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The Taking of Pelham One Two Three By Steve Landau
Dog Day Afternoon. Annie
Hall. Taxi Driver. In
the pantheon of classic New York films, these three take pride of place.
But there are, of course, others, some of which have fallen through the
cracks over the years, criminally overlooked and unjustly relegated to
commercial-riddled Saturday-afternoon TV broadcasts. Joseph Sargent's The
Taking of Pelham One Two Three is just such a picture. This taut 1974
thriller about four armed men who highjack a New York City subway train
and hold it and its passengers for ransom may be hopelessly dated (it's
loaded with ethnic stereotypes, impossibly wide neckties, and bad
hairdos--and there are no explosions!), but that's part of the fun. A
gruffly sardonic Walter Matthau heads a fine cast that includes Jerry
Stiller, Hector Elizondo, Martin Balsam, and a perfectly villainous pre-Jaws
Robert Shaw. Think you'll find a better film that depicts a nearly broke
city led by an inept mayor forced to deal with armed terrorists?
Fuhgeddaboutit!
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FILM
FACTS |
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|  | Director: Joseph Sargent
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|  | Stars: Walter Matthau, Robert Shaw, Tony Roberts, Martin Balsam, Hector Elizondo, Julius Harris
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|  | Released: October 2, 1974
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|  | Availability: DVD VHS | | |
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