Blast of Silence is a 1961 American crime film. It was written and directed by Allen Baron and produced by Merrill Brody, who was also the cinematographer.
Blast of Silence | |
---|---|
Directed by | Allen Baron |
Produced by | Merrill Brody |
Written by | Allen Baron |
Starring | Allen Baron Molly McCarthy Larry Tucker Peter Clume |
Narrated by | Lionel Stander |
Music by | Meyer Kupferman |
Cinematography | Merrill Brody |
Edited by | Peggy Lawson |
Production company | Magla Productions |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 77 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Screenplay
Frankie Bono, a hitman from Cleveland, comes to New York City during Christmas week to kill a middle-management mobster, Troiano. First he follows his target to select the best possible location, and orders a gun from rat-loving dealer Big Ralph. One night, he meets a former friend from the orphanage he grew up in, rattling his cool and putting his life in danger.
According to Turner Classic Movies web site, the "fist fight" scene was filmed on Long Island during Hurricane Donna (September 10–12, 1960), the only hurricane of the 20th century to blanket the entire East Coast from south Florida to Maine.
Blast of Silence was released in Chicago on June 5, 1961.
The Criterion Collection released Blast of Silence on DVD in 2008. The disc's special features include a new, restored digital transfer, a making-of featurette (Requiem for a Killer: The Making of Blast of Silence), rare on-set Polaroid photos, and images of locations as they existed in 2008. Also included is a booklet featuring an essay by film critic Terrence Rafferty and a four-page graphic novel by Sean Phillips (Criminal, Sleeper, Marvel Zombies).