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Blackout

Blackout (1978)

September. 13,1978
|
4.7
|
R
| Action Thriller

A black comedy of violent criminals who terrorize apartment dwellers during New York's 1977 power blackout.

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Woodyanders
1978/09/13

A gang of dangerous and ferocious criminals led by the shrewd and ruthless Christie (a genuinely chilling portrayal by Robert Carradine, who's excellent in a rare full-blown villainous part) terrorize the hapless residents of a deluxe high-rise apartment during the infamous 1977 New York City power blackout. It's up to brave cop Dan Evans (a fine and credible performance by Jim Mitchum) to save the day. Director Eddy Matalon, working from a tight and absorbing script by John C.W. Saxton, relates the gripping story at a brisk pace, builds a substantial amount of nerve-rattling suspense, and maintains an appropriately tough, gritty, and serious tone throughout. The bad guys are a memorably foul and frightening bunch: Don Granberry as giggly, volatile nutcase Chico, Terry Haig as slimy rapist Eddy, and Victor B. Tyler as mute hulking brute Marcus. The sound acting from a tip-top cast keeps this picture humming: Mitchum and Carradine both do sterling work in the leads, with able support from Belinda Montgomery as the plucky Annie Gallo, June Allyson as the kindly Mrs. Grant, Jean-Pierre Aumont as suave French magician Henri, and Ray Milland as sour rich old grouch Richard Stafford. The moments of sudden ugly violence pack a pretty harsh punch. The climactic confrontation between Evans and Christie in a parking garage is extremely exciting and well staged. This movie deserves extra praise for its evenly balanced presentation of how a crisis situation brings out both the best and worst in people. Jean-Jacques Tarbes' sharp cinematography boats several impressive panoramic shots of the city. Didier Vasseur's robust score hits the rousing spot. A worthwhile film.

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HumanoidOfFlesh
1978/09/14

All the lights are gone in New York during a citywide power failure.Four dangerous criminals escape from the prison bus and hide in a posh apartment building owned by wealthy Ray Milland.The convicts begin to terrorize the residents and it's up to Jim Mitchum to stop the orgy of violence and abuse...I haven't seen Eddy Matalon's tedious "Cathy's Curse" yet,but "Blackout" is a pretty tense exploitation thriller.The action is exciting and the cast is impressive.The few scenes of violence are quite hard-hitting.If you are into 70's gritty and washed out excursions into urban paranoia give "Blackout" a chance.This obscure flick deserves to be seen.8 blackouts of 10.

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sddavis63
1978/09/15

The basics seemed right. New York City gets hit with a huge power outage, and in the midst of it four very violent criminals escape from custody, get into a high rise apartment building and terrorize the tenants, all the while being pursued by a lone cop. It sounds like it should be a pretty decent actioner, but from the very beginning it just didn't seem to work very well. It began with a far too long introduction to what was happening, and when the "action" did start it just came in dribs and drabs, but there was nothing sustained to it. Then to an overall dull-ish feel, you have to add a few rather silly elements in the plot. Let's see. There's the woman who gets raped and is obviously traumatized by the experience but ends up within a few minutes as the cop's partner searching the building. Then, the cop is telling everyone he meets (including a couple of unaccompanied kids) to go to the lobby (but what if they meet up with the gang on the way?) but then tells an elderly couple to stay in their half burned and smoke-filled apartment after one of the bad guys turned pyromaniac. Does any of that make any sense? We were never told what happened to the man whose ventilator was turned off (presumably he died while his wife who was tied up watched, but that was never tied up) and then one of the bad guys turns on another because the latter one hits a kid - after everything else (murder, rape, arson) we suddenly get "you don't hit a kid" and two crooks end up killing each other over it? I also wasn't taken with the performances, which seemed pretty dry to me most of the way through. The movie also had a very low-budget feel most of the way through. Some good scenes of looting appeared throughout the movie as a reminder of the ugliness of human nature, because we know that really does happen in such circumstances, and the closing car chase through the underground parking lot was pretty decent. Aside from those points though there's not much to recommend this. 2/10

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William
1978/09/16

I wouldn't be surprised Hollywood will one day borrow some idea off of this film. New York has a blackout and four nutty convicts (lead by activist Robert Carradine) goes to a High Rise apartment and haunt the tenant. Jim Mitchum plays a cop who is the only one that can stop them (sort of like Bruce Willis in DIE HARD). New World Picture edited a very important scene in the film, where they explained about the convict. Ray Milland is good also

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