DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
#1DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/30/26 at 6:18pm
Feldman says midnight embargo lift.
KevinKlawitter
Broadway Legend Joined: 1/21/20
KevinKlawitter
Broadway Legend Joined: 1/21/20
#4DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/31/26 at 1:01am
DTLI Consensus: This stage adaptation of the beloved 1975 crime film bungles the heist, leaning much too far into comedy and resulting in an ill-advised and tonally incoherent play.
7 negative (including the NYT), 7 mixed, 1 positive.
https://didtheylikeit.com/shows/dog-day-afternoon/
BoringBoredBoard40
Broadway Legend Joined: 9/27/21
#5DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/31/26 at 1:17am
well yikes this thing has been in development for years so these reviews are kind of a bummer
#6DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/31/26 at 1:34am
‘Dog Day’ Drama: Broadway Playwright Briefly Kept Out of Rehearsals
"A week before opening night, tensions spilled over offstage, with the show’s producing team temporarily prohibiting Stephen Adly Guirgis from entering the theater."
"Making a new Broadway show is often stressful. At “Dog Day Afternoon,” a stage adaptation of Sidney Lumet’s 1975 movie about a Brooklyn bank robbery and hostage-taking, that stress became so intense that the production’s Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright was prohibited from entering the August Wilson Theater for three days over the last week.
The show’s producing team told the playwright, Stephen Adly Guirgis, that he was no longer welcome at rehearsals after tempers flared on Friday between Guirgis and Mark Kaufman, who runs Warner Bros. Theater Ventures, an entity that is among the play’s lead producers.
The argument and the aftermath were described by three theater professionals with connections to the production and knowledge of the events, but who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were seeking to protect their relationships with those involved.
Asked for comment, the playwright and lead producers issued a joint statement saying that “the process of creating and producing a new play is always a passionate one.”
“Stephen has finalized his script after implementing all his changes, as is customary, during previews,” they said. “We are all committed to maintaining a respectful environment for everyone involved and remain very proud of what’s onstage.”
The subject of the dispute is not entirely clear, but the show was continually revised throughout the preview process, which began March 10 and involves performances for paying audiences as well as ongoing rehearsals to incorporate changes. There were tensions over the show’s running time (it is now two hours and 15 minutes long, including an intermission, which is shorter than it was at the start of previews) and its tone (early previews leaned into comedy, while the film was primarily suspenseful)."
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/25/theater/dog-day-afternoon-broadway-stephen-adly-guirgis.html
MasterThespian 2
Featured Actor Joined: 3/22/22
#7DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/31/26 at 5:59am
EDSOSLO858 said: "Feldman says midnight embargo lift."
Yikes. Might want to keep that embargo in place.
Michelle Birnbaum
Chorus Member Joined: 6/21/18
#8DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/31/26 at 7:16am
Already have tickets to go with my husband and friends. Hope we can still enjoy it at least somewhat.
#9DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/31/26 at 8:40am
I'm not that surprised at the reviews but I do find it significant that a few reviewers used the NY Times Michael Paulson article, published less than a week before the show opened, about backstage conflict as a support for their negative opinion.
No matter what you think of the play, I wonder if Paulson and the New York Times will repeat this kind of Sweaty Oracle crap before the opening of other Broadway shows.
MemorableUserName
Broadway Legend Joined: 3/27/19
#10DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/31/26 at 8:51am
Holdren's review in Vulture is a good read as always, though, as someone who found it to be one of those shows that's perfectly entertaining without actually being good, I feel like she's being very generous.
Did Dog Day Afternoon Get Away With It?
https://www.vulture.com/article/theater-review-dog-day-afternoon-broadway-bernthal-guirgis.html
"Bring too much of that hyperspecific tone along with you to the August Wilson Theatre, and comparison may indeed prove the thief of joy. But let Stephen Adly Guirgis’s play introduce itself on its own terms, with its firm, enthusiastic handshake and garrulous demeanor (Guirgis has never been a playwright of few words), and the experience quickly endears itself. This time around, under Rupert Goold’s actor-forward direction and with Guirgis’s distinctive voiciness, the story has more in common with the canine of its title — there’s a little more swagger, sweetness, and slobber, a little more desire to please. But please, and move, it does, largely on account of its good heart."
#11DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/31/26 at 8:51am
58 on Broadway Scorecard, skippable.
"Critics find this stage adaptation of the classic film tonally confused, struggling to justify its existence beyond star power. While some praise Guirgis's New York voices and entertaining moments, most fault the uneven mix of comedy and drama."
https://broadwayscorecard.com/show/dog-day-afternoon
EvanstonDad
Stand-by Joined: 5/10/16
#12DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/31/26 at 10:17am
Oof, these reviews killed any interest I had in this show, and I didn't have much to begin with. They confirm what I already suspected -- there's no "why" to this show. Why this film, and why now?
MasterThespian 2
Featured Actor Joined: 3/22/22
#13DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/31/26 at 10:32am
Find it so bizarre that you start with a gritty, suspenseful, dramatic 70’s movie…add two intense dramatic actors as co-leads…and bring it to Broadway…as a comedy???
is this simply a writer insisting on putting his own stamp on a classic? All these lousy reviews are pointing to the same things. Have tickets to see this in two weeks. Guess we’ll still go, but my interest has dwindled. Too bad.
At least I have tickets for Giant and Salesman.
#15DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/31/26 at 10:59am
Feldman and I basically shared a brain on this one.
These were pretty much the reviews I expected - it has no real direction or goal other than muddying the legacy of the film and the story that inspired it. Plus, I still am in disbelief that they did nothing to fix the very transphobic problem of Leon basically acting like Agador from THE BIRDCAGE.
It’s basically “Dog Day Afternoon: A Gay Romp Through A Bungled Bank Robbery On A Sweaty Brooklyn Tuesday In August”
#16DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 3/31/26 at 12:16pm
Many reviews characterized as "mixed" struck me as decidedly negative. Arguably, only Jessica Hecht emerges completely unscathed (though a couple of reviews questioned the value in expanding the role thus). In the Monday a.m. quarterbacking, one might wonder whether a full - and in some ways semi-literal - adaptation was wise. A tighter "close-up" on the film's characters, without the revolve and large company required to put a screenplay on the stage, might've been more ambitious. I realize this post is presumptuous in its rearview mirror speculation, but since many heads are being scratched over the failures here, let the guesswork begin, dramaturgical and otherwise.
MasterThespian 2
Featured Actor Joined: 3/22/22
#17DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 4/16/26 at 10:21am
Want to check in on Dog Day. Has anyone attended recently? Any further tweaks (or improvements) since the reviews came out? Or is it locked in and it is what it is? Thanks.
Updated On: 4/16/26 at 10:21 AM#18DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 4/16/26 at 4:32pm
MasterThespian 2: Want to check in on Dog Day. Has anyone attended recently? Any further tweaks (or improvements) since the reviews came out? Or is it locked in and it is what it is? Thanks.
I attended last week. I liked Act I which I thought had a good number of laughs. I loved the New Yorkness of it along with the performances by Bernthal, Hecht and Kostroff. The set is terrific as well. But then we get to Act 2 which was just so painful. I actually felt bad for Jon Bernthal who was working his butt off and then he had to prolong that excruciating phone call with Leon. A phone call in movie works because of close-ups, etc. On stage, not so much. Jeez, I literally never thought it would end. The guitar solo that I read so much about in the preview thread is most definitely still in and shouldn't be. That character should have been cut but is alive and causing pain. Moss-Bachrach has a completely forgettable role.
Ptero2
Featured Actor Joined: 6/18/22
#19DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 4/16/26 at 5:02pm
MasterThespian 2 said: "Want to check in on Dog Day. Has anyone attended recently? Any further tweaks (or improvements) since the reviews came out? Or is it locked in and it is what it is? Thanks."
I saw this a few days ago and it was godawful. I've never seen a show so desperate to squeeze out laughs from the audience... every character was turned into a two-dimensional punchline spouting machine. I can't even begin to imagine what the motivation was to make this unless the creatives just really hated the movie from the depths of their souls.
MasterThespian 2
Featured Actor Joined: 3/22/22
#20DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 4/16/26 at 5:25pm
Thanks. Was really hoping for a different response, but sadly these reviews fit right in with the rest. Too bad. Had such high hopes for this production.
broadfan327
Broadway Star Joined: 3/20/08
#21DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 4/18/26 at 4:17pm
I saw it this afternoon and was entertained. I won the lotto for this. It helps apparently that I never saw the movie. It does have tonal issues, just like The Lost Boys I saw earlier in the week. Act II was a little painful to sit through.
#22DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 4/20/26 at 10:39am
I hate the reception this is getting, I was planning on sneaking off to the city with the girl I like this summer to see some shows and wanted to see this. The announcement made me watch the film for the first time and it was instantly in my top four, but now I don't think I want to see this. I believe in 'screw opinions, form your own' but good lord this is. just bad.
lilpunkin
Understudy Joined: 9/14/04
#23DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 4/20/26 at 10:49am
I don’t understand how this was bungled so badly. Especially since (as pointed out upthread) it’s been in development for years. I heard that Rupert was only hired to direct fairly last minute which is also odd. You’d expect the director to be involved throughout development.
TheOtherOne2
Stand-by Joined: 4/22/23
#24DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 4/20/26 at 11:40am
lilpunkin said: "I don’t understand how this was bungled so badly. Especially since (as pointed out upthread) it’s been in development for years. I heard that Rupert was only hired to direct fairly lastminute which is also odd. You’d expect the director to be involved throughout development."
No one took into account how much its success depended on its being a movie. Sal probably said no more in the film than he says on stage, he may even have said less, but we see him in close-up often so he becomes a much more vital presence. Despite Pacino's reputation as a shouter, he is in fact a highly nuanced actor. For every moment of Sonny yelling we have a moment where he is reacting actively but quietly, where his eyes do the talking. We get to know them both. And we have the environment of Brooklyn teeming realistically around us every time the camera leaves the bank. Lumet had NY in his bones. So did Pacino, and he and Cazale were at the top of their powers back then. The bank robbery spiraling out of control is certainly comedic, but not at the expense of suspense. The tension mounts in the movie; the police force surrounding Sonny and Sal is like the cavalry surrounding Butch and Sundance at the end of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. The stakes feel very high. With the exception of the scene with Leon, nothing seems to matter enough in the stage version to merit the story being told.
Maybe Giurgis wasn't the right playwright for this? Maybe Goold didn't have the right touch? More likely it just benefited form being told on camera, directed by and starring experts.
willep
Broadway Legend Joined: 9/20/08
#25DOG DAY AFTERNOON Reviews
Posted: 4/20/26 at 2:36pm
Giurgis' work is absolutely at least partially to blame. Unless he was locked out of the rehearsals because he wanted to cut characters and do massive rewrites.
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