Snipers entered the public conciousness in the U.S. on August 1, 1966, when Charles Whitman shot dozens of people from a tower located on the University of Texas campus in Austin, Texas. Whitman's shooting spree claimed the lives of 14; earlier, he had killed his wife and mother in their homes. The mass murder was unprecedented in American history, and Whitman's motives remain unexplained. *
Two years later, Peter Bogdanovich borrowed that story as the basis for Targets, in which a sniper on an oil tank in Los Angeles first shoots motorists driving on a nearby freeway, then flees to a drive-in theater, where he resumes his deadly attack. Nearly seven years later, in 1975, George LaFountaine's novel Two-Minute Warning appears to have been published for the first time, depicting a sniper attack at the Super Bowl.
The film version followed in November 1976. Produced by Edward S. Feldman and directed by Larry Peerce, who had previously teamed up for the 1975 melodrama The Other Side of the Mountain, the film fit firmly into the "disaster movie" formula that distributor Universal Pictures had perfected, beginning with 1970's Airport, and followed by Earthquake and Airport 1975 in 1974 and The Hindenburg in 1975. (Meanwhile, producer Irwin Allen and 20th Century Fox were making millions from The Poseidon Adventure and The Towering Inferno.)
Screenwriter Edward Hume, a television veteran, adapted LaFountaine's novel and hewed closely to the formula. Charlton Heston (as a police captain) and John Cassavetes (as a SWAT team leader) lead the cast; supposedly they're in conflict over their methods, with the avowedly 'peace-seeking' police captain at odds with the SWAT team leader's 'bullet-happy' inclinations. The supporting players line up dutifully: Martin Balsam as the stadium manager; Jack Klugman as a gambler in heavy debt to the Mob; Mitchell Ryan as a priest; Beau Bridges as an unemployed father treating his wife and kids to the big game; David Janssen and Gena Rowlands as a couple at a turning point in their relationship; Walter Pidgeon as a pickpocket; David Groh as a guy who flirts with Marilyn Hassett, who just happens to be sitting next to him.
The action takes place almost entirely at the Los Angeles Coliseum during "Championship X," which stood in for the Super Bowl due to the National Football League declining to participate or license their properties. (The teams are identified as Baltimore and Los Angeles; footage was shot during a college football game between the Stanford Cardinals and USC Trojans.) The sniper is shown getting into position atop a tower above the scoreboard, so the suspense depends upon his eventual discovery -- which seems to take forever, just because the movie needs to be a certain length -- and subsequent police efforts to neutralize him.
Very early in the film, an unnerving sequence establishes the deadly intentions of the sniper, as he picks out a target seemingly at random. It's presented in part from the sniper's point of view, through the sights of a rifle, and it's a perspective to which director Peerce returns throughout the movie. The first-person point of view, of course, has become numbingly familiar from countless video games, but seeing it here, in a real-world environment, is still disturbing.
Once the action finally begins, all hell breaks loose, and the "disaster" is one that is frightening because of its all-too-human elements, capturing the reaction of individuals in sheer panic. And, perhaps because I had recently read a detailed account of the Charles Whitman shooting, the similarities made me tense up beyond even what is depicted on-screen.
Less than six months later, John Frankenheimer's Black Sunday upped the stakes, placing an attack on the Super Bowl within the realm of terrorism, and making a blimp the weapon of mass destruction, rather than a lone guman's rifle. (For more on that movie, please see my 70s Rewind from September 2012.)
Although it's certainly not a classic waiting to be discovered, Two-Minute Warning provides a good 20 minutes of well-staged mayhem, and its visual snapshot of Los Angeles, albeit narrow, is worth visiting for history buffs.
Footnotes
* See Gary M. Lavergne's book, A Sniper in the Tower: The Charles Whitman Murders, published by University of North Texas Press, 1997.
In 1965, a teen sniper opened fire on passing motorists in California, killing three and wounding 10 before committing suicide, but it does not appear that it elicited the kind of national publicity that attended the Whitman shooting a year later.
Two-Minute Warning is available on Region 1 DVD. It is also available to watch via Amazon's Instant video on demand service for rental or purchase. I rented the high-definition version, which looked to have been sourced from well-preserved materials.
70s Rewind is a column on movies released during the writer's favorite decade for filmmaking.