Born to Lose: The Misfits Who Made Dog Day Afternoon

Rachel Walther

Book cover for Born to Lose: The Misfits Who Made Dog Day Afternoon
Image for variant 9781915316509
Book cover for Born to Lose: The Misfits Who Made Dog Day Afternoon
Image for variant 9781915316509

Born to Lose: The Misfits Who Made Dog Day Afternoon

Born to Lose: The Misfits Who Made Dog Day Afternoon

Rachel Walther

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Description

August 22, 1972: Two men attempt to rob a bank in Brooklyn. They fail miserably: the money they'd hoped for isn't there, the cops get tipped off immediately, and within 30 minutes they're in a hostage situation with the FBI. Things really get crazy when reporters learn that one of the robbers is gay and married to a trans woman. The crowd of journalists and onlookers grows into the hundreds, desperate for a glimpse of this charismatic live-wire who's robbing the bank not for greed or thrills, but to fund his partner's sexual reassignment surgery.

Sound familiar? This is the plot of Dog Day Afternoon, the 1975 film directed by Sidney Lumet and starring Al Pacino, John Cazale, and Chris Sarandon. It remains a high-water mark of New Hollywood, where the best acting talent of the day came together on a film that was truly exceptional. But equally exceptional was the fact that the film was based on a true-life incident.

Drawing on extensive archival research, film historian Rachel Walther delves into the film's backstory, tracing how an unbelievable true crime tale of love, bank robbery, and LGBTQI+ activism became a box-office smash and catapulted a group of Brooklyn outsiders into the media spotlight. Name-checked on TV shows from The Simpsons to Drunk History, and now a Broadway play, Dog Day Afternoon's legacy continues to inspire filmmakers, writers, and actors. Walther's deep dive interrogates the film's place in the 1970s zeitgeist, set against a background of antiwar activism and the fight for gay and trans rights, and in doing so shows its continuing relevance today.

Critical Reviews

"If, like me, you're fascinated by how true crime stories are adapted for the screen, Rachel Walther's deep dive into the history of Dog Day Afternoon--both the real event and its cinematic recreation--is even wilder and more engrossing than the film itself. An instant classic. Savor it!"
--Eddie Muller
Cinema historian, host of TCM's Noir Alley

"The stranger-than-fiction story behind Dog Day Afternoon finds its ideal teller in Rachel Walther, whose page-turning account does full justice to this hilarious, bizarre, tragic, and timely American tale. Deeply researched and told with all the flavor and gusto it deserves, Born to Lose has much to say about the entanglement of reality, celebrity, and the movies."
--Imogen Sara Smith
Film critic and historian, the Criterion Channel and Film Comment

Publishing Information

Publisher: Headpress
Pub date: 2026-03-05
Length: 152 pages

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