WWTW Rewind: ‘The Taking of Pelham One Two Three’ (1974)

WWTW Rewind: ‘The Taking of Pelham One Two Three’ (1974)

taking-of-pelham

The 1970s gave us disco, bell bottom jeans and the most authentic New York films in recent history.

“Dog Day Afternoon” quickly comes to mind, as does “The French Connection.”

It’s too bad the 1974 thriller “The Taking of Pelham One Two Three” isn’t mentioned in the same breath. “Pelham” might not pop off the screen like the aforementioned films, lacking a thrilling car chase or the emotional histrionics of vintage Al Pacino.

It’s still a definitive New York story told with all the gusto the city demands.

The film, based on the novel by Morton Freedgood, knows exactly how New Yorkers act and react under duress.

It ain’t pretty, but it’s glorious to behold all the same.

Walter Matthau plays Lt. Zachary Garber, a transit cop forced to deal with a hostage situation on the New York Subway System.

Four armed men, led by Mr. Blue (Robert Shaw), have commandeered the Pelham One Two Three line and want $1 million in cash in one hour’s time – or they’ll start killing passengers.

Garber doesn’t have much to work with, so he tries stalling the hijackers to give the city more time to respond.

Meanwhile, the hapless mayor and his inner circle worry about how giving in to the hostage takers will impact their poll numbers.

Last summer’s pedestrian “Pelham” remake illustrates just where today’s films too often go astray. While John Travolta burned hundreds of calories as the hyperventilating villain, Shaw rarely raises his voice.

Guess which screen baddie leaves more of an impression?

The plot in both films remains a model of efficiency, but the remake’s final 20 minutes becomes a silly, belabored affair.

The original never suffers such a letdown.

“Pelham” knows how New Yorkers talk – and talk – and how they can’t help expressing themselves even in dire circumstances. The accents are all dead on, from Matthau talking about the “terlet” to his colleagues not willing to give those SOBs who stole their train an inch.

“The Taking of Pelham One Two Three” is all New York, its coal black humor, blunt honesty and ability to rally in times of crisis.

They don’t make ‘em like “Pelham” anymore, even when they break the bank trying.

If you enjoyed this post, please consider leaving a comment or subscribing to the RSS feed to have future articles delivered to your feed reader.

Related posts:

  1. ‘The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3′ – It’s not the ’70s anymore
  2. WWTW Rewind – ‘Pillow Talk’ (1959)
  3. WWTW Rewind – ‘Dr. No’ (Blu-ray)
  4. WWTW Rewind – ‘King Kong’ (1976)
  5. WWTW Rewind: ‘Cape Fear’ (1991)

{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

PaulaNo Gravatar February 14, 2010 at 5:02 pm

This is such a wonderful movie made back when then they cast actors who looked like real people instead of movie stars. Matthau is just hysterical and had so many great throwaway lines. Loved the bit where he jokes that his co-worker, Rico, spends his spare time working for the Mafia.

cftotoNo Gravatar February 14, 2010 at 6:46 pm

Great point … I tend to prefer shorter reviews online otherwise I would have delved more into the cast. Matthau is superb here … utterly credible. The remake made Denzel look less handsome than usual, but in the final reel he’s acting like you’re average movie hero. Matthau is all brains and intuition, which makes his heroics far more compelling.

Loved watching Jerry Stiller reading the paper at his desk and complaining he’s ‘too busy’ to help out.

JimmyCNo Gravatar February 14, 2010 at 9:00 pm

Just saw this for the first time a couple of months ago, and loved it. (Minor spoiler alert!) Robert Shaw’s character has one of the best death scenes in movie history in this.

jWarriorNo Gravatar February 15, 2010 at 12:41 am

Robert Shaw was also the villain in From Russia With Love, imho, the best Bond film. The fight in the train compartment is outstanding. He was a fine actor who died way too young.

Jose M GuardiaNo Gravatar February 15, 2010 at 10:45 am

Haven’t seen the remake — I didn’t want to spoil the enjoyment of the ‘74 original, if you get my point. I remember enjoying the book so much back then, almost a kid (13 yr old); I can still remember the sensations I was feeling when I was reading it. Then the movie, which I found awesome too; whatched twice or thrice since then and enjoyed each time…

Leave a Comment