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Two-Minute Warning

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Two-Minute Warning
Theatrical release poster
Directed byLarry Peerce
Screenplay byEdward Hume
Based onTwo-Minute Warning
1975 novel
by George LaFountaine
Produced byEdward S. Feldman
StarringCharlton Heston
John Cassavetes
Martin Balsam
Beau Bridges
CinematographyGerald Hirschfeld
Edited byWalter Hannemann
Eve Newman
Music byCharles Fox
Production
company
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • November 12, 1976 (1976-11-12) (US)
Running time
115 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$6.7 million[2]

Two-Minute Warning is a 1976 action thriller film directed by Larry Peerce and starring Charlton Heston, John Cassavetes, Martin Balsam, Beau Bridges, Jack Klugman, Gena Rowlands, and David Janssen. It was based on the novel of the same name written by George LaFountaine [fr]. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Film Editing.[3][4]

Plot

[edit]

An unknown sniper (Warren Miller) positions himself at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum before a professional football championship dubbed "Championship X" (Ten) between Baltimore and Los Angeles, similar to the Super Bowl. He is spotted by a Goodyear Blimp camera. Police and SWAT team are immediately called in by the stadium manager Sam McKeever (Martin Balsam).

Police Captain Peter Holly (Charlton Heston), working with SWAT team Sergeant Chris Button (John Cassavetes), devises a plan to capture the sniper before the conclusion of the game.

Many of the fans attending the game are introduced. They include Steve and Janet (David Janssen and Gena Rowlands), an argumentative middle-aged couple; Stu Sandman (Jack Klugman), a gambling addict; a Catholic priest (Mitchell Ryan), who is a friend of quarterback Charlie Tyler (Joe Kapp); young married couple Mike and Peggy Ramsay (Beau Bridges and Pamela Bellwood); an elderly pickpocket (Walter Pidgeon) and his young accomplice (Juli Bridges, the then-wife of Beau Bridges); and football fan Al (David Groh), who begins flirting with Lucy (Marilyn Hassett) when he notices her date (Jon Korkes) is more interested in the game than in her.

The stadium's maintenance director, Paul (Brock Peters), discovers the sniper's presence and attempts to confront him. The sniper strikes Paul with the butt of his rifle and, undetected by fans, causes him to fall several stories, leaving him severely injured. SWAT team members position themselves on stadium light towers to take aim on the sniper's nest. The sniper kills two of the SWAT marksmen but a third one coolly waits for a clear shot and hits the sniper's arm and neck area, seriously injuring him.

Mike Ramsay spots the sniper with his binoculars. He reports it to the police, but rather than thank him, they question him suspiciously and then physically overpower him.

Shortly after the game's two-minute warning, the SWAT team is given the green light to go after the sniper. Seeing that he is surrounded, the sniper opens fire, shooting randomly into the crowd. His shots cause a massive panic in which the panicked fans spill onto the field.

Many security men, Coliseum personnel, and spectators are killed or wounded. Fleeing spectators are crushed or trampled underfoot while rushing towards exit tunnels. A few lose their footing while climbing down wall-ivy trestles. Steve, Stu, Chris, Peggy, and the pickpocket are among those shot (Chris and Peggy survive). Mike escapes from police custody during the riot and is reunited with Peggy and their children once the stadium empties of people. Ultimately, the sniper is shot by Peter who, along with Chris, and other members of the SWAT team, arrest him.

Searching through his wallet, the officers learn the sniper's name: Carl Cook. Cook dies while in custody, revealing nothing about his intent. Button points out that although they know nothing about Cook, over the next few weeks the media, via newspapers and television, will discover all the unknown details about Cook's life: what schools he attended, his nice mother, pet dog, former gym teacher, the body count, and question why the officers had to kill him. Peter sees Button's gunshot wound, and wonders if a doctor had looked at it, to which Button replies, "It's no big deal." Peter then replies, "Don't be a hero, Sergeant. I'll drop you off at the hospital. Come on." Button reluctantly follows Peter, while Sam looks toward the empty football stadium, feeling sad that a lot of people died in the stadium. Peter drives Button to the hospital off-screen, and the film ends.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

When released in 1976, Two-Minute Warning was promoted as an entry into the disaster film genre, complete with an all-star cast attempting to survive an immense riot created by the sniper. Joe Kapp, a former NFL quarterback for the Minnesota Vikings and Boston Patriots, plays Baltimore's veteran quarterback Charlie Tyler. It has been claimed that John Cassavetes and Gena Rowlands participated in order to obtain funding for Cassavetes' 1977 film, Opening Night.

The game footage for the full stadium shots of the Los Angeles Coliseum was from the Pac-8 college football game between Stanford and USC, played on November 8, 1975.[2] The rest of the film was shot over three months in early 1976.[2] The production employed thousands of background performers, several of whom sustained minor injuries while filming a stampede sequence.[2] At one point, Peerce publicly complained about the performances of the extras, leading to rebukes from an extra who had worked on the film, who complained about on-set conditions, and a leader of the Screen Extras Guild, which represented a number of the performers.[2]

The National Football League refused to allow the film to use any real team names.[2]

Release

[edit]

The film was set to be released on July 30, 1976, reportedly to place it well in advance of the similarly themed Black Sunday, but it was later pushed back to November 12.[2]

Universal Studios devised a gimmick where moviegoers were not allowed to enter the theater at the moment the football game's two-minute warning began in the film.

Television version

[edit]

Due to the film's explicit violence and uncomfortable detail of a homicidal sniper acting alone and without apparent motivation, NBC negotiated with Universal Studios to film additional scenes for its television premiere in 1978.[2]

The new scenes would detail an art theft, with the sniper serving as a decoy so robbers could escape without detection. The additional scenes, totaling 40 minutes in length, were added for the film's TV showing while 45 minutes of the original version were removed. Director Larry Peerce disowned the TV version, which credits editor Gene Palmer as director, and Francesca Turner as writer. Both Palmer and Turner were involved in the creation of the television version of 1974's Earthquake (where the film was expanded by 30 minutes in order to show it over two nights). Turner also helped doctor David Lynch's Dune for TV for the "teleplay".[5] When shown on network television, this version of Two-Minute Warning is often shown rather than the original theatrical release.[6] The television version had previously never been released to video and DVD; however it did finally appear as an extra on the Blu-ray from Shout! Factory on June 28, 2016.

Critical reception

[edit]

Two-Minute Warning received negative reviews from critics, as it holds a 29% rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 14 reviews.

Roger Ebert gave the film a rating of one star out of four, writing, "I knew going in what the movie was about (few films have such blunt premises) and I knew Two-Minute Warning was supposed to be a thriller, not a social statement. But I thought perhaps the movie would at least include a little pop sociology to soften its blood-letting. Not a chance. It's a cheerfully unashamed exploitation of two of our great national preoccupations, pro football and guns."[7] Richard Eder of The New York Times wrote that since the viewer is told nothing about the sniper's character, "the efforts of the police to catch the sniper—all their ladder-climbing and maneuvering—are no more exciting than watching a group of linesmen at work up a telephone pole."[8] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film two stars out of four and wrote, "I'm sure the fast-buck artists who made this film justify it as a mirror of society and its faceless killers. But that's just an excuse to make a picture that will hold appeal only for those who like to see other people blown away by high-powered rifles. This is a contemptible motion picture."[9][10] Arthur D. Murphy of Variety noted "above-average plotting, acting and direction, including one of the better mob scenes filmed in many a year."[11] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times called it "a taut and terrific thriller" and "an example of superb film craftsmanship."[12] Gary Arnold of The Washington Post called it "a middling suspense thriller" with characters "so sketchy and arbitrary that the victims and survivors might as well be determined by flips of the coin."[13]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Two-Minute Warning is a 1976 American thriller film directed by Larry Peerce and based on the 1975 novel of the same name by George La Fountaine.[1][2] The story centers on a psychotic sniper who positions himself in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum during a packed National Football League championship game, prompting a tense police operation led by Captain Peter Holly to prevent a mass shooting while the crowd remains unaware.[3] Released by Universal Pictures on November 12, 1976, with a runtime of 115 minutes, the film blends elements of suspense, action, and disaster genres, featuring extensive location shooting at the Coliseum to heighten its realism.[3][2] The ensemble cast includes Charlton Heston as Captain Holly, John Cassavetes as SWAT commander Sergeant Button, Martin Balsam as the stadium manager, and supporting roles by Beau Bridges, Jack Klugman, Gena Rowlands, David Janssen, and Walter Pidgeon, among others known from television and film.[1] The screenplay, adapted by Edward Hume, emphasizes procedural drama and interpersonal conflicts within the law enforcement team, culminating in a high-stakes confrontation during the game's final moments.[4] Produced on a budget that capitalized on the era's disaster movie trend, it incorporates aerial photography and a score by Charles Fox to build escalating tension.[1] Critically, the film received mixed reviews for its pacing and character development but was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing at the 49th Academy Awards, recognizing the work of Eve Newman and Walter Hannemann in managing its complex action sequences. While it earned modest box-office returns, it has gained retrospective interest as a precursor to modern mass-shooting thrillers and for its all-star cast assembled during a transitional period in Hollywood.[5][2] The source novel by La Fountaine saw tie-in editions upon the film's release, and the film later aired in a television version with additional footage.[2]

Background

Source Material

The novel Two-Minute Warning was published in 1975 by Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, marking the debut work of author George LaFountaine.[6] LaFountaine, born on November 10, 1934, in Attleboro, Massachusetts, was an American writer specializing in suspense thrillers; his output remained limited, with subsequent novels including Flashpoint (1976).[7][8] At its core, the novel centers on a sniper positioning himself in a packed Super Bowl stadium, prompting a tense response from police and SWAT teams after he is spotted by television cameras, while interweaving perspectives from law enforcement officers like Captain Graz and Roy Sickles, ordinary fans such as Timothy Metcalfe and Steve D’Abruzzo, and the antagonist himself.[9] The sniper, named Norbert Baird, is given a detailed backstory portraying him as a young man scarred by personal tragedies—including his father's killing of the family dog and puppies, fleeting friendships marred by racial conflicts, and a lost romance thwarted by his girlfriend's strict mother—culminating in a life of unrelenting disappointments that brings him fleeting joy only at his father's funeral.[9] Additional subplots emphasize the everyday lives of stadium attendees and the procedural intricacies of the police investigation, providing a multifaceted view of the unfolding crisis without the heightened melodrama seen in later adaptations.[9] Key differences from the film adaptation include the novel's deeper exploration of the sniper's psyche and its straightforward depiction of fan and police narratives, avoiding added backstories like familial betrayals or crises of faith, while amplifying subplots around collective human responses in a confined public space.[9] The book's themes of urban paranoia—evident in the sniper's alienation amid societal pressures—and mass panic in a densely crowded venue directly shaped the film's concept of imminent threat in a high-stakes communal event, heightening tensions around vulnerability in modern American spectacles.[9][10]

Development

Universal Pictures and Filmways Pictures acquired the film rights to George LaFountaine's 1975 novel Two-Minute Warning on April 16, 1975, following an earlier licensing arrangement with Paramount Pictures.[2] The novel's core premise centers on a lone sniper with a high-powered rifle who positions himself in the Los Angeles Coliseum during a championship football game, threatening the packed stadium and its high-profile attendees.[11] Edward Hume adapted the novel into the screenplay, streamlining the narrative for the screen while retaining the central tension of the sniper threat amid the chaos of the event.[2] Larry Peerce was hired to direct, aiming to craft a suspenseful entry in the disaster thriller genre that emphasized procedural drama and escalating peril in a confined public space.[2] Initial planning included concepts for marketing the film in alignment with the NFL football season to capitalize on audience interest in sports-themed suspense.[2]

Production

Casting

Charlton Heston leads the cast as Captain Peter Holly, the steadfast LAPD captain tasked with orchestrating the multi-agency response to a sniper threat at a major stadium event. His character represents the bureaucratic and strategic core of the operation, drawing on Heston's established persona in high-tension scenarios from prior disaster films like Earthquake (1974), which helped secure his starring role here.[2][12] John Cassavetes portrays Sergeant Chris Button, the no-nonsense leader of the SWAT team brought in for the tactical takedown. Button's arc underscores the friction between frontline urgency and higher-level oversight, with Cassavetes—celebrated for his improvisational method acting in films like Faces (1968)—infusing the role with raw authenticity.[2][5] The supporting cast bolsters the film's ensemble dynamic, highlighting a web of authority figures and civilians entangled in the crisis. Martin Balsam plays Sam McKeever, the harried stadium manager who bridges venue operations and law enforcement efforts, emphasizing the logistical pressures on public safety officials.[4] Beau Bridges appears as Mike Ramsay, an observant young man whose encounter with the situation pulls him into the unfolding events, representing the civilian perspective amid official chaos.[13] Jack Klugman embodies Stu Sandman, a high-stakes gambler whose personal desperation mirrors the broader tension in the crowd.[3] Additional notable players include David Janssen as Steve, a salesman navigating the stadium with his spouse, and Walter Pidgeon as an opportunistic pickpocket prowling the stands, adding layers to the diverse spectator ensemble.[13][3] This all-star lineup, featuring multiple authority figures like police, SWAT, and management, underscores the film's focus on coordinated crisis response in a confined, high-pressure environment.[2]

Filming

Principal photography for Two-Minute Warning commenced on 5 January 1976 in Los Angeles, California, and extended over three months, concluding in early April. The production primarily utilized the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum as its central filming location. This choice allowed for authentic on-site shooting of key sequences, including the sniper's positioning and police operations within the stadium environment.[2] To enhance realism in depicting the championship game, the filmmakers incorporated actual footage from the 1975 Stanford vs. USC college football matchup played at the Coliseum on 8 November 1975. The National Football League declined permission to use official team names or imagery, prompting the use of fictional teams—the Cougars and the Stars—instead. This integration of real game material blended seamlessly with staged scenes, providing a backdrop of genuine crowd energy and athletic action.[2] Filming the crowd panic and evacuation sequences presented significant logistical hurdles, requiring up to 1,800 extras per day at a cost of $1.3 million for these elements alone. Simulating the chaos of a stampede during the sniper's random gunfire involved coordinated special effects for muzzle flashes and on-field disruptions, all captured directly at the Coliseum to maintain spatial accuracy. The staged panic resulted in minor injuries among participants, underscoring the physical demands of choreographing mass movement in a confined, high-stakes setting. Sniper shots were executed using practical effects from elevated positions, ensuring the tension of long-range targeting felt immediate and perilous.[2] The overall production budget totaled $6.7 million, with substantial portions allocated to location fees at the Coliseum and intricate stunt coordination for the action-heavy climax. These investments facilitated tight synchronization among the ensemble cast during high-tension sequences, where actors navigated real-time crowd simulations and pyrotechnic elements.[2]

Plot

An unknown sniper positions himself at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum before a professional football championship game dubbed "Championship X" between the Baltimore Hawks and the Los Angeles Rams. He is spotted by the Goodyear Blimp camera operator. Police and the SWAT team are immediately called in by the stadium manager, Sam McKeever.[14] Police Captain Peter Holly, working with SWAT team Sergeant Chris Button, devises a plan to capture the sniper before the conclusion of the game. Many of the fans attending the game are introduced, including an argumentative middle-aged couple, Steve and Janet; a gambling addict, Stu Sandman; a Catholic priest who is a friend of quarterback Charlie Tyler; a young married couple, Mike and Peggy Ramsay; an elderly pickpocket and his young accomplice; and a football fan, Al, who begins flirting with Lucy after noticing her date is more interested in the game than in her.[14] The stadium's maintenance director, Paul, discovers the sniper's presence and attempts to confront him. The sniper strikes Paul with the butt of his rifle and, undetected by fans, causes him to fall several stories, leaving him severely injured. SWAT team members position themselves on stadium light towers to take aim at the sniper's nest. The sniper kills two of the SWAT marksmen, but a third one waits for a clear shot and hits the sniper's arm and neck area, seriously injuring him.[14] Mike Ramsay spots the sniper with his binoculars and reports it to the police, who question him suspiciously and physically overpower him. Shortly after the game's two-minute warning, the SWAT team is given the go-ahead to go after the sniper. Seeing that he is surrounded, the sniper opens fire, shooting randomly into the crowd. His shots cause a massive panic in which the panicked fans spill onto the field.[14] Many security men, Coliseum personnel, and spectators are killed or wounded. Fleeing spectators are crushed or trampled while rushing towards exit tunnels. A few lose their footing while climbing down wall-ivy trestles. Steve, Stu, and the pickpocket are among those shot. Mike escapes from police custody during the riot and is reunited with Peggy and their children once the stadium empties. Ultimately, the sniper is shot by Peter, who, along with Chris and other members of the SWAT team, arrests him.[14] Searching through his wallet, the officers learn the sniper's name: Carl Cook. Cook dies while in custody, revealing nothing about his intent. Button points out that although they know nothing about Cook, over the next few weeks the media will discover all the unknown details about his life. Peter sees Button's gunshot wound and insists on taking him to the hospital. The film ends with Peter driving Button to the hospital as Sam looks toward the empty stadium.[14]

Release

Theatrical Premiere

The theatrical premiere of Two-Minute Warning occurred in the United States on November 12, 1976, with a wide release aligning with the peak of the NFL football season to draw in audiences interested in sports-themed entertainment.[15][2] The timing capitalized on the film's narrative, which unfolds during a fictional championship game at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, enhancing its relevance amid ongoing professional football broadcasts and events.[16] Marketing efforts positioned the film as a high-stakes disaster thriller, building on the genre's surging popularity following the blockbuster successes of Earthquake (1974) and Jaws (1975), which had popularized suspenseful, large-scale catastrophe stories.[16] Promotional materials emphasized the all-star cast, including Charlton Heston and John Cassavetes, and the film's basis in George La Fountaine's 1975 novel, while incorporating subtle NFL connections such as a cameo by retired quarterback Joe Kapp to evoke authenticity without official league endorsement.[16] The film's international rollout commenced in 1977, varying by market to accommodate local distribution schedules. Notable early releases included West Germany in early 1977, Denmark on February 18, 1977, and Spain on March 4, 1977, allowing Universal Pictures to adapt promotion to regional audiences while maintaining the core appeal of its action-packed stadium siege premise.[15]

Box Office Performance

Two-Minute Warning was produced with a budget of $6.7 million.[2] The film opened in over 650 theaters across North America on November 12, 1976, and briefly topped the box office charts for one week that month.[2] Despite initial expectations of earning around $20 million from exhibitors, it ultimately generated $5.385 million in domestic rentals, falling short of projections and resulting in unsuccessful theatrical returns.[2][17] This performance represented an underachievement for a disaster thriller, especially when compared to contemporaries like The Omen, which amassed $48.6 million in domestic grosses earlier that year. The timing of Two-Minute Warning's release played a key role, as it faced immediate competition from Rocky, which premiered on November 21, 1976, and went on to become 1976's highest-grossing film with $117.2 million domestically. The crowded holiday release slate further diluted audience attention and ticket sales for the film.[2]

Alternate Versions

Television Edit

The television edit of Two-Minute Warning premiered on NBC's The Big Event on February 6, 1979. This version extended the film's runtime to 141 minutes from the original theatrical cut of 115 minutes, achieved by adding approximately 40 minutes of new footage that introduced an art heist subplot portraying the sniper as a hired distraction for thieves targeting a museum exhibit, while excising around 30 minutes of original content.[18][19] To comply with broadcast standards, violent sequences, profanity, and on-screen deaths were primarily eliminated, including the shooting of the pickpocket character played by Walter Pidgeon.[19][20] The new material featured additional actors such as Rossano Brazzi, James Olson, and Joanna Pettet, along with brief reshot scenes involving Charlton Heston to integrate the heist narrative. These changes shifted focus toward police procedural aspects of the robbery planning and execution, while retaining core elements of the stadium siege but rendering it less graphic, with no spectator fatalities depicted. Charlton Heston contributed to three short new scenes, and the sniper's identity was revealed earlier to tie into the subplot. The edit was directed by Gene Palmer, as original director Larry Peerce declined involvement.[18][21] Peerce publicly disavowed the television version, describing it as an "awful" alteration that "neuters" the film's tension through unauthorized pacing disruptions and tonal shifts. Despite his objections, the broadcast aired without his credit. Viewer reception was mixed: it achieved strong initial ratings for NBC but faced criticism for its disjointed structure and padded narrative, though some appreciated the extended runtime and family-friendly modifications. The version became the standard for subsequent TV and cable airings for years. The television edit was included as a bonus feature on Shout! Factory's 2016 Blu-ray release of the film.[21][18][22]

Reception

Critical Response

Upon its release, Two-Minute Warning received mixed to negative reviews from critics, earning a 29% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 14 reviews.[3] The film also holds an average rating of 6.2 out of 10 on IMDb, drawn from over 4,600 user votes.[1] Some reviewers praised the film's ability to build tension through its suspenseful pacing and realistic depiction of the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum as a crowded, chaotic setting for the unfolding crisis. Variety highlighted the "above-average plotting, acting and direction," noting how the ensemble cast effectively conveyed the escalating panic among diverse characters. Performances by Charlton Heston as the determined police captain and John Cassavetes as his more impulsive partner were particularly commended for adding grit and authenticity to the procedural elements, with critics appreciating how their dynamic grounded the high-stakes scenario.[23] However, the majority of contemporary critiques focused on the film's shortcomings, including the sniper's underdeveloped motivation, which left the antagonist as a faceless cipher without psychological depth or backstory. Roger Ebert awarded it one out of four stars, lambasting it as a "cheerfully unashamed exploitation of two of our great national preoccupations, pro football and guns," and criticizing the disposable, stereotypical characters who served merely as targets in a formulaic disaster narrative. Other reviewers echoed concerns about shallow character development and reliance on clichéd tropes, such as interchangeable subplots involving a young couple, a priest, and a gambler, which diluted emotional investment. The film's cynicism and lack of social commentary on violence were seen as particularly grating, contributing to its perception as a mechanical thriller prioritizing spectacle over substance.[5] In modern reevaluations, the film is often viewed as a precursor to later sniper-in-a-crowd thrillers like The Sum of All Fears (2002), sharing a premise of mass threat at a major sporting event, though with less geopolitical scope. While the special effects and production values appear dated by today's standards—evident in the practical explosions and crowd simulations—its core suspense endures, with some retrospective analyses crediting the tight climax for maintaining riveting tension despite the narrative flaws.[24][25]

Cultural Impact

Two-Minute Warning emerged as part of the 1970s disaster film cycle, a popular genre that peaked following the success of films like Airport (1970), The Poseidon Adventure (1972), and The Towering Inferno (1974), blending ensemble casts with high-stakes threats to capitalize on escalating public anxieties about catastrophic events. Released in 1976, the film arrived shortly after Jaws (1975) amplified societal fears of uncontrollable dangers in everyday settings, contributing to a wave of thrillers that dramatized mass peril in public spaces.[26][27][28] The movie influenced subsequent sniper thrillers and established tropes of stadium-based attacks in media, portraying a lone gunman endangering a crowded sports venue in a manner that echoed real-world shooting fears stemming from incidents like the 1966 University of Texas tower massacre. Its narrative of institutional response to anonymous terror prefigured elements in later action films, such as the high-rise siege in Die Hard (1988), while helping define the subgenre of Super Bowl disaster stories that included Black Sunday (1977). These depictions amplified concerns over public safety at large gatherings, paralleling heightened awareness of potential attacks in the post-1970s era.[29] In terms of home media, Two-Minute Warning received a Blu-ray release from Shout! Factory on June 28, 2016, featuring a high-definition transfer of the theatrical cut alongside the extended television edit as a bonus feature. As of 2025, the film remains available for digital rental or purchase on platforms including Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV, and Fandango at Home, ensuring accessibility for modern audiences interested in 1970s genre cinema.[30][31] The film's legacy includes a minor cult following, particularly for its tense action sequences and star-studded ensemble amid the chaos of a football stadium climax, though it has not inspired major remakes. It continues to be referenced in compilations of football-themed films, appearing alongside classics like The Longest Yard (1974) in lists chronicling the genre's evolution.[32][33][34]

References

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