
Al Pacino, John Cazale, Charles Durning
Sidney Lumet

This put me in the somewhat postmodern position of having read the MAD satires of many classic 1970s films years before I would be allowed to watch them or be fully capable of understanding them. Of all these warped masterpieces, one stood out: Dum-Dum Afternoon. I would pore over its pages, troubled and fascinated by these weird, wise-cracking, self-aware bank robbers, the cross-hatched exaggerations of Al Pacino and John Cazale - especially Cazale - and the seething cesspit of a city they inhabited.
When I finally saw Dog Day Afternoon for the first time, in the 1980s, Cazale's pale, stricken visage as Sal, the dim-witted accomplice of real-life bank robber John Wojtowicz (Pacino), had already been cemented in my brain as the archetypal scary, wild-eyed weirdo.