Although the fourth episode of our new show has dropped a few days ago (you can find the official PR and links to the show here on CLAPPER), I thought I’d take this opportunity to say something more than just a few words carefully designed to tease this podcast and entice you to have a listen. Which you should totally consider by the way!

In any case, when I originally came up with what is now The Uncut Gems Podcast, I didn’t just have a vague idea about what I wanted this show to entail. I knew perfectly well what kinds of movies I wanted to dig into – originally in a one-man-show format which later evolved into a conversational platform that the show is. I wanted to have an opportunity to talk about films which are hiding in plain sight. Granted, this is an extremely difficult endeavour because it’s rather difficult to pinpoint what it actually means. In fact, it is much easier to define which movies do not belong in that category instead. I knew I did not want to talk about classics everybody is aware of. Although it’s always enjoyable to talk about Jaws, The Godfather or Double Indemnity (honestly, three random choices that popped into my head just now), they get quite a lot of attention already from fans all over the world. Some more than others, but such films continue to exist within the wider cultural consciousness.

On the other hand, I didn’t want to embark on a quest to look for completely niche movies, indie festival failures, or homemade exploitation movies that nobody but Nicolas Winding Refn knows about. I am most interested in movies that either used to have an audience and lost it, or had a decent chance at developing one but for some reason were never successful. This way – I thought – I’s be giving myself, my co-hosts and the listeners out there a chance to get to know films which might not be that hard to love. Granted, some films I have jotted down on my list of potential ideas (and this list is now long enough to sustain this effort for multiple years) require a lot of adjustment from the modern viewer to embrace the idea of liking them, but at least in my mind they are an opportunity for an interesting conversation, which in itself should be more than enough to compel someone to watch the film.

And I will be completely honest here: one of the very first titles I ever wrote down as a possible idea was this – John Frankenheimer’s Black Sunday. Released in 1977 at great cost and riding on massive studio expectations, this epic espionage thriller about a terrorist plot at a Super Bowl (filmed partially at a real 1976 Super Bowl as well, which is absolutely wild in its own right), this film was very quickly forgotten. It was a failed blockbuster that could not recreate the type of success that Jaws enjoyed a mere two years earlier and it has since flown under the radar, known more as an oddity than a timeless masterpiece that it is in my opinion. When I first watched it a few years back, Black Sunday instantly became one of the most pleasantly surprising movies I have stumbled upon by complete chance and it boggled my mind it never ever gets a mention among the most influential films of the decade. And I wished I could at least try to give this amazing film a chance to enter a conversation and help its memory stay alive.

Well, I got that chance. We had an absolutely phenomenal time talking about this movie and although not all of us around the table (you know who you are) were completely on board with the idea of praising Black Sunday as a clench-your-cheeks-suspenseful masterclass of action filmmaking from an era long gone by, I would like to say we did John Frankenheimer justice. So tune in and join our conversation where we delved deep into discussing the film’s epic scale, Frankenheimer’s underrated legacy, the film’s place as a subliminal well of inspiration and its stature as one of those films you can describe by simply saying “they don’t make’em like they used to”.

Enjoy!


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8 responses to “The Uncut Gems Podcast – Episode 04: Black Sunday”

  1. Huge fan of ‘BLACK SUNDAY’ here! Robert Shaw is my favorite actor, and I got caught up in the Jaws 50th fever.

    Your podcast discussion was awesome! Not familiar with the personalities, but loved the guy who is adamant that it is a masterpiece AS IS.

    I myself created my own ‘fan edit’, where I basically cut out about 20m of the Dern/Keller material, and other small cuts like starting the film right off the bat in the bunker with the film rolling. Cutting the speed boat chase (leaving just the setup and then daytime investigation). Things like that.

    I’ve even thought about trying to edit in those awesome split screen shots from the trailer into the actual film. It would create a little clairvoyance re: the repeat kill shots, maybe suggesting Kabakov has supernatural abilities… or at least a righteous path forwards?

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    1. Cheers, Adam! You’ve reached to the very beginning of our show with this one. It might have been me, Jakub, who’s the massive fan of this movie (one of my all-time favourites). Glad you enjoy the podcast and hope you will come back for more.

      I like your fan edit ideas. Though I am still convinced the movie is perfect just the way it is.

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      1. Love your enthusiasm about this one! It is absolutely an ‘Uncut Gem’!

        I will definitely check out more. Nobody seemed to like ‘The Deep’ I heard… maybe you have to think Robert Shaw is just the most badass actor of the ’60s/70s era? But yeah… that one exists as a showcase for Jacqueline Bisset! I had some ideas for a fan edit of that one too, but not sure if it’s even worth it. Focusing on the Shaw character as an underwater Indiana Jones, and cutting a lot of the cheese/boring bits… it doesn’t suck…

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  2. But anyway, back to ‘BLACK SUNDAY’. I’d love to continue the discussion… (isn’t that the point?)

    The biggest improvement my edit makes is improving the pace. It’s absolutely hypnotic now.

    The edit starts right inside the dark bunker, like I said before. The whole 5m intro from the airport etc is cut.

    The speed boat chase is cut. It seems like it’s from another movie, and is a little too long and drawn out. A little cheesy with the sped up footage…

    The absolutely amazing meeting between Kabakov and the Egyptian embassador in front of the Washington Monument. WOW! What an incredible scene. If you cut out the connecting material between those two Kabakov meetings, leaving only the small sequence of Dahlia driving underneath the blimp’s ads… it speeds up the whole Washington meeting. Like the Egyptian took Kabakov so seriously, he handled the matter in less than a few hours (which also ties in to his earlier comment that Kabakov’s ruthless reputation was not on display).

    And a few cuts I’m most proud of are little connecting scenes with Dern/Keller. The scene where they are in the garage and find out Kabakov is in a specific hospital… and when Dern gives her a little ‘test’ about ID’ing the pilot… by cutting these scenes, it creates a MUCH more unsettling tone/tension. It takes a page out of ‘CHINATOWN’ (cinematographer John Alonzo) and adds real mystery. When she just shows up at the hospital… just shows up at the Goodyear pilot’s hotel room…it is MUCH more unsettling…

    And maybe my most controversial editing might be the removal of the bad “explosion” at the end, as well as some of the really dated shots/effects in the stadium (the scared zoom in of the boy, the blurry quick composite shots).

    The explosion at the end can be cut out right after John Williams’ brilliant score reaches its climax. It really gives it a NIHILISTIC, Chris Nolan edge in my opinion. Like kind of suggesting Lander’s fuse was a dud and it wasn’t even set up correctly. Like what was it all for?

    And yes, it really is a masterpiece. The Kabakov hospital scene revealing all the details of his past, and the Egyptian ambassador scene revealing all of Dahlia’s past… it shows you the true root of Terrorism, exactly like Frankenheimer intended all along.

    Which ties the whole story along the lines of ‘HEAT’, in a way. Kabakov and Dahlia are two sides of the same coin. And despite their mutual hatred for each other, they each realize that their own past history got them where they are today. And that final meeting face to face in the sky… all the more perfect.

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    1. You know what? I would like to see this edit. Is there any way you could hook me up?

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  3. Absolutely. My fan edit only currently exists as a 720 mp4 of the full movie from YouTube.

    I am by no means a tech wiz. This edit is all clipping out specific scenes and/or cutting scenes at the right moment. It could be easily replicated with a 1080 Blu Ray rip, which I have the hd for. Someday if I have the time.

    What’s an email address I can send the file to?

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    1. So I trimmed up the cut, made sure it was presentable. This is easily now, maybe my favorite movie. I mean wow. I watched the edit last night, and it just came to life. I have to convince my girl that this is now a Classic that can sit proudly alongside ‘Jaws’ and ‘Silence of the Lambs’.

      The flaws were in the third act for sure. Like some review I read mentioned, its almost like they ran out of money at the very end (ie, post production visual fx). One site mentioned it was a sore spot for Frankenheimer and why he avoided mentioning it?

      We need to get a petition going for a 4k sourced Blu Ray for its 50th anniversary in two years!

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    2. Probably best to use the email on the contact page. Cheers!

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