Dog Day Afternoon

Dog Day Afternoon(1975)

R
09/21/1975 (US)Crime, Drama, Thriller2h 4m
7.8

"Anything can happen during the dog days of summer. On August 22nd, 1972, everything did."

Overview

Based on the true story of would-be Brooklyn bank robbers John Wojtowicz and Salvatore Naturile. Sonny and Sal attempt a bank heist which quickly turns sour and escalates into a hostage situation and stand-off with the police. As Sonny's motives for the robbery are slowly revealed and things become more complicated, the heist turns into a media circus.

Frank Pierson

Screenplay

Sidney Lumet

Director

Where to Watch

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Fandango At Home
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Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home

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Media

Dog Day Afternoon (1975) ORIGINAL TRAILER

Dog Day Afternoon (1975) ORIGINAL TRAILER

Trailer

Modern Trailer

Modern Trailer

Trailer

Original Theatrical Trailer

Original Theatrical Trailer

Trailer

Chris Sarandon reflects on Al Pacino’s performance in DOG DAY AFTERNOON.

Chris Sarandon reflects on Al Pacino’s performance in DOG DAY AFTERNOON.

Featurette

Attica! | The Hostage Exchange

Attica! | The Hostage Exchange

Clip

3 Things You Didn't Know About Oscar-winning "Dog Day Afternoon" w/ Carol Kane

3 Things You Didn't Know About Oscar-winning "Dog Day Afternoon" w/ Carol Kane

Featurette

Sarah Polley on Sidney Lumet's DOG DAY AFTERNOON | From Studio 9

Sarah Polley on Sidney Lumet's DOG DAY AFTERNOON | From Studio 9

Featurette

"Dog Day Afternoon" winning Best Original Screenplay

"Dog Day Afternoon" winning Best Original Screenplay

Featurette

Katt Shea on DOG DAY AFTERNOON

Katt Shea on DOG DAY AFTERNOON

Featurette

Jeffrey Wright Inspired By DOG DAY AFTERNOON & Al Pacino

Jeffrey Wright Inspired By DOG DAY AFTERNOON & Al Pacino

Featurette

Social

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A review by talisencrw
10.0

Written on August 23, 2016

Recently I have gotten on kicks for both watching and appreciating the works of director Sidney Lumet and the classic (i.e., 70's) performances of Al Pacino. Thus I came across this film, which I had on DVD forever. It'll interesting to watch the recent documentary on the character Pacino portrays, 'The Dog'--just found out about it earlier today. I loved Lumet's films he made before this that I've seen--'12 Angry Men', 'The Fugitive Kind', 'The Hill', 'The Anderson Tapes' and 'Murder on the Orient Express'--and he's superb at getting the gradual self-destruction of his characters that just seethes through the screen.

At this point, Pacino could do no wrong in his work--he had that firm grasp on his immense talent and just what he needed from it to do remarkable work, some of the finest characterizations in contemporary cinema. Do both he and yourself a favour and don't bother with anything he's made since 'Heat'.