A hired killer from Cleveland has a job to do on a second-string mob boss in New York, but a special girl from his past and a gun dealer with pet rats get in his way.A hired killer from Cleveland has a job to do on a second-string mob boss in New York, but a special girl from his past and a gun dealer with pet rats get in his way.A hired killer from Cleveland has a job to do on a second-string mob boss in New York, but a special girl from his past and a gun dealer with pet rats get in his way.
Peter Clune
- Troiano
- (as Peter H. Clune)
Bill DePrato
- Joe Boniface
- (as Bill Da Prado)
Bill Chadney
- Pianist
- (uncredited)
Ernest Jackson
- Gangster
- (uncredited)
Erich Kollmar
- Bellhop
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
The strongest impression left by director/star Allen Baron's 1961 Blast of Silence is that the fabulous postwar years are gone, fini, kaput. The gritty 60s have arrived, and Manhattan is grimy, garish and awash in human as well as inanimate litter -- the 60s in which transvestite hookers started knifing U.N. diplomats in Times Square. Into this nascent cesspool travels tired hitman Frankie Bono; he comes by train, through a dark and endless tunnel which seems to symbolize either the birth canal or the human condition -- or both. He's a full-time loner (like Vince Edwards in the somewhat similar Murder by Contract) out to do a job, collect and move on. But he happens upon some old acquaintances from his childhood in an orphanage and succumbs, clumsily, to some human contact. This proves his undoing. The ending takes place in a desolate shore not unlike the Staten Island locations of Sorry, Wrong Number. Blast of Silence is amateurish and "personal," in the style of the John Cassavettes films that would soon follow -- products of that edgy, verbal New York culture of jazz boites and improvisational theater. It's no masterpiece, but it's worth seeing for anyone tracking the turns the noir cycle took in its last, dying years.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaPart of the movie was shot during the middle of a real hurricane --- the wind and snow seen during the final scenes is not artificial. The exterior chase that ends the film was filmed at the Old Mill on a Jamaica Bay estuary on Long Island during Hurricane Donna (September 10-12, 1960), the only hurricane of the 20th Century to strike the entire East Coast from south Florida to Maine.
- GoofsThe "silencer" (or suppressor) that Frankie Bono attaches to his revolver could not have worked due to the gap between the cylinder and barrel of the gun. They are only effective on semi-automatic or automatic weapons, except for one special revolver (when the film was made), the Nagant M1895. The Nagant had a 7-round cylinder, but Frankie's gun was a 6-shooter. This is a very common mistake in films.
- Crazy creditsThe MPAA seal appears on the bottom right corner of the Universal-International logo instead of its usual place in the credits.
- Alternate versionsThe Criterion Collection edition of this movie includes a director's commentary.
- ConnectionsEdited into Dusk to Dawn Drive-In Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 9 (2002)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Blast of Silence
- Filming locations
- Village Gate - 160 Bleecker Street, Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA(nightclub closed in 1995)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $65,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $339
- Runtime1 hour 17 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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