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The Taking of Pelham One Two Three

 
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The Taking of Pelham One Two Three

  • Director: Joseph Sargent
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Thriller
  • Movie Type: Crime Thriller, Action Thriller
  • Themes: Hijackings, Perfect Crime, Hostage Situations
  • Main Cast: Thomas LaFleur, Maria Landa, William Snickowski, Walter Matthau, Robert Shaw, Martin Balsam, Hector Elizondo, Earl Hindman
  • Release Year: 1974
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 104 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

On a quiet midday in New York, along the Lexington Avenue subway line, the train designated "Pelham One Two Three" -- so named for its station of origin and time of departure -- makes its way down the East Side of Manhattan. One by one, three men board the train, and at 28th Street, a fourth man approaches the motorman (James Broderick) and points a pistol at him, ordering him to unlock the door to his cab and admit the man waiting there; meanwhile, another man points a gun at the conductor and threatens to kill him unless he holds the doors open and then closes them when the man talking to the motorman is aboard. Once on board, "Mr. Blue" (Robert Shaw) and "Mr. Green" (Martin Balsam) halt the train between stations, while "Mr. Brown" (Earl Hindeman) and "Mr. Gray" (Hector Elizondo) seal off the lead car. With Mr. Green at the controls, the front car is separated and isolated in the tunnel with 17 passengers aboard, and then Mr. Blue presents their demands over the radio: one million dollars in cash, within one hour, or they will start shooting one passenger each minute. On the other end, Transit Police Lieutenant Zachary Garber (Walter Matthau) must overcome his initial disbelief to deal with this threat, amid the confusion of a subway system that's chaotic even when it's running normally. With the mayor reluctantly aboard to pay the ransom, Garber must keep the hijackers from carrying out their threat while the money is transported, and keep the hotheads around him and on the police force under control -- and figure out how they intend to get away with a million dollars from inside a subway tunnel with police on all sides. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

Review

Joseph Sargent's film version of the book by John Godey is an electrifying thriller sparked by great performances, unrelenting action, and the fantastic use of location shooting. Walter Matthau stars as a wrinkly transit cop negotiating a potentially deadly situation: four criminals have hijacked a New York City subway train full of hostages -- whom they plan to kill one by one if they don't receive one million dollars in one hour. Peter Stone's gritty script (nominated for the Writer's Guild Award) ratchets up the tension splendidly, revealing perfectly timed details that keep viewers firmly on their toes. The dialogue has all the saltiness and cynical humor that mark true New York City speech, and the cast doesn't miss a beat with it. Matthau is quite simply a show stealer, whether he's leading a tour group of Asian cops whom he thinks don't speak English or coolly taking control of the crisis that brings the Big Apple to a standstill. Other notables include Robert Shaw, who leaves a distinct mark as the cold-blooded lead villain, Martin Balsam as Shaw's sickly cohort, and Woody Allen regular Tony Roberts as the mayor's wry assistant. Technically, The Taking of Pelham One Two Three is first-rate, with particular credit going to the film's editing and lighting. David Shire's memorable music score recalls a style used in that other '70s crime classic, Dirty Harry. The villains' use of phony color names (Mr. Green, Mr. Blue, etc.) was later used by Quentin Tarantino in his film Reservoir Dogs. The Taking of Pelham One Two Three was remade for TV in 1998, and again in 2009 for the big screen. ~ Patrick Legare, All Movie Guide

Cast

James Broderick - Denny Doyle; Ruth Attaway - Mayor's Nurse; Thomas Barbour - T.A. Chairman; Anna Berger - The Mother; Gary Bolling - The Homosexual; Rudy Bond - Police Commissioner; Bill Cobbs - Man on Platform; Alex Colon - The Delivery Boy; Joe Fields - The Salesman; Nathan George - Patrolman James; Mari Gorman - The Hooker; Michael Gorrin - The Old Man; Gene Gross - Muscat; Burtt Harris - Ptl. Ricci; Julius Harris - Inspector Daniels; Louise Larabee - The Alcoholic; Kenneth McMillan - Borough Commander; George Lee Miles - The Pimp; Christopher Murney - Dispatcher; Dick O'Neill - Correll; Tom Pedi - Caz Dolowicz; Doris Roberts - Mayor's Wife; Tony Roberts - Warren LaSalle; Lucy Saroyan - Coed #2; Joe Seneca - Police Sergeant; Sal Viscuso - Ptl. O'Keefe; Lee Wallace - The Mayor; Robert Weil - Marino; Beatrice Winde - Mrs. Jenkins; Conrad Yama - Mr. Tomashita; Carey Loftin - Stunt Driver; Harry Madsen - Stunt Driver; Paul Nuckles - Stunt Driver; Jerry Stiller - Lt. Rico Patrone; Carol Cole - The Secretary; Carolyn Nelson - Coed #1; Jerry Holland - Budy Carmondy; Carmine Foresta - Train Expediter; Tim Myers - Plumber; Cynthia Belgrave - The Maid; Simon Deckard - Ptl. Miskowsky; Toru Nagai - Mr. Yashimura; Rick Seaman - Stunt Driver; Thomas LaFleur - Older Son; Maria Landa - Spanish Woman; William Snickowski - Hippie/Plainclothes Policeman; Walter Jones - Mr. Mattson

Credit

Gene Rudolf - Art Director, Stephen F. Kesten - Associate Producer, Alixe Gordin - Casting, Anna Hill Johnstone - Costume Designer, Peter R. Scoppa - First Assistant Director, Joseph Sargent - Director, Jerry Greenberg - Editor, Robert Q. Lovett - Editor, David Shire - Composer (Music Score), Dick Mingalone - Camera Operator, Owen Roizman - Cinematographer, Gabriel Katzka - Producer, Edgar J. Scherick - Producer, Herb Mulligan - Set Designer, Chris Newman - Sound/Sound Designer, Peter Stone - Screenwriter, Vic Ramos - Extra Casting, John Godey - Book Author

Similar Movies

The Great Train Robbery; The Incident; The Laughing Policeman; Reservoir Dogs; Bullet Train; Speed; Money Train; Inside Man
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Wikipedia: The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (1974 film)
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The Taking of Pelham One Two Three

Original film poster by Mort Künstler
Directed by Joseph Sargent
Produced by Edgar J. Scherick
Written by John Godey (novel)
Peter Stone
Starring Walter Matthau
Robert Shaw
Martin Balsam
Jerry Stiller
Hector Elizondo
Dick O'Neill
Earl Hindman
Music by David Shire
Cinematography Owen Roizman
Editing by Gerald B. Greenberg
Robert Q. Lovett
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) October 2, 1974 (US)
Running time 104 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Taking of Pelham One Two Three, also known as The Taking of Pelham 123, is a heist film released in 1974, starring Walter Matthau, Robert Shaw, Jerry Stiller, and Martin Balsam. It was directed by Joseph Sargent, produced by Edgar J. Scherick, and was based on the novel of the same title by John Godey. Peter Stone wrote the screenplay, which takes its basics from the novel[1] but is highly different in approach, embracing a kind of New York City cynicism.[citation needed]

Contents

Plot

In New York City, four men—each wearing a near-identical trenchcoat, thick-rimmed eyeglasses, hat, and wide fake moustache, and carrying a briefcase—board, at different station stops on the Pelham 123 subway train run of the 6 Lexington Avenue Local service, bound from the Pelham Bay Park station in the Bronx to Manhattan. Each briefcase conceals a submachine gun, and the men hijack the train, calling one another Mr. Blue, Mr. Green, Mr. Grey, and Mr. Brown. They soon secure a small, easily supervisable group of hostages, whom they isolate in one car of the train. (Eventually they disconnect it from the rest of the train.)

Meanwhile, Lieutenant Zachary Garber (played by Walter Matthau), a cynical, curmudgeonly yet light-hearted New York City Transit Authority policeman begins his day by leading four visiting directors from the Tokyo subway system on a tour of the subway command-center facilities. The train halt between the 28th Street and 23rd Street stations is noted as an impediment to other subway traffic, but the transit authority realizes only when Garber's routine is interrupted by Blue's radio announcement to the command center that a complex crime is in progress.

Blue (Robert Shaw), the leader of the hijackers—distinguished by his calm English accent and cold, calculated demeanor—tells Garber they are demanding that a ransom of a million dollars be delivered to them, to prevent their killing a passenger per minute, starting when exactly one hour has passed. Garber, the sarcastic Lieutenant Rico Patrone (Jerry Stiller), and fellow transit workers cooperate while trying to guess how the criminals intend to escape the subway tunnel, and avoid capture once leaving it.

The film audience learn, by hearing them talk, that Blue was a ruthless British mercenary and that Green (Martin Balsam) is a New York native with an especially good understanding of the train controls (suggesting he is possibly a former transit worker). Green seems to have caught a cold overnight and his repeated sniffling and sneezing is heard through the radio by Garber. Grey, the most impulsive of the group, is constantly reprimanded by Blue; Brown is the quietest.

An angered boss at the Transit Authority seems unable to comprehend the possible risks, boldly walks down the subway tunnel himself to physically approach the hijacked train car, and is shot by the hotheaded Grey. Garber learns that one of the hostages is an out-of-uniform, off-duty police officer, and the transit police discuss the likelihood he is armed and the possibility of his providing assistance.

The mayor, introduced as a ridiculous incompetent, is at home with the flu; he finally agrees to pay the ransom, focused, at the urging of his take-charge deputy mayor, on the prospect of winning votes in the next election. The police dispatch a squad car carrying the ransom money on a frantic drive uptown from the Federal Reserve, as Garber attempts to negotiate with the hijackers by radio from transit police headquarters. When the car is delayed by a collision, Garber daringly bluffs to buy some time, telling the hijackers that the money has already been delivered to the 28th Street Station and only the walk down the tunnel is delaying it. A reluctant Blue finally agrees, uncharacteristically, to delay.

A police motorcycle completes the trip from the scene of the collision to the subway station, and two unarmed officers are sent with the money to the hijackers, quietly followed by an armed police team. Apparently contrary to their plans, they find themselves in a short but vicious shootout with the hijackers, in which Brown is wounded in the arm. The hijackers kill the train's young conductor, and Blue contacts Garber, allowing only thirty seconds for the ransom to arrive to forestall further killings, and the two unarmed police accomplish this. The hijackers now demand restoration of electric power to the entire sector of the Lexington Ave. Line, and turning green of all signals from 28th Street to the closed former South Ferry stop, both of these being necessary for the self-driven car to move. These are accomplished as Garber leaves headquarters, hoping to assist in capturing the gang when the train stops again, but anticipating that their plan includes some further twist that will need to be countered.

The audience learn that the gang have overridden the subway car's dead-man's switch, which would otherwise ensure its stopping unless one of them remained at the throttle. They divide the ransom money and disembark stealthily into the tunnel, leaving the car to carry the hostages away at top speed and be pursued by the police in the belief that its motion proves they are still aboard. The off-duty police officer, who reveals himself to the rest of the hostages, leaps from the train in pursuit the hijackers, sustaining injuries, but they do not recognize that anything that could pose a threat has occurred.

Garber has become convinced that fleeing along such a predictable route is so poor an escape strategy that it must be a mere diversion, and that the hijackers must somehow have left the train and taken to the tunnels on foot. While most of the police are chasing the car, Garber and his superior, Inspector Daniels, follow his hunch.

Entering the South Ferry Loop, the driverless and dangerously fast car abruptly reaches a red signal and emergency brakes stop it; police there find the passengers safe, and the hijackers gone.

Back in the tunnel they stopped in, the hijackers confirm their final getaway plans, and leave behind the disguises and weapons that connect them to the crime. Grey wants a gun in case he faces capture, and Blue shoots him dead. While the surviving conspirators are dividing Grey's share, the off-duty police officer, lying injured in the dark, fires his handgun at the three remaining hijackers, killing Brown. Blue fires back, hitting the officer. At Blue's instruction, Green makes his escape by ascending to street level, unnoticed, by the same route that Garber descends by moments later. He has his weapon drawn when he comes upon Blue preparing to dispatch the wounded officer. Blue drops his gun, surrenders, and asks Garber whether the death penalty is still in force in New York. Informed otherwise, he electrocutes himself by stepping onto the third rail.

Patrone announces positive identification of the three dead hijackers. Blue was named Bernard Ryder, Grey a former Mafioso, and Brown a professional robber. Green, who survived and escaped, has left as a clue only the suspicion that he is an ex-motorman of the New York transit authority.

Later, Garber and Patrone are seen working their way through a list of former motormen seeking suspects. Harold Longman (whom the audience can recognize as having been Mr. Green) is at home, with his share of the ransom cash, when they interview him. They find his alibi weak, but decide to continue their work elsewhere, and start out the door. Longman sneezes, and Garber, ever polite, says "Gesundheit" on the way out. Just before closing the door, Garber peeks significantly back into the room again, the audience can tell he has remembered hearing Green's repeated sneezing over the radio during the hijacking, and the film ends.

Cast

The Hostages
  • Cynthia Belgrave as The Maid
  • Anna Berger as The Mother
  • Gary Bolling as The Homosexual
  • Carol Cole as The Secretary
  • Alex Colon as The Delivery Boy
  • Joe Fields as The Salesman
  • Mari Gorman as The Hooker
  • Michael Gorrin as The Old Man
  • Thomas La Fleur as The Older Son
  • María Landa as The Spanish Woman
  • Louise Larabee as The Alcoholic
  • George Lee Miles as The Pimp
  • Carolyn Nelson as Coed #1
  • Eric O'Hanian as The Younger Son
  • Lucy Saroyan as Coed #2
  • William Snickowski as The Hippie
  • Barry Snyder as The W.A.S.P.

Production

Setting

Portions of the scenes in the tunnel were filmed on the old Court Street line in Brooklyn, which now serves as a track which links to the New York City Transit Museum. A reconstruction of a Transit Authority control center was built on a soundstage, rendered down to exact detail.Total box office was $16,550.000, and was filmed with a 5,000,000 buget

The exterior NYC 'Command Post Center' street scenes shot above the subway train, during the cash negotiation scenes, where throngs of police and spectators gathered awaiting the ransom money, was filmed at the subway exit corner of 28th and Park Avenue South, in Manhattan.

Music

The score was composed and conducted by David Shire, and it remains his most popular score. The soundtrack album was the first CD release by Film Score Monthly, and was later released by Retrograde Records.[2] The end titles contain a more expansive arrangement of the theme, courtesy of Shire's wife at the time, Talia Shire, who suggested that he close out the score with a more traditional ode to New York.[3]

Awards and honors

BAFTA Awards

Writers Guild of America Award

  • 1975: Nominated, "Best Drama Adapted from Another Medium"—Peter Stone

Remakes

In 1998, the film was remade as a television movie with the same title, with Edward James Olmos in the Matthau role and Vincent D'Onofrio replacing Shaw as the senior hijacker. Although not particularly well received by critics or viewers, this version was reportedly more faithful to the book, though it updated the setting with new technologies.

Another remake, set in a post 9/11 New York City directed by Tony Scott and starring Denzel Washington and John Travolta, was released in 2009.

Aftermath

Realizing that it would become too much of a reminder to the public, after this movie was released, the New York City Transit Authority, for many years, banned any schedule of a train leaving Pelham station either at 1:23 in the afternoon, or in the morning. Eventually this policy was rescinded, but in a kind of superstition, the dispatchers have generally avoided scheduling a Pelham train at 1:23.[4]

In popular culture

  • The hijackers' system of referring to each other as colors, such as "Mr. Blue", was later used by Quentin Tarantino in his film Reservoir Dogs, and a group of other productions, most notably the TV series The Unit, in this case to hide the operators' military ranks and real names.
  • The movie was the inspiration for Carter USM's song "The Taking of Peckham One Two Three".
  • A reference to the movie appears in the lyric of the Beastie Boys' song "Sure Shot", on the 1994 album Ill Communication: "Well, it's the taking of Pelham, one, two, three / If you want a doodoo rhyme then come see me"
  • The song 'We Took Pelham' by Deadly Avenger, an artist on Shadow Records, is inspired by this film.
  • The end title theme is a featured track on the DJ Food & DK album Now, Listen!.
  • The title of the Doctor Who novel The Taking of Chelsea 426 by David Llewellyn is likely a play on the title of this film.

References

  1. ^ "The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (1974)" at IMDb
  2. ^ FSM-80123-2
  3. ^ Adams, Doug. CD liner notes
  4. ^ Dwyer, Jim, "Subway lives : 24 hours in the life of the New York City subway", Crown, 1991, ISBN 051758445X

External links


 
 

 

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