budgeted film since The Fury.[1] De Palma considered Al Pacino for the role of Jack Terry, but ultimately chose John Travolta.[1] At least one studio executive suggested De Palma also cast Travolta's Grease co-star Olivia Newton-John in the role of Sally; De Palma refused.[citation needed] Travolta lobbied De Palma to cast Nancy Allen for the role (the three had previously worked together on Carrie); De Palma hesitated at first—he and Allen were married at the time and did not want Allen to have a reputation for only working in her husband's pictures—but ultimately agreed.[1] In addition to Travolta and Allen, De Palma filled Blow Out 's cast and crew with a number of his frequent collaborators: Denis Franz (Dressed to Kill, The Fury); John Lithgow (Obsession); cinematographer Vilmos Zsigmond (Obsession); editor Paul Hirsch (Hi, Mom!, Sisters, Phantom of the Paradise, Obsession, Carrie, The Fury]; and composer Pino Donaggio (Carrie, Home Movies, Dressed to Kill).

During the editing process, two reels of footage from the Liberty Parade sequence were stolen and never recovered; the scenes were reshot with insurance money at a cost of $750,000.[1] Because Zsigmond was no longer available, László Kovács lensed the reshot sequences.[2]

Themes and allusions

Thematically, Blow Out almost "exclusively concern[s] the mechanics of movie making" with a "total, complete and utter preoccupation with film itself as a medium in which ... style really is content."[3] In numerous scenes, the film depicts the interaction of sound and images, the manner in which the two are joined together, and methods in which they are re-edited, remixed, and rearranged to reveal new truths or the lack of any objective truth.[1]

As with several other De Palma films, Blow Out explores the power of guilt; both Jack and Sally are motivated to help right their past wrongs, both with tragic consequences.[1] De Palma also revisits the theme of voyeurism, a recurring theme in much of his previous work.[1] Jack exhibits elements of a peeping tom, but one who works with sound instead of image.[1]

Blow Out incorporates multiple allusions both to other films and to historical events. Its protagonist's obsessive reconstruction of a sound recording to uncover a possible murder recall both Michelangelo Antonioni's film Blowup[4] and Francis Ford Coppola's The Conversation.[5] The film alludes to elements of the Watergate scandal and the JFK assassination.[4] The film also recalls elements of the Chappaquiddick incident,[3] although De Palma intentionally tried to downplay the similarities.[1]

De Palma also explicitly references two of his previous projects. At one point in the film, Dennis Franz watches De Palma's film Murder a la Mod on television. (Originally, the character was to watch Coppola's Dementia 13, but Roger Corman demanded too much for the rights.)[1] A flashback where Travolta recalls an incident where his work got a police informant killed was also taken from an abandoned project, Prince of the City, which was ultimately directed by Sidney Lumet.[1]

Reception

Blow Out opened to generally positive reviews from critics,[1] including several ecstatic ones. In The New Yorker, Pauline Kael gave the film one of her few unconditional raves:[6] "De Palma has sprung to the place that Robert Altman achieved with films such as McCabe and Mrs. Miller and Nashville and that Francis Ford Coppola reached with the two Godfather films—that is, to the place where genre is transcended and what we're moved by is an artist's vision.... It's a great movie."[7] Roger Ebert's four-star review in the Chicago Sun-Times noted that Blow Out "is inhabited by a real cinematic intelligence. The audience isn't condescended to.... We share the excitement of figuring out how things develop and unfold, when so often the movies only need us as passive witnesses."[4]

Despite positive reviews, the film floundered at the box office due to terrible word of mouth about its bleak ending.[1] Blow Out returned approximately $8 million at the box office.[1]

Blow Out's public reputation, however, has grown considerably in the years following its release.[8] As a "movie about making movies," it has earned a natural audience with subsequent generations of cineastes.[9] In particular, Quentin Tarantino has consistently praised the movie, listing it alongside Rio Bravo and Taxi Driver as one of his three favorite films.[10] (In homage, Tarantino used the music cue "Sally and Jack" from Pino Donaggio's score in Death Proof, Tarantino's segment of Grindhouse

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Bouzereau, Laurent (1988). The De Palma Cut: The Films of America's Most Controversial Director. New York: Dembner Books. ISBN 0-942637-04-6. 
  2. ^ "László Kovács". The Internet Encyclopedia of Cinematographers. http://www.cinematographers.nl/PaginasDoPh/kovacs.htm. Retrieved March 13, 2009. 
  3. ^ a b Canby, Vincent (July 24, 1981), "TRAVOLTA STARS IN DEPALMA'S 'BLOW OUT'", New York Times, http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?_r=1&res=9903E1D81038F937A15754C0A967948260 
  4. ^ a b c Ebert, Roger (January 1, 1981), "Blow Out", Chicago Sun-Times, http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/19810101/REVIEWS/40318076/1023 
  5. ^ Koresky, Michael (Fall 2006). "Sound and Fury: Michael Koresky on Blow Out". Reverse Shot. http://www.reverseshot.com/article/blow_out_two. Retrieved March 13, 2009. 
  6. ^ Edelstein, David (September 7, 2001). "The Best Lover a Movie Could Have". Slate. http://www.slate.com/id/114923/. Retrieved Mar. 13, 2009. 
  7. ^ Kael, Pauline (August 1981), "The Perfect Scream", New Yorker . Reprinted in Kael, Pauline (1984). Taking It All In. New York: Henry Holt & Co. ISBN 0030693624. 
  8. ^ E.g., Schrodt, Paul (August 26, 2006). "Blow Out". Slant Magazine. http://www.slantmagazine.com/film/film_review.asp?ID=2463. Retrieved Mar. 13, 2009. 
  9. ^ E.g., Frazer, Bryant. "Blow Out". Deep Focus. http://www.deep-focus.com/flicker/blowout.html. Retrieved Mar. 13, 2009. 
  10. ^ Charlie Rose (Host). (Oct. 14, 1994). [1] An Interview with Quintin Tarantino. [The Charlie Rose Show]. PBS. 

See also

External links


 
 
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