Inside Dog Day Afternoon’s Cinematic Opening Night


“This is Brooklyn, Colleen,” Sonny reminds the head bank teller in the branch (played by Jessica Hecht) after she requests that he tone down his language, “not Mister Rogers’s Neighborhood.”

It is only in the second act, when the media outs the criminal duo as “avowed homosexuals,” that we come to learn about Sonny’s wife, Leon, a transgender woman for whom Sonny is committing this crime. He intends to use the funds not for personal gain, but rather to pay for Leon’s gender-affirming surgery. Moss-Bachrach, who delivers a controlled but emotive performance, has little interest in being called names by the media and defensively blurts, “I ain’t no homosexual, Sonny!”

Like the film—which was deemed ahead of its time for Al Pacino’s portrayal of a queer man and the inclusion of a transgender character—this adaptation seems interested in the political implications of both queerness and police brutality. The topicality of such issues hasn’t lessened in the intervening five decades, and in one notable instance, mirroring a scene from the movie, Bernthal begins shouting “Attica!”—referencing the 1971 prison uprising in which 43 people died—and much of the 2026 audience joins in.

After the actors take their bows to an audience on its feet, the celebration moves downtown to a spacious event venue called Second, where guests enjoy glasses of wine and slices of Sicilian-style pizza—an on-theme snack, given Sonny’s demand for pizza in the original film. Dum-Dums lollipops, a signature banking treat, are also plentiful, stored in little baskets at every table.

One of the windows looks out onto a courtyard, and on the building across the way a video of co-stars Bernthal and Moss-Bachrach is projected. In this silent, grainy short, they appear in period garb, roaming the streets of New York in what is meant to be the 1970s. Even without sound, they ooze the electric chemistry of partners in crime—ones you might even root for in a bank robbery.