Do you know what you won't find in many American films these days, a lead character who is an Israeli intelligence officer leading Mossad commando raids against Palestinian fanatics, but that is exactly what we get in Black Sunday in the form of Major David Kabakov (Robert Shaw), a man who will do almost anything to see the job done. He is aided by FBI agent in charge Sam Corely (Fritz Weaver) who would have been the lead character in most Hollywood movies, but instead we get Shaw’s tenacious and brutal Kabakov as he chases his prey from the explosive heights of Beirut to the dark streets of Washington DC and Los Angeles. Kabakov is almost a proto-Jack Bauer as he will cross almost any line to stop the terrorist plot.
“Where’s Marwan?”
What makes Black Sunday standout is that though it is obviously on the side of Robert Shaw’s character the villains of the piece are not just cardboard moustache twirling stereotypes. Behind the plot to wreak havoc during the Super Bowl is Dahlia Iyad (Marthe Keller), an operative from the Palestinian terrorist group Black September who lost most of her family to the conflict between Palestine and Israel. Her goal is to “Hit Americans where it hurts, where they feel most safe," so that they will stop supporting Israel. The plan is to detonate a bomb rigged to the Goodyear Blimp while it’s floating over the Super Bowl, which would then send a quarter million steel flechettes flying into the 80,000 fans watching the game, including the President of the United States (Jimmy Carter look-a-like). The weak link in her plan is her co-conspirator Michael Lander (Bruce Dern) who is a contract blimp pilot and Vietnam veteran who spent many years being tortured by the Viet Cong while he was a POW. Lander unfortunately isn’t the Chuck Norris type of Vietnam vet as he’s basically a walking basket case and probably suffering from every form of PTSD imaginable, and to make matters worse upon returning to America he faced a bitter court martial and a failed marriage. Now he’s ready to die in a way that will take as many fellow Americans with him.Not an ideal partner to have for such a delicate terrorist plot.
The poster and ads clearly promoted the Super Bowl threat but most of the movie’s running time deals with Kabokov, his Mossad partner Robert Moshevsky (Steven Keats) and Agent Corely as they interrogate smugglers responsible for getting the explosives stateside, boat chases through Miami's crowded harbor, running gun battles with Dahlia’s operation’s chief Mohammed Fasil (Bekim Fehmiu), all while trying to figure out what the actual target is. Black Sunday is more a spy/thriller than the event disaster film its ad campaign suggested.Note: Normally movies are forced to use fake team names and sporting events but Frankenheimer was actually allowed to film at Super Bowl X featuring the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Dallas Cowboy. The movie cameras that were used in filming during the game were disguised as TV cameras with CBS logos, of course during the climax when the Goodyear Blimp plunges into the stadium that was shot on a different day with extras.
Black Sunday is an excellent thriller which manages to juggle the mechanics of a tricky plot without skimping character development, and only someone with Frankenheimer’s skill could make a “Blimp Chase” into a suspense filled action sequence. Which is more than can be said about a certain movie based on a true dirigible disaster. This is one of those rare terrorist plot movies that has both a compelling hero as well as fleshed out villains, something that is lacking in many films since. So if you need a good pre-game event for your Super Bowl party I suggest putting on this flick, you and your friends will not be disappointed.
Note: This is currently the only Thomas Harris book to not include Hannibal Lector, though I’m sure if this film was remade today they’d find some way to work him in.
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