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| Index | 241 reviews in total |
100 out of 124 people found the following review useful:
A masterpiece of NYC hard-edged realism, 29 April 2005
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Author:
mstomaso from Vulcan
This is an intense, unremitting, intelligent and incredibly fast-paced
film which blends action, cinematic realism, art and humor into a
masterwork of hard-edged crime drama. But to categorize this film as
drama, suspense or action really does violence to it. This is just a
great film, and it doesn't fit comfortably into any category with which
I am aware.
Don't look here for any sense of fantasy-justice or n'er-do-wrong comic
book heroism. Look here instead for gut wrenching nihilism, frustration
with the unfairness of criminal justice in the hands of bureaucracy,
and a solid, plot-driven story about a couple of cops who are just
trying to do their jobs as best they can.
And by all means, don't watch this film if you aren't fully awake and
willing to be taken down the electric, ambiguous, and compelling roads
it leads to. If you watch this film with any part of your brain turned
off you'll end up asking questions like "plot, what plot?" The fact
that some people can't find it reflects more on them as film-watchers
than it does on this film. This film does not offer passive
entertainment like most of the contemporary action market does. It
makes you pay attention, though, at times you might not want to.
Hackman and Scheider are incredible, with some of the greatest
chemistry I have ever seen between two young actors. They play two
hard-ass NYC detectives looking to end the war on drugs more-or-less
permanently by taking down an international conspiracy which they have
just barely sniffed out. And make no mistake, they, particularly
Hackman's "Popeye Doyle" are at war, and treat their jobs as a
battlefield. Doyle pursues his quarry with utterly wreckless abandon,
endangering the lives of dozens of people along the way. While both men
are absolutely terrific, this stands out as one of Hackman's greatest
performances, and his Oscar is well-deserved (not something you will
see me say often). Backed by a strong supporting cast, and some of the
best live-action cinematography of the late 20th century, this film
does not allow you to turn away, get popcorn, or even deal with bodily
functions for its entire duration.
Considered in the early 70s to be 'shockingly violent', this film does
not even reach a tenth the degree of passive violent repulsion of the
average Tarantino film, and it relies, instead, on amazing
performances, flawless direction, a phenomenal post-modern soundtrack
and edgy, tense camera-work. Unlike contemporary action film garbage,
it also gives you complex characters who you can care about, but never
fully understand. I will cut this review short because I am running out
of superlatives. Anybody remotely interested in expanding or just
appreciating the artistic breadth and depth of mainstream film needs to
see this.
71 out of 92 people found the following review useful:
Slow, but worth it., 19 September 2002
Author:
(Bastian Balthazar Bux) from Iowa City, IA
The French Connection is number seventy on the AFI's list of top 100
movies,
right before Forrest Gump. But why is it known as such a great film?
Why
did it win Best Picture at the 1971 Academy Awards? Why was it so
important?
The French Connection was made in 1971, starring a then 41-year-old Gene
Hackman in the lead, and directed by William Friedkin, who started his
directing career with `Alfred Hitchcock Presents' in 1955. The film
follows
an aging but truculent `bad-boy' police officer Popeye Doyle and his
slightly kinder partner (Roy Schneider) in their journey to bust a
drug-smuggling ring of French origin. The movie itself is basically one
big
chase scene, following Popeye on his cat and mouse game of catch the
crook.
The film has been classified as both an action and drama movie. Both are
right, in their own way. The film at its core is a tense, slow-moving
thriller, dramatic in its musical score and over-acted brutality. Scenes
are left to their own devices, moving forth indeterminately, in a very
drama-characteristic fashion. However, there's plenty of chasing and
violence to satisfy an `action' classification. This action, however, is
played so that it's less about the adrenaline rush (so common in today's
big-budget action flicks), and more about that tense underlying
heartbeat.
The style of the film then, is a very paced and dingy chase scene. By
today's post-Matrix standards, the film is slow. But in its own way,
it's
subterrainiously charged.
The camera is mastered by cinematographer Owen Roizman, whose previous
film,
Stop, is essentially unheard of, and who went on to make The Exorcist
with
Friedkin two years later. Shots are varied. There are handheld shots of
the streets, coupled with static medium wide, along with crane shots,
along
with close-ups and wide shots. And even though the shots are extremely
eclectic, one common theme shines through-realism. Every shot composed
is
just a little bit shaky, a little bit unclean. There's no truly
innovative
lighting used, simply that yellow coarse light that everything is
eternally
bathed in. It succeeds in making the movie that much more tangible to
the
eye. The mood created within is one of belief. You can believe the
movie,
because it's shot in such a rugged manner. The car scenes, filmed at
night,
use the same technique; red and white car lights with a subtlety lit car.
It is clear that the film Taxi Driver, made 5 years later, contained car
shots obviously influenced by the ones in The French Connection.
Furthermore, actors' faces are lit without any superfluous shine or
luster-they are simply real human faces, and are not hyped up. This
influenced cinema in the way that it brings the mood and story above the
actors' egos.
The editing, done by Gerald Greenberg, is, in the same manner, very real.
Characteristic of films made pre-computer based editing, shots are held
for
longer periods of time, and not as many cuts are used. The editing is
almost unnoticeable, because it seems to pass by so soft, especially
during
dialog. However, conversely, it cuts much more often (but never
frantically) during action sequences, like the bar roust or the car chase
under the train tracks. But still, drama is tensed out by holding shots
long during action sequences, and it works. But this never comes to
fault.
The few times when quick cuts are needed, they are used, such as the
train
crash. In general though, the editing satisfies the mood of the
film.
It is said that silence is golden, and in The French Connection, it seems
to
be just as valuable. While the tense, stringy score (by Don Ellis) is
important to the film in some aspects, its not used very often, and
instead,
director Friedkin employs simple background noise. For instance, most of
the scenes in the movie simply work with dialog and city noise. This all
goes back to the pre-established mood: realism. The music is used only
when
it wont get in the way of the framework of the film. So therefore,
background noise suffices wonderfully for most action and dialog scenes.
Some of the music is setting-based as well, and so, comes from the
movie's
plot itself, and doesn't break the reality theme. Modern audiences might
be
surprised by the lack of `action-music', but car chases and fight scenes
sans pumping bass are surprisingly welcome, and help the film, as well as
add
an aire of classiness.
Director William Friedkin is a director who knows what he wants out of a
film. For The Exorcist, it is told he violently slapped an actor who
wouldn't cry, and, with The French Connection, he establishes his
premise,
and lets the story tell itself. It is a different style of filmmaking.
The
French Connection is important to modern cinema not only because it
taught
modern directors the art of silence and visual suspense, but because it
artfully embodies its theme. Its story, rough characters, locales,
color,
and pace all bleed a very dark, yet very familiar reality; one that has
shaped nearly every cop movie since its making. While the film is at
times
hard to follow, simply because the story is left to its own devices so
much
(there are 15 minute periods of no dialog), but in the end, it succeeds
admirably. While not the best film ever made,
The French Connection is a classic, and worthy of the honors it has
received.
63 out of 82 people found the following review useful:
32 years and still relevant, 6 February 2003
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Author:
wrfarley from nyc, USA
I first saw The French Connection in the summer of '72 (after it won the Oscar), so it's reputation was fairly well sealed by then. I had seen fair number of 1971 films, including The Hospital, Nicholas and Alexandria, A Clockwork Orange, Shaft, Le Boucher, Dirty Harry. The French Connection was something different though. It seemed to leap off the screen. It gave me a feeling I no longer have when I leave a movie, which is when I stepped out into the street I felt I was still in the movie. Of course, the chase was spectacular, but what I most remember and still enjoy about the movie is the energy. Gene Hackman acted Popeye with his entire body: running, stamping his feet, fighting, pointing, running some more: the porkpie hat was not a meaningless appendage; it was part of him, whether he employed it for drug recovery or slamming it into the concrete. It's a cinematic performance that ranks with Chaplin and Keaton. Then there's the intoxicating mood of grey, dreary winter in New York 1970-71 that puts you into the show. And the editing. Note the cool shot of Doyle spinning out of the phone booth on Broome St. cutting right into the drone of the Brooklyn Bridge at daybreak; or the shots jammed together as Doyle yells at Pierre Nicoli on the departing train, cut to: the motorman's hand cut to: to the suspicious transit cop, cut to: to the closing train doors, etc. And no music to smooth it over! Whenever I see this film it looks like it's still happening.
62 out of 85 people found the following review useful:
One of the 1970s best crime movies, and yes, that means one of the best ever., 15 June 2003
Author:
Infofreak from Perth, Australia
'The French Connection' has really stood the test of time. William Friedkin is one American director who has almost been forgotten about, despite making some excellent movies like 'The Birthday Party', 'The Exorcist' and 'Cruising'. 'The French Connection' is his best movie by far, and one of the 1970s best crime movies, which means it's one of the best EVER. The lead actors are first rate, and the script by Ernest Tidyman ('Shaft') is a good one, but Friedkin makes this something special by applying documentary film techniques to this gritty and realistic detective story. 'The French Connection' was groundbreaking in this respect and influenced just about every subsequent cop movie, all the way up to contemporary TV shows like 'NYPD Blue' and the like. Gene Hackman is just terrific as Popeye Doyle. Hackman had been around for about ten years, and impressed many with his supporting role in 'Bonnie And Clyde', but this movie made him a major star. Along with 'The Conversation' and 'Scarecrow' it's still one of his most impressive performances. Roy Scheider was almost a complete unknown prior to this but he's also very good as Popeye's partner Buddy Russo. Scheider went on to some fine work in movies such as 'Jaws', 'Marathon Man', 'Last Embrace', '52 Pick-Up' and 'Naked Lunch', but never quite became the big name star that Hackman did. Bunuel regular Fernando Rey (cast by mistake after a misunderstanding, Friedkin thinking he was hiring a different actor!) and the underrated character actor Tony Lo Bianco, who had recently appeared in the cult classic 'The Honeymoon Killers', lead a fine supporting cast who really add to the movie's success. The exciting car chase sequence in this movie is now legendary, and is arguably the best one ever filmed, but there is so much more to this film than just that. 'The French Connection' is a superb movie, and still better than just about any similar Hollywood crime thriller made in the last few years. Highly recommended!
39 out of 58 people found the following review useful:
Amazing Masterpiece From the 1970s, 15 September 2000
Author:
tfrizzell from United States
"The French Connection" is an excellent film in every way imaginable. Gene Hackman (Oscar-winning) stars as a tough New York cop who is obsessed with stopping the flow of heroin into the city from France. Fernando Rey is perfect as the ring-leader of the smuggling. Tough, gritty, and realistic, "The French Connection" is an intense character-study that is never short on suspense or action. The film won five Oscars in 1971, including the Best Picture Oscar and one for William Friedkin's (only 32 at the time) intense direction. In a year that produced "The Last Picture Show" and "A Clockwork Orange", this film's win makes it even more impressive than it was nearly 30 years ago. Excellent. 5 stars out of 5.
23 out of 32 people found the following review useful:
The first of many to come!, 6 December 2005
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Author:
Percevalx from United States
In most movies, the good guys are portrayed as models for others, examples for a better life. The bad guys, on the other hand, are usually dirty rat scums. What a refreshing surprise to see that The French Connection has the roles loosely interchanged. Set against the backdrop of bleak New York City streets, ill-tempered narcotics detective 'Popeye' Doyle and his partner 'Cloudy' Russo intercept a drug shipment coming in from France led by urbane master criminal Alan Charnier. The two cops, however, have a hard time capturing the drug lord as he outwits them throughout the city. Popeye and Charnier make an interesting contrast. Popeye is portrayed as an obsessive, racist drunk while Charnier is the mellow, European sophisticate. This is, of course, an action thriller and the sequences are gritty, tense, and heart-pounding. It features one of the best car chase scenes ever filmed. What makes it so effective is the fact that it was shot in real-time, heavy traffic and we vicariously experience moment-by-moment. The acting is strong and believable. Gene Hackman's portrayal is exact and deservedly won the Best Actor Oscar. William Friedkin did a superior job in giving us a diverting and realistic look of cop life and the raw work they undergo to clear the streets of illicit activity. Great action thriller!
23 out of 33 people found the following review useful:
Tough, cool and clever, 23 January 2003
Author:
Mika Pykäläaho (bygis80@hotmail.com) from Järvenpää, Finland
I just bought "The French Connection" DVD-box (must for anybody who
appreciates fascinating old thriller classics) and I have to admit that even
though I've seen this terrific film couple of times some years ago now I
finally realized how stylish, impressive, brilliant and powerful movie it
actually is. However personally I think that year Stanley Kubrick's
masterpiece "A Clockwork Orange" would have been a slightly better choice
for the best picture Oscar but I guess in the end it was way too dubious at
the time to win it.
If "The French Connection" was released today, nobody would be interested in
it. In the early seventies this was something totally unique, nowadays this
is of course a huge classic that shaped the form of all the upcoming cop
thrillers but nothing we haven't seen before. Actually that's the biggest
problem of the modern cinema, we've seen it all - there's nothing new
filmmakers can offer us.
If you have your doubts about this film you just have to be patient and wait
a while. Gene Hackman is having one of the finest performances of his career
as Popey Doyle but the film starts out like just a thriller among others.
The second half of "The French Connection" reveals why this movie has earned
its numerous awards and reputation as one of the greatest cop flicks of the
1970's. Over 30 years later those chase scenes are still pure
dynamite.
20 out of 29 people found the following review useful:
An enjoyable cop thriller with plenty of good touches and an unmistakably 1970's feel, 31 January 2005
Author:
bob the moo from Birmingham, UK
Following a mix of hunches and leads, two tough NYPD narcotic cops set
up surveillance on a candy store in the belief that the owners of the
store are somehow involved in drug dealing on the side. Putting the
squeeze on the store leads them to a couple of new people, specifically
a smooth French criminal called Alain Charnier who is trying to
orchestrate a massive drug sale in New York. The pressure looks like
bringing success to Detectives Doyle and Russo, but Charnier's
organisation has tight time targets and decides to take action to
remove the heat from the job.
Sometimes with "classic" films it is easy to get sucked into the hype
and reputation and just love it before you have even seen it; for that
reason, although I have seen it several times, I decided to give it a
fresh viewing before I dared try to write my thoughts on it it
finished ten minutes ago, so my memory is still fresh. Although I feel
that it has remained well known thanks to "that" car chase, I think
that recalling only that scene is to do a disservice to a film that is
an enjoyable thriller in a tough, typically 1970's mould. The plot sees
a minor hunch turn into a bigger police job and it would be easy to
pick holes in some of the logic within it, it still grips and provides
a nicely gritty cop thriller. It isn't as clever or as original as
those coming to it on the back of its reputation might expect it to be,
as it does pretty much what the rest of the genre does. Now I'll be
fair and acknowledge that I don't know whether this film was the first
to create this type of film or if it was just part of the development
of them, but certainly watching it now it does blend in with others in
the same genre.
The direction makes it better than the material as Friedkin injects
real tension and grit into the story keeping it exciting while also
being rather sombre and low-key. The acting also makes it and, rightly,
Hackman carries much of the film with a great performance as Doyle.
Grizzled, bigoted and apparently heartless, it is interesting to
contrast his character with Rey's Charnier, who is much cooler and
effective. Scheider is, as always, reliable in support and he gives a
good performance throughout while the rest of the cast play their roles
well enough. There is no doubt though, that Hackman is the heart of the
film and his performance reflects this and makes the audience
emotionally involved with his story from the very start.
Overall this is a great 1970's cop thriller with all that comes with
that genre. It is enjoyably gritty and fast paced with "heroes" of
questionable morality and smooth criminals. People will always hark on
about that car chase and, yes, it is good, but there is more to this
film and it stands out as one of the best of the genre.
25 out of 39 people found the following review useful:
The ultimate cop movie., 5 February 2005
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Author:
Boba_Fett1138 from Groningen, The Netherlands
My favorite movie of all time "A Clockwork Orange" lost at the best
picture Acadamy Award ceremony against this movie. However looking at
this movie I can't say that it's undeserved, for "The French
Connection" truly is one of the best movies from at least the seventies
and maybe of all time. It most certainly is the best cop movie ever
made, in my opinion!
The movie has a perfect gritty and realistic kind of atmosphere and an
unmistakably seventies feeling. I love it! The seventies truly were the
golden age of film making and they simply don't make movies like this
anymore.
The characters are perfectly realistic and director William Friedkin
and the actors most certainly don't attempt to portray them as being
heroic or 'good cops'. Gene Hackman really in a way is an anti-hero and
he seems to be born to play 'Popeye' Doyle, who by now truly has grown
into a classic movie character. Roy Scheider also is really great as
his partner 'Cloudy' Russo, even though his character at times
disappears too long out of the story. A shame because he and Hackman
were a perfect screen duo. Both got an Oscar nomination but only
Hackman got to take the statue home with him. The movie also won
Oscar's for best director, best film editing, best picture and best
writing, screenplay based on material from another medium and got
nominated for three more.
The movie might have a slow pace by today's standards but the wonderful
story and acting really make up for this, "The French Connection" has
stand the test of time well. The slow pace even makes the famous car
chase scene even more energetic and thrilling enough to make your
adrenaline run.
Truly in my opinion, the ultimate cop movie!
10/10
http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
17 out of 24 people found the following review useful:
The first film to go deep inside the perils of being a maniacal and sadistic narcotics cop
, 11 May 2005
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Author:
ironside (robertfrangie@hotmail.com) from Mexico
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The dividing line between tough cops and mad mobsters is often so slim
it could be inscribed on the rim of a steel-jacketed .45 bullet
When Gene Hackman, as Popeye Doyle is hot on the trail of that illegal
load of heroin, he lets nothing and nobody get in his way
If one
stands aside from the sheer excitement of the film and examines it
dispassionately, it becomes apparent that here is ruthlessness which,
under normal circumstances, would be regarded as the actions of a crazy
man
Under the arches of the elevated railroad, the Doyle character drives a
car like a character gone berserk; if the number of innocent bystanders
sent flying and the total of wrecked cars were calculated, it might
have been cheaper and more humane to let the villains and the heroin
escape
But
it's only movies
While the picture's running it is not necessary
to wonder whether all this mayhem is morally right or wrong
Indeed, it
would be a sorry day for the entire thriller industry, both written and
screened, if ever we did!
This is a world of fantasy into which the audience is content to follow
the action for less than two hours
There are the goodies and the
baddies; the policeman may act like a baddie, but he's really on the
side of the angels
The really tough cop is a comparatively new type of cinematic
character
When the gangster film was young, so were the policemen
That detective of the 1930's, might have knocked a hoodlum or two
around in self-defense, but would never have been so careless as to
shoot a fellow cop through being too cynical or quick on the trigger
The New York film cop, of the 1930's would not have coldly broken a
mobster's jaw, as Sterling Hayden did in "The Godfather."
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