- Blow Out
Infobox_Film
name = Blow Out
imdb_id = 0082085
director =Brian De Palma
writer = Brian De Palma
starring =John Travolta
Nancy AllenJohn Lithgow Dennis Franz
producer =George Litto
music =Pino Donaggio
cinematography =Vilmos Zsigmond
distributor =Filmways
released =July 21 , 1981 (U.S. release)
runtime = 108 min.
amg_id = 1:6214
language = English"Blow Out" is a 1981 thriller
film , written and directed byBrian De Palma . The title and themes derive from and are an homage toMichelangelo Antonioni 's 1966 film "Blowup ".Fact|date=March 2008 The film starsJohn Travolta as Jack Terry, a moviesound effects technician fromPhiladelphia who, while recording sounds for a low-budgethorror film , accidentally captures audio evidence of the possibleassassination of the Pennsylvania governor who was planning to run for President. The supporting cast included Nancy Allen (in the role of Sally, a prostitute who was riding in the governor's limousine when he was killed),Dennis Franz as sleazy private investigator, Manny Karp, aZapruder esque figure, andJohn Lithgow as the cold-blooded assassin Burke (a.k.a. 'The Liberty Bell Strangler').Plot
Jack Terry works as a sound technician in the film industry, mainly associated with a producer of sleazy exploitation horror films. One of his current problems is that he needs an authentic scream for a crucial scene in his current project. While out recording night sounds in a local park, he is shocked when a car suddenly passes by, careens off the road, and plunges into a nearby lake. Jack dives in and tries to help, discovering a dead man and a young woman, still alive, inside the submerged car. He pulls her to safety and accompanies her to a local hospital.
The situation turns out to be stranger than Jack thought. The car happens to have been driven by the governor of Pennsylvania, a strong candidate for the presidency, and the girl is a prostitute named Sally. Since the governor was a married man, there is a strong bid to hush up the fact that Sally was with him in the car. Later, Jack listens to the audio tape he was making at the time, and he distinctly hears a gunshot just before the blow-out that caused the accident. As Jack begins to suspect, the incident was actually an assassination, perpetrated by a psychotic hired assassin named Burke.
Jack becomes enamored with Sally even as he draws her into his own private investigation of the incident. With her help, he pieces together a crude film of the incident, using images shot by a photographer who happened to catch the crash on camera. However, Jack can get nobody to believe his story. Every move he makes is immediately hushed up in a seemingly widespread conspiracy to silence the truth. Even worse, Sally is in grave danger after Burke sees her as a loose end that needs to be eliminated. In preparation for her murder, Burke begins murdering local prostitutes in an attempt to establish a fictitious serial killer scenario, marking the body of each victim with the pattern of the Liberty Bell.
Finally, Jack attempts to gather irrefutable proof of the assassination attempt wiring Sally with a hidden microphone and sending her off to meet a secret media contact. Shadowing her from a distance, he is alarmed to see Burke posing as his contact. Immediately realizing that she is in danger, Jack attempts to warn her, only to have them slip out of range into a large Independence Day crowd. Jack makes a mad dash across Philadelphia, attempting to head them off and rescue Sally. Burke takes her to a rooftop and attacks her just as Jack, still listening in on his earpiece, spots them on top of the building. Jack 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 bell pattern. Jack takes Burke by surprise and kills him, but Jack is heartbroken that Sally is dead. He becomes obsessed with listening to the tapes he made of Sally the day she died, even going so far as to use her death scream in the horror movie he is working on.
Reception
Initial reaction to "Blow Out" was mixed. Some critics, such as
Pauline Kael , thought the film was a masterpiece. In her review in "The New Yorker ", Kael noted, "It's a great movie." She elaborated, "I think De Palma has sprung to the place thatRobert Altman achieved with films such as "McCabe and Mrs. Miller " and "Nashville" and thatFrancis Ford Coppola reached with the two "Godfather" films - that is, to the place wheregenre is transcended and what we're moved by is an artist's vision."Roger Ebert gave it four stars, and in his review in theChicago Sun-Times stated, "Best of all, this movie 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." At the same time,Andrew Sarris despised the film, denouncing it as "misogynistic ". AndHarlan Ellison famously walked out of aWriters Guild Film Society screening, stating that DePalma's movie "consciously and gratuitously debased the human spirit."Fact|date=March 2008. At the box office, the film failed to bring an audience. With an estimated $18 million budget, Blow Out managed to only return approximately $12 million in box office receipts ultimately labeling it as a flop.Over the years, the general critical response to the film has become much more favorable, and many critics now agree that "Blow Out" is one of De Palma's best movies.
Quentin Tarantino has consistently praised the movie, and listed it as one of his favorite three films, along with "Rio Bravo" and "Taxi Driver " (although Tarantino had apparently changed his mind in 2002, when he left it out of his top-ten list for the "Sight & Sound " poll of the best films of all time). Tarantino would later go on to use the track "Sally and Jack" from Pino Donaggio's score for his "Death Proof" segment in "Grindhouse".Fact|date=March 2008Trivia
*During the editing process, two reels of footage from the Liberty Parade sequence were stolen and were never to be seen again. This meant that the scenes had to be reshot at a cost of $750,000. Cinematographer
Vilmos Zsigmond was no longer available, so he was replaced byLászló Kovács .*The idea of a man discovering a crime by listening to a recording is a reinterpretation of
Michelangelo Antonioni 's filmBlowup (1966), but using sound instead of photographs.*The accident at the start of the film alludes to the Kennedy incident at
Chappaquiddick .*Also alludes to the
Watergate scandal and theJFK assassination .*
John Travolta suffered from insomnia during the shoot. His lack of sleep helped him create a very moody performance and is why his character seems so downtrodden throughout the movie.*In the French version,
John Travolta 's voice was dubbed byGérard Depardieu .*
Al Pacino wasBrian De Palma 's first choice for the role of Jack Terry. When he proved unavailable Travolta was signed, prompting a suggestion from at least one studio executive to castOlivia Newton-John in the role of Sally (which De Palma refused).ee also
* Assassinations in fiction
External links
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