"Now that's a scream."I've seen this one countless times and though De Palma has a number of masterpieces this is the one that's always felt like it summarizes and symbolizes his entire filmography. His love of/playful use of pulp and B-moviemaking (voyeur-horror, slashers, Giallo black-gloved misogynist murderers, etc), his basically plagiarized Hitchcockian visual grammar/obsession (especially in the suspense-sequencing and doomed murder-mystery/self-critical or confessional romance), the meta-angle of the love of analog craftsmanship + the filmmaker's responsibility to this powerful illusion they serve (not dissimilar from the way a cover-up functions), and of course the radical, angry political paranoia that cropped up in some of his early student and eventual war films. Taking his obvious inspirations (namely Blow Up and The Conversation) and so thoroughly merging them with his own unique obsessions that he spits it all back out as the darkest, most personal and masterfully-crafted “magic of the movies” thriller of all time imo. Where the brutality and constructed artifice of cinema meets the brutality and constructed artifice of a corrupt nation's history, Travolta's tragically handsome insomniac filmmaker-as-detective literally witnessing the seams around him and reconstructing the awful truths of his ugly reality through images and sound. Understanding both the instinct towards curiosity and watching but also the utter horror of actually following them to their logical conclusions; getting the horrifying answers, leading the people you love to their deaths, seeing how their screams are swallowed and reverberated right back into the artifice. A soulful, guilt-ridden, despairing vision of the life of an illusionist in a cruel, violent, corrupt country that’s much better at his trade than he ever could be, and easily one of the greatest movies ever made. Full discussion on ep 230 of my podcast SLEAZOIDS.
Directed by Brian De Palma
Blow Out
An acclaimed, bleak crime.
While recording sound effects for a slasher flick, Jack Terry stumbles upon a real-life horror: a car careening off a bridge and into a river. Jack jumps into the water and fishes out Sally from the car, but the other passenger is already dead — a governor intending to run for president. As Jack does some investigating of his tapes, and starts a perilous romance with Sally, he enters a tangled web of conspiracy that might leave him dead.
Where to watch
1Blow Out is showing in 1 cinema in Los Angeles — next screening Friday 10 July at 19:30 at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures.
Friday, 10 July
/ TodayCast & crew
6What people say
Holy shit this is a god damn movie right here
People love to talk about this movie as a movie about making movies and how it synthesizes "Blow Up" (photos) and "The Conversation" (audio) for a movie about a guy threading sound together with a moving image to create movie magic, but De Palma adds another crucial layer as this film is really about dealing with actresses, or at least how they are seen by the male director. Here, Nancy Allen is the prototypical leading lady, she gets cast in Travolta's movie, and at first he falls for her and wants to love her, but eventually he realizes she's just a dumb whore and goes from cajoling her to barking orders at her to make her hit her marks, remember her lines. Eventually, he gets her killed and moves on to make more movies, taking from her the only useful thing to him: her death rattle. Pretty dark!
What is Blow Out about?+
Jack Terry, a film sound technician, accidentally records evidence of a political murder and gets entangled in a deadly conspiracy.
Who directed Blow Out?+
Brian De Palma directed the film in 1981; he is an American filmmaker recognized for his distinct visual style and suspense thrillers.
Is Blow Out worth watching?+
The film is highly regarded by critics for its innovative sound design and technical camerawork, anchored by a strong performance from John Travolta. Watch it on Mood.














