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Blow Out (1981)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
24 July 1981 (USA) moreTagline:
The Blow Out took them to the edge of terror . . . his questions took them way beyond [Video Australia] morePlot:
A soundman accidentally records the evidence that proves a car "accident" was murder, and consequently finds himself in danger. full summary | add synopsisUser Comments:
Reconstructing truth moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| John Travolta | ... | Jack Terry | |
| Nancy Allen | ... | Sally | |
| John Lithgow | ... | Burke | |
| Dennis Franz | ... | Manny Karp | |
| Peter Boyden | ... | Sam | |
| Curt May | ... | Donahue | |
| John Aquino | ... | Det. Mackey | |
| John McMartin | ... | Lawrence Henry | |
| Deborah Everton | ... | Hooker | |
| J. Patrick McNamara | ... | Detective at hospital | |
| Missy Cleveland | ... | Coed lover (as Amanda Cleveland) | |
| Roger Wilson | ... | Coed lover | |
| Lori-Nan Engler | ... | Sue | |
| Cindy Manion | ... | Dancing coed | |
| Missy O'Shea | ... | Dancing coed |
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Additional Details
Also Known As:
Blow Out (France) [fr]Blow Out (Portugal) [pt]
Blow Out - viimeinen todistaja (Finland) [fi]
Blow out - Der Tod Löscht alle Spuren (West Germany) [de]
Blow out - O dolofonos tou mesonyktiou (Greece) [el]
Impacto (Spain) [es]
Pucanj nije brisan (Serbia) [sr]
Um Tiro na Noite (Brazil) [pt]
Vittnet måste tystas (Sweden) [sv]
Wybuch (Poland) [pl]
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Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
108 minCountry:
USALanguage:
EnglishColor:
Color (Technicolor)Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 moreSound Mix:
DolbyCertification:
Singapore:M18 | Germany:16 | Canada:18A (Ontario) | Philippines:R-18 | Australia:M | Finland:K-16 | France:-12 | France:U (re-release: 2000) | Norway:16 (1982) | Sweden:15 | UK:18 | USA:R | Argentina:16 | UK:X (original rating) | Iceland:16MOVIEmeter: 
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
The accident at the start of the film alludes to the Kennedy incident at Chappaquiddick. moreGoofs:
Continuity: After Jack gets out of his vehicle to go into the train station to try to find Sally, he leaves his Jeep door open. When he comes out and gets back in the door is closed. moreFAQ
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"Banal story? Give me a break. I just watched "Snake Eyes" and "Mission to Mars" on DVD from beginning to end. They're very beautiful films. I think you missed a lot. All the critics ever talk about is the banality of my stories!" - Brian De Palma (2002)
Do not treat De Palma's films too logically. He has one agenda, and that is to enable his camera to become multiple characters. His camera, deceives, lies, lusts, stalks and mocks. When it's not adopting a character's point of view, it's literally becoming a character of it's own. There's real intelligence behind some of his films, despite their B movie roots and surface cheese.
Watch the jeep scene again. See how it begins with the camera suddenly changing stance. The music booms and everything becomes operatic. The scene itself plays out like a self contained mini-opera. Of course the whole sequence is illogical, but then one of De Palma's themes throughout his career has always been reconstructing truth. In "Snake Eyes" and "Black Dahlia" it's the truth of a murder. In "Mission Impossible" it's reconstructing the truth of a mission gone bad. In "Femme Fatale" it's reconstructing the truth of a heist. In this film it's reconstructing the truth of an assassination. But what makes De Palma interesting is that this constant theme of "finding the truth" clashes continusouly with his artistic style. He's a formalist who's entire filmography stresses the fakery or superficiality of film.
On one hand he acknowledges the lie that is film (his famous quote: "film is 24 lies per second"), whilst on the other, his character's constantly search for some objective truth.
But back to the jeep scene. Notice how De Palma shifts to slow-motion to heighten the clues. Travolta crashes and we linger on the "Liberty or Death?" shop window as a plastic hang man slowly tips over. De Palma as artist and formalist has the power of deciding Travolta and Sally's fate. Like the end of "Femme Fatalle", he's asking his audience, teasing them, letting them know that his film isn't reality, and that only the artist as God has the power to decide the fate of characters. Do we let them die or do we let them live?
He then inter-cuts this with Sally's conversation with the killer, which suddenly shifts from friendly to hostile. De Palma signifies this newfound danger by jump cutting from day to night. And so with Sally now in trouble, he literally resurrects Travolta, who of course climbs and climbs but still doesn't get there in time. Travolta's guilt and failure rings eternal as Sally's scream is immortalised in the final film-within-the-film. A film kills Sally and a film immortalises her death. A recorded sound (blow out) brings her into De Palma's world and a recorded sound (her scream) brings her out of it. There's a cinematic purity to Sally's life.
9/10- Brilliant opening, brilliant ending and some memorable scenes in the middle. The virtuoso camera work doesn't touch "Snake Eyes" and the purposefully cheesy acting (the porno within a film makes it clear that De Palma sees this as self conscious formalist film-making) at times detracts. Still, this is nevertheless enjoyable and one of the more accessible De Palma films.