“A time capsule spiked with amphetamines… It may be the perfect
movie for
post-blackout New Yorkers. And what a cast!”
– Michael Sragow, The New Yorker Click
here to read the complete review
“Giddily thrilling! Bootylicious
with tuba, David Shire’s score mates
blaxploitation bomp to vintage-cop-show rattle and dread; indeed, Sargent?s
whole enterprise doubles as a ?70s archaeological dig, its eureka moment
arriving when the cop car with ransom in tow crashes in a grimy, pre-Starbucks
Astor Place.”
– Jessica Winter, Village Voice Click
here to read the complete review
(1974) "Screw the goddamn passengers! What do they want for their
thirty-five cents? To live forever?"
Just a typical day on the East Side IRT, as a No. 6 train starts
its downtown run from Pelham Station in The Bronx at the scheduled departure
time of 1:23 PM (there?s your title) – then gets hijacked by heavily-disguised
men: Mr. Brown (Earl Hindman), shnurfling Mr. Green (Martin Balsam), trigger-loving
Mr. Grey (Hector Elizondo), and their icy-cold leader Mr. Blue (Robert
Shaw) – color-coded aliases: are you listening, Mr. Tarantino? ?This
city hasn?t got a million dollars!? kvetches the schmucky, flu-plagued
Koch-lookalike mayor (this was the era, after all, when Jerry Ford told
NYC to “drop dead”) to hovering spin doctors when he gets
that ransom ultimatum: cough up the dough in an hour or the 17 passengers
(your typical fellow riders: a hooker, a philosophical old Jewish man,
a mother with two bratty kids, Matthew Broderick?s dad James as the conductor,
et al.) get wasted, or one corpse for each minute late. Wisecracks and
bullets fly as Walter Matthau?s quickwitted TA cop Lt. Zachary Garber
gives a guided tour to embarrassingly polyglot Tokyo subway execs; dispatcher
Jerry ?I?ll believe anything? Stiller doesn’t believe it; the ransom-carrying
cop car jackknives in Astor Place; and Matthau negotiates with the all-business
Mr. Blue via subway squawkbox. A crackling adaptation by the late Peter
Stone of the John Godey bestseller, featuring terrific (and accurate)
Gotham locations, knife-edge hilarity, a thrilling jazz score by David
Shire, and third-rail brand jolts – evoking a New York that, while
not exactly the golden age, was a time when you could still buy
a token... for thirty-five cents!
AN MGM DISTRIBUTION RELEASE
SPECIAL THANKS TO MGM'S JOHN KIRK. |