This 1976 release is hugely suspenseful and very realistic indeed, largely due to the Oscar nominated film editing, photography(the stadium footage works a treat!), direction and good strong cast of familiar faces. Charlton Heston plays Captain Pete Holly, a hard-boiled cop whose initial investigation of a random shooting seen at the start of the movie by a mystery gunman leads him to a championship football game at the LA Coliseum - the mystery gunman is a sniper who is perched above the scoreboard. When the time comes, the sniper will kill a target - or several? This flick does keep you guessing at times, just who is he after? In the crowd are a noisy family(DYNASTY's Pamela Bellwood is the mom, Beau Bridges(who played the President of the USA in 10.5 APOCALYPSE and also STARGATE SG1) is the harassed Dad Of The Year(not!) and sniper witness brutalised by over-zealous cops - remember this was 1976 - and there are two mischievous brats with him, a gambler facing loan sharks(QUINCY's Jack Klugman) and prayers from a priest sitting next to him for LA to win! Add to that the President visiting at half time, a pickpocket(Walter Pidgeon), and the TV crews being commandeered by SWAT captain Chris Button, played superbly by JOHN CASSAVETES and keeping it quiet from the public, and you have a killer of a movie(no pun intended) which will have you hooked from beginning to end. The original 115 minute cinema release shown here on this great quality widescreen DVD is the best way to see this classic - forget the awful network TV doctored version which in my view ruined a great story.
The story's pace moves along well and there are moments which will genuinely give you mild shocks or two! Strangely, you will also get caught up in the excitement of LA playing Baltimore on the field too, so if you are an NFL fan, this will appeal to you. Overall, a superb thriller and a movie which as well as being a smart disaster movie when the sniper starts his killing spree and the crowd panics, explores the theme of random killing quite well, especially in the wake of recent real-life massacres such as Dunblane and Hungerford in the UK. Stadium panic and riots, have also sadly become a reality since Hillsborough and Heysel in the 1980s, which makes the crowd panic scenes at times very realistic indeed.
One could also say that the climax, also explored in the terrorism thriller BLACK SUNDAY also released in 1976, might have inspired Jean-Claude Van Damme's similarly superb SUDDEN DEATH which came about 21 years later.
Final word: this thriller comes highly recommended.