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Trouble is, the NFL wouldn’t allow the makers of Two-Minute Warning to use their likenesses and logos, nor even the name “Super Bowl.” So the film had one arm tied behind its back from the start as two generic teams met up for the “Championship” game. Still, that aside, the conceit that a stadium could be packed to capacity with screaming fans who are held in the grip of an unknown, steely wacko who can start killing at any moment is enough to generate a significant amount of tension.
Putting a spin on the popular “box movie” style of poster format, this one has all the stars’ faces in circles representing the rifle site as seen through the eye of the gunman. Though he continually and randomly lands his site on the stars throughout the bulk of the movie, the film’s title should be an indication of when hell really starts to break loose.
The mainstay of
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A buffet of (then) familiar faces rounds out the rest of the cast, portraying ticket
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While the film does
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Things get fun when panic ensues. Bridges (who is being shockingly mistreated by uniformed police officers) takes off running through the deserted, h
As the panic grows, Hassett (or her stunt double, rather) is knocked out of the relati
It must be said that the crowd scenes here come off as unnecessarily cynical and cruel. Would people really act the way they do here, crushing each other and knocking each other everywhere? Perhaps. Still, in the aftermath of 9/11 I was never made aware of this type of beh
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The overall callous brutality of the film and the vivid way in which several people are killed led to some serious problems for the network trying to air the movie on TV. Also, typical for the time, there was plenty of spicy dialogue that was deemed too vulgar for the viewing audience. (Naturally, by now, all this is tame stuff, however.) So the film was augmented in quite a hideous way with newly shot footage offering up a preposterous excuse for the gunman’s assault and a whole new subplot about an art heist taking place next to the venue! This rendition of the film is notoriously bad. Even those who hated the original (and there are plenty of people who did and do) admit that the re-fabricated version is worse.
Poseidon has never let such a thing as good taste stand in the way of his enjoyment of all-star spectacles that also include panic and destruction. The fact that real-life sports announcers Howard Cosell, Frank Gifford and Dick Enberg appear briefly and that The National Anthem is
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If you can stomach the generification of the football game and its teams, chances are you will find yourself compelled by the aura of dread that hangs over the film until it all comes apart at the seams. A similar (some say greater, though I am not one of them) film is 1977’s Black Sunday, in which terrorists hijack the Goodyear blimp in order to explode it over The Super Bowl, this time the real Super Bowl!
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