Ending on Walter Matthau’s deadpan face, The Taking of Pelham 123 is a rare movie that does not put a hair wrong.
I have wanted to see this movie for years, and it upsets me that it took this long.
Funny, tense and immersive in its world-building, it is a movie that you want to marinate in. You feel like you are taking a trip into a functioning, tangible world.
New York was heading toward the images of ‘Fear City’ that came to define it in the seventies, and that image is pervasive in Pelham. There is a grimy, lived-in quality to the settings - amplified by the use of real locations - and a great cast of character actors reinforce that sense of specificity.
While the movie builds tension like a well-oiled machine, that sense of suspense is matched by its sense of humour.
The jokes are great - Matthau realising his commanding officer is black; the payoff when Matthau finally meets the undercover cop on the train. They are a great relief from the tension and further serve to illustrate character and a sense of place.
The movie it reminded me of the most was Die Hard, down to the smug, professional Euro-villain.
Backed by a swaggering, off-kilter score by David Shire, The Taking of Pelham 123 is solid gold entertainment. Accept no remakes.
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