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O Domingo Negro é a história poderosa de um grupo terrorista, o Setembro Negro, que tentou explodir um dirigível Goodyear pairando sobre o estádio do Super Bowl com 80.000 pessoas e a presen... Ler tudoO Domingo Negro é a história poderosa de um grupo terrorista, o Setembro Negro, que tentou explodir um dirigível Goodyear pairando sobre o estádio do Super Bowl com 80.000 pessoas e a presença do presidente dos Estados Unidos.O Domingo Negro é a história poderosa de um grupo terrorista, o Setembro Negro, que tentou explodir um dirigível Goodyear pairando sobre o estádio do Super Bowl com 80.000 pessoas e a presença do presidente dos Estados Unidos.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 2 indicações no total
Robert J. Wussler
- Robert Wussler
- (as Robert Wussler)
Avaliações em destaque
"Black Sunday" is a nice example of how good action films used to be, before the 80s and 90s saw dumb scripts and dumb characters undermine the genre forever (films like "The Rock" for example). Instead of going for non-stop pyrotechnics, John Frankenheimer and Ernest Lehman serve up a tense, exciting build-up with interesting characters along the way that culminates in a grand finale that was partly filmed during Super Bowl X between Dallas and Pittsburgh. Robert Shaw, at long last given the chance to play the hero in a movie, is quite good as the weary Israeli agent and Bruce Dern is at his psychotic best as the deranged blimp pilot.
"Black Sunday" is a flat out exciting motion picture about the planning and execution of a terrorist attack during the Super Bowl. Robert Shaw plays the head of an agency trying to prevent the attack. Bruce Dern is at his creepy best as a brainwashed Vietnam vet enlisted by the lovely Marthe Keller to help carry out the sinister plan. Dern is a blimp pilot and the perfect person to help detonate a contraption that will send thousands of deadly needles into the unsuspecting crowd. Dern was born to play parts like this and it's a reminder of how terrific an actor he is and how sad it is that he doesn't work as much as he used to.
The final 40 minutes is intercut between the game (actually shot during the real Cowboys-Steelers Super Bowl game of 76) and the unfolding of the final stages of the plot. It's tense and exciting as Shaw and cohorts commandeer helicopters to try to catch the blimp heading to the big game to unleash its deadly attack.
Kudos to director John Frankheimer for keeping the pacing on this 2 hour 25 minute thriller moving. The editing is first rate and the music score by John Williams is one of his best though it is never mentioned when his name comes up.
If you like a good thriller that is never boring and will keep you on the edge of your seat, I highly recommend "Black Sunday."
The final 40 minutes is intercut between the game (actually shot during the real Cowboys-Steelers Super Bowl game of 76) and the unfolding of the final stages of the plot. It's tense and exciting as Shaw and cohorts commandeer helicopters to try to catch the blimp heading to the big game to unleash its deadly attack.
Kudos to director John Frankheimer for keeping the pacing on this 2 hour 25 minute thriller moving. The editing is first rate and the music score by John Williams is one of his best though it is never mentioned when his name comes up.
If you like a good thriller that is never boring and will keep you on the edge of your seat, I highly recommend "Black Sunday."
The late John Frankenheimer was one of our greatest movie directors and Black Sunday was one of his greatest films that showed him as a true master of suspense. I recently bought the DVD for the film and it still "holds up" today as well as ever. There isn't a suspense film today that can hold a candle to it just like Frankenheimer's other great film The Manchurian Candidate (I cannot believe that they are re-making it with Denzel Washington!). Robert Shaw was a truly overlooked and underused talent. He was a true Renaissance man in every sense of the word. People don't realize that he wasn't only a great actor but a playwright and novelist as well. He wrote the Broadway play The Man In The Glass Booth. He is best remembered for his role as Quint in Jaws but he gave many other fine performances as well and this is surely one as the heroic Israeli agent who has to stop a terrorist threat to kill 80,000 Superbowl fans. Watching this film in 1977 was chilling when you saw what the psychotic Vietnam vet Bruce Dern and Martha Keller were going to do. These were two terrorists who were willing to die for their cause and take thousands of innocent people with them. Watching this film today is even MORE chilling! Back when it was released, most probably thought it was too farfetched. These two terrorists were going to use an "aircraft" (in this case a Goodyear blimp) as a weapon of mass murder. DOES THIS SEEM FARFETCHED TODAY!!!!Black Sunday was made a quarter century before 9/11. As a matter of fact, when the Oklahoma City Bombing happened, CNN showed a clip of Black Sunday as an example of how Hollywood has treated the subject of domestic terrorism. It is chiling that Frankenheimer and Thoams Harris (the author of the novel who later wrote the Hannibal Lecter trilogy) could have that much foresight. All the actors in this film are awesome and what really shocked me was Fritz Weaver's heroic FBI agent (usually movies show the FBI as stupid and corrupt) Critics have often commented on the climax of the film where Lander and her take off in the blimp to set the bomb off and Kabakov and Corley try to stop them. It is the most intense and suspenseful ending you can possibly imagine and the music is awesome. The stunt people must have had a field day doing the climax where they haul the blimp out of the stadium.
Another thriller, after Two-Minute Warning (1976), about disaster at a football game.
I personally call myself a disaster movie nutcase but am just a casual fan of traditional thrillers. Well over 50% of Black Sunday can be defined as a thriller and it is not until the later sections that it gets into disaster-movie-mode. As I am a fan of Bruce Dern (he deserved top billing here!) and an even bigger fan of composer John Williams - I liked the whole movie!
Today's younger viewers might be turned off by some sections of the dated photography (rear projection all over the place) but to a middle aged viewer like me the photography was no problem.
The above mentioned John Williams score sounds more like a Jerry Goldsmith action score for Capricorn One (1978) or The Swarm (1978).
I probably like sister film - Two-Minute Warning (1976) - just a bit more but both flicks are a knockout.
I personally call myself a disaster movie nutcase but am just a casual fan of traditional thrillers. Well over 50% of Black Sunday can be defined as a thriller and it is not until the later sections that it gets into disaster-movie-mode. As I am a fan of Bruce Dern (he deserved top billing here!) and an even bigger fan of composer John Williams - I liked the whole movie!
Today's younger viewers might be turned off by some sections of the dated photography (rear projection all over the place) but to a middle aged viewer like me the photography was no problem.
The above mentioned John Williams score sounds more like a Jerry Goldsmith action score for Capricorn One (1978) or The Swarm (1978).
I probably like sister film - Two-Minute Warning (1976) - just a bit more but both flicks are a knockout.
I'm a sucker for movies with blimps and hot air balloons (from Jules Verne to James Bond). A movie where the Goodyear Blimp plays a major role is right up my alley. But that's not all. This is one of the most realistic political thrillers ever filmed. Each actor regardless of the size of role in this film simply blows away most of what passes for acting today. Frankenheimer's direction (style later copied on Hill Street Blues and NYPD Blue) was perhaps ten to fifteen years ahead of its time, and the editing at times perhaps second only to Jaws and maybe a Hitchcock film or two (though it does slow down in the middle). This is a film where the obvious villain, played by a colorful Bruce Dern, is the central character driving the story, and Robert Shaw's underplayed hero somewhat of an antagonist getting in the way. Dern's character is not glorified (as many of that film era were such as in Bonnie and Clyde, The Sting, and Butch Cassidy). The camera is there so we may understand his character without romanticism or sympathy. We are left to make up our own mind about his villainy, and Dern's performance leaves little to question that he is a deranged lunatic. Perhaps this is why the film is not so known today. Vietnam vets returning home was a fairly new topic for films at the time (ironically "Coming Home" with Bruce Dern as a sympathetic vet was the first big film about this subject). The "crazed Viet Vet" became a stereotype and politically incorrect. It is too bad this film was lumped into that group, because it is as good as a thriller can get. Next to "Jaws," this is Shaw's best performance. This is a film that can be watched over and over because it is so complex. I recommend buying the film as opposed to renting it, so you can savor it like a good wine.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThis was one of Paramount's highest ever pre-release scoring of a film from test screenings. Paramount was positioning it to be the blockbuster picture of 1977 with many industry insiders predicted the film would be as big a box-office hit as Tubarão (1975). However, the film did not perform as well as expected and instead Star Wars: Episódio IV - Uma Nova Esperança (1977) became the biggest blockbuster movie of 1977.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe president shown attending Super Bowl X was Pres. Jimmy Carter. Super Bowl X was held in January 1976. Pres. Carter was elected in November 1976 and took office in January 1977. Pres. Ford was in office during Super Bowl X.
The film was shot during Super Bowl X, however, it was not meant to take place during that event, just during some fictionalized later Super Bowl when Carter was president.
- Citações
Major David Kabakov: Now, just blink for "yes", or die for "no".
- ConexõesEdited into O Show Não Pode Parar (2002)
- Trilhas sonorasThe Star Spangled Banner
(1814)
Music by John Stafford Smith (uncredited)
Lyrics by Francis Scott Key (uncredited)
Sung by Tom Sullivan
Accompanied by Up With People
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- How long is Black Sunday?Fornecido pela Alexa
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- Orçamento
- US$ 8.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 15.769.322
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 15.769.322
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