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The French Connection (film)

The French Connection is a 1971 American neo-noir[6] action thriller film[7] directed by William Friedkin and starring Gene Hackman, Roy Scheider and Fernando Rey. The screenplay, written by Ernest Tidyman, is based on Robin Moore's 1969 non-fiction book of the same name. It tells the story of fictional NYPD detectives Jimmy "Popeye" Doyle and Buddy "Cloudy" Russo, whose real-life counterparts were narcotics detectives Eddie Egan and Sonny Grosso, in pursuit of wealthy French heroin smuggler Alain Charnier (played by Rey).

The French Connection
Theatrical release poster
Directed byWilliam Friedkin
Screenplay byErnest Tidyman
Based onThe French Connection
by Robin Moore
Produced byPhilip D'Antoni
Starring
CinematographyOwen Roizman
Edited byGerald B. Greenberg
Music byDon Ellis
Production
companies
  • Philip D'Antoni Productions
  • Schine-Moore Productions
Distributed by20th Century-Fox
Release date
  • October 7, 1971 (1971-10-07) (United States)[1]
Running time
104 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
Languages
  • English
  • French
Budget$1.8–2.2 million[3][4]
Box office$75 million (worldwide theatrical rental)[5]

At the 44th Academy Awards, the film earned eight nominations and won five for Best Picture, Best Actor (Hackman), Best Director, Best Film Editing and Best Adapted Screenplay. It was also nominated for Best Supporting Actor (Scheider), Best Cinematography and Best Sound Mixing. Tidyman also received a Golden Globe Award nomination, a Writers Guild of America Award and an Edgar Award for his screenplay. A sequel, French Connection II, followed in 1975 with Hackman and Rey reprising their roles.

Often considered one of the greatest films ever made, The French Connection appeared in the American Film Institute's list of the best American films in 1998 and again in 2007. In 2005, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant".[8][9]

Plot edit

In Marseille, a police detective follows Alain Charnier, who runs a large heroin-smuggling syndicate. The policeman is murdered by Charnier's hitman, Pierre Nicoli. Charnier plans to smuggle $32 million worth of heroin into the United States by hiding it in the car of his unsuspecting friend, television personality Henri Devereaux, who is traveling to New York by ship. In New York City, detectives Jimmy "Popeye" Doyle and Buddy "Cloudy" Russo go out for drinks at the Copacabana. Popeye notices Salvatore "Sal" Boca and his young wife, Angie, entertaining mobsters involved in narcotics. They tail the couple and establish a link between the Bocas and lawyer Joel Weinstock, a major buyer in the narcotics underworld. Popeye learns that a massive shipment of heroin will arrive within two weeks. The detectives convince their supervisor to wiretap the Bocas' phones. Popeye and Cloudy are joined by federal agents Mulderig and Klein.

Devereaux's vehicle arrives in New York City. Boca is anxious to make the purchase while Weinstock urges patience, knowing they are being surveiled. Charnier realizes he is as well, "makes" Popeye and escapes on a departing subway shuttle at Grand Central Station. To shake his tail, he has Boca meet him in Washington D.C., where Boca asks for a delay to avoid the police. Charnier is impatient and wants to conclude the deal quickly. On the flight back to New York City, Nicoli offers to kill Popeye, but Charnier objects, knowing that Popeye would be replaced by another policeman. Nicoli insists, however, saying they will be back in France before a replacement is assigned. Soon after, Nicoli attempts to shoot Popeye but misses. Popeye chases Nicoli, who boards an elevated train. Popeye shouts to a policeman on the train to stop Nicoli and then commandeers a passenger car. He gives chase, accidentally crashing into several vehicles on the way.

Realizing he is being pursued, Nicoli works his way forward through the carriages, shoots the pursuing policeman who tries to intervene, and hijacks the motorman at gunpoint. He forces him to drive straight through the next station, and shoots the train conductor. The motorman passes out, and they are just about to slam into a stationary train when an emergency trackside brake engages, hurling the assassin violently to the floor. A battered Popeye arrives to see the killer descending from the platform. Nicoli sees Popeye, turns to run, but is shot dead. After a lengthy stakeout, Popeye impounds Devereaux's Lincoln. In a police garage, he and his team tear the car apart piece by piece searching for the drugs, but seemingly come up empty handed. Then Cloudy notes that the vehicle's shipping weight is 120 pounds (54 kg) over its listed manufacturer's weight, indicating that the contraband must still be in the car. Further search reveals heroin packages hidden inside the rocker panels. The police reassemble and return the car to Devereaux, who delivers it to Charnier.

Charnier drives to an old factory on Wards Island to meet Weinstock and deliver the drugs. After Charnier has the rocker panel covers removed, Weinstock's chemist tests one of the bags and confirms its quality. Charnier removes the drugs and hides the money, concealing it inside the rocker panels of another car purchased at an auction of junk cars, which he will take back to France. Charnier and Sal drive off in the Lincoln, but hit a roadblock with a large contingent of police led by Popeye. The police chase the Lincoln back to the factory, where Boca is killed during a shootout while most of the other criminals surrender. Charnier escapes into a nearby warehouse with Popeye and Cloudy in pursuit. Popeye sees a shadowy figure in the distance and opens fire too late to heed a warning, killing Mulderig. Undaunted, Popeye tells Cloudy that he will get Charnier. After reloading his gun, Popeye runs into another room and a single gunshot is heard.

Title cards describe the fates of various characters: Weinstock was indicted, but his case was dismissed for "lack of proper evidence"; Angie Boca received a suspended sentence for an unspecified misdemeanor; Lou Boca (Sal's brother, an accessory to the handoff) received a reduced sentence; Devereaux served four years in a federal penitentiary for conspiracy; and Charnier was never caught. Popeye and Cloudy were transferred out of the narcotics division and reassigned.

Cast edit

Production edit

The film was originally set up at National General Pictures, but they later dropped it, and Richard Zanuck and David Brown offered to make it at Fox with a production budget of $1.5 million.[1] The film came in $300,000 over budget at a total cost of $1.8 million.[3]

In an audio commentary track recorded by Friedkin for the Collector's Edition DVD release of the film, Friedkin notes that the film's documentary-like realism was the direct result of the influence of having seen Z, a French film by Costa-Gavras. Friedkin mentioned the film's influence on him when directing The French Connection:

After I saw Z, I realized how I could shoot The French Connection. Because he shot Z like a documentary. It was a fiction film but it was made like it was actually happening. Like the camera didn't know what was gonna happen next. And that is an induced technique. It looks like he happened upon the scene and captured what was going on as you do in a documentary. My first films were documentaries too. So I understood what he was doing but I never thought you could do that in a feature at that time until I saw Z.[10]

The film was among the earliest to show the World Trade Center: the completed North Tower and the partially completed South Tower are seen in the background of the scenes at the shipyard following Devereaux's arrival in New York.

Casting edit

Though the cast ultimately proved to be one of the film's greatest strengths, Friedkin had problems with casting choices from the start. He was strongly opposed to the choice of Gene Hackman for the lead, and actually first considered Paul Newman (out of the budget range), then Jackie Gleason, Peter Boyle and a New York columnist, Jimmy Breslin, who had never acted before.[11] However, at that time Gleason was considered box-office poison by the studio after his film Gigot had flopped several years before, Boyle declined the role after disapproving of the violent theme of the film, and Breslin refused to get behind the wheel of a car, which was required of Popeye's character for an integral car chase scene. Steve McQueen was also considered, but he did not want to do another police film after Bullitt and, as with Newman, his fee would have exceeded the movie's budget. Tough guy Charles Bronson was also considered for the role. Lee Marvin, James Caan, and Robert Mitchum were also considered; all turned it down.[12][13] Friedkin almost settled for Rod Taylor (who had actively pursued the role, according to Hackman), another choice the studio approved, before he went with Hackman.

The casting of Fernando Rey as the main French heroin smuggler, Alain Charnier (irreverently referred to throughout the film as "Frog One"), resulted from mistaken identity. Friedkin had seen Luis Buñuel's 1967 French film Belle de Jour and had been impressed by the performance of Francisco Rabal, who had a small role in the film. However, Friedkin did not know his name, and remembered only that he was a Spanish actor. He asked his casting director to find the actor, and the casting director instead contacted Rey, a Spanish actor who had appeared in several other films directed by Buñuel. After Rabal was finally reached, they discovered he spoke neither French nor English, and Rey was kept in the film.[11] Friedkin recounts his casting opinions in Making the Connection: The Untold Stories (2001). Extra feature on 2001 Five Star Collection edition of DVD release. After screening the film's final cut, Rey's French was deemed unacceptable by the filmmakers. They decided to dub his French while preserving his English dialogue.

Comparison to actual people and events edit

The plot centers on drug smuggling in the 1960s and early 1970s, when most of the heroin illegally imported into the East Coast came to the United States through France (see French Connection).[14]

On April 26, 1968, a record-setting seizure of 246 lb (111.6 kg) of heroin was made, concealed in a Citroën DS and smuggled to New York on the SS France ocean liner.[15][16][17] The total amount smuggled during the many transatlantic voyages of this DS was 1,606 lb (728.5 kg) according to arrested smuggler Jacques Bousquet.[18]

In addition to the two main protagonists, several of the fictional characters depicted in the film also have real-life counterparts. The Alain Charnier character is based upon Jean Jehan, who was arrested later in Paris for drug trafficking, though he was not extradited since France does not extradite its citizens.[19] Sal Boca is based on Pasquale "Patsy" Fuca, and his brother Anthony. Angie Boca is based on Patsy's wife Barbara, who later wrote a book with Robin Moore detailing her life with Patsy. The Fucas and their uncle were part of a heroin-dealing crew that worked with some of the New York City crime families.[20]

Henri Devereaux, who takes the fall for importing the film's drug-laden Lincoln into New York City, is based on Jacques Angelvin, a television actor arrested and sentenced to three to six years in a federal penitentiary for his role, serving about four before returning to France and turning to real estate.[21] The Joel Weinstock character is, according to the director's commentary, a composite of several similar drug dealer financiers.[22]

Car chase edit

The film is often cited as featuring one of the greatest car chase sequences in movie history.[23] The chase involves Popeye commandeering a civilian's car (a 1971 Pontiac LeMans) and then frantically chasing an elevated train, on which a hitman is trying to escape. The scene was filmed in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, roughly running under the BMT West End Line (currently the D train, then the B train) which runs on an elevated track above Stillwell Avenue, 86th Street and New Utrecht Avenue in Brooklyn, with the chase ending just north of the 62nd Street station. At that point, the train hits a train stop, but is going too fast to stop in time and collides with the train ahead of it, which has just left the station.[a]

The most famous shot of the chase is made from a front bumper mount and shows a low-angle point-of-view shot of the streets racing. Director of photography Owen Roizman wrote in American Cinematographer magazine in 1972 that the camera was undercranked to 18 frames per second to enhance the sense of speed; this effect can be seen on a car at a red light whose exhaust pipe is pumping smoke at an accelerated rate. Other shots involved stunt drivers who were supposed to barely miss hitting the speeding car, but due to errors in timing, accidental collisions occurred and were left in the final film.[24] Friedkin said that he used Santana's cover of Peter Green's song "Black Magic Woman" during editing to help shape the chase sequence, though the song does not appear in the film, "it [the chase scene] did have a sort of pre-ordained rhythm to it that came from the music."[25]

The scene concludes with Doyle confronting Nicoli the hitman at the stairs leading to the subway and shooting him as he tries to run back up them, its climax captured as a still shot in a theatrical release movie poster for the film. Many of the police officers acting as advisers for the film objected to the scene on the grounds that shooting a suspect in the back was simply murder, not self-defense, but director Friedkin stood by it, stating that he was "secure in my conviction that that's exactly what Eddie Egan (the model for Doyle) would have done and Eddie was on the set while all of this was being shot."[26][27]

Filming locations edit

The French Connection was filmed in the following locations:[28][29][30]

  • 50th Street and First Avenue, New York City (where Doyle waits outside the restaurant)
  • 82nd Street and Fifth Avenue (near the Metropolitan Museum of Art), New York City, (Weinstock's apartment)
  • 86th Street, Brooklyn, New York City (the chase scene)
  • 91 Wyckoff Avenue, Bushwick, Brooklyn (Sal and Angie's Cafe)
  • 940 2nd Avenue, Manhattan (where Charnier and Nicoli buy fruit and Popeye is watching)
  • 177 Mulberry Street near Broome street, Little Italy, New York City (where Sal makes a drop)
  • Avenue De L'Amiral Ganteaume, Cassis, Bouches-du-Rhône, France (Charnier's house)
  • Château d'If, Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France (where Charnier and Nicoli meet Devereaux)
  • Chez Fon Fon, Rue Du Vallon Des Auffes, Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France (where Charnier dines)
  • Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, New York City (where Sal parks the Lincoln)
  • Le Copain, 891 First Ave, New York City (where Charnier dines)
  • Doral Park Avenue Hotel (now 70 Park Avenue Hotel), 38th Street and Park Avenue, New York City (Devereaux's hotel)
  • Dover street near by the Brooklyn Bridge, New York City (where Sal leaves the Lincoln)
  • Forest Avenue, Ridgewood, Queens, New York City
  • 42nd Street Shuttle platform at Grand Central Terminal, Manhattan, New York City
  • Henry Hudson Parkway Route 9A at Junction 24 (car accident)
  • Marlboro Housing Project, Avenues V, W, and X off Stillwell Avenue, Brooklyn, New York City (where Popeye lives)
  • Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France
  • Montee Des Accoules, Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France
  • Onderdonk Avenue, Ridgewood, Queens, New York City
  • Plage du bestouan, Cassis, Bouches-du-Rhône, France
  • Putnam Avenue, Ridgewood, Queens, New York City
  • Randalls Island, East River, New York City
  • Ratner's Restaurant, 138 Delancey Street, New York City (where Sal and Angie emerge)
  • Remsen Street, Brooklyn, New York City (where Charnier and Nicoli watch the car being unloaded)
  • Rio Piedras (now demolished), 912 Broadway, Brooklyn, New York City (where the Santa Claus chase starts)
  • Rapid Park Garage, East 38th Street near Park Avenue, New York City (where Cloudy follows Sal)
  • Ronaldo Maia Flowers, 27 East 67th Street at Madison, New York City (where Charnier gives Popeye the slip)
  • The Roosevelt Hotel, 45th Street and Madison Avenue, Manhattan, New York City
  • Rue des Moulins off Rue Du Panier, Old Town of Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France (where the French policeman with the bread walks)
  • La Samaritaine at 2 Quai Du Port, Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France
  • South Street at Market Street at the foot of Manhattan Bridge, New York City (where Doyle emerges from a bar)
  • Triborough Bridge to Randall's Island toll bridge at the east end of 125th Street, New York City
  • Wards Island, New York City (the final shootout)
  • The National Mall in Washington, D.C., near The Capitol (where Charnier and Sal meet)
  • Westbury Hotel, 15 East 69th Street, Manhattan, New York City (Charnier's hotel)

Reception edit

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film four out of four stars and ranked it as one of the best films of 1971.[31] Roger Greenspun of The New York Times wrote: The French Connection "is in fact a very good new kind of movie, and that in spite of its being composed of such ancient material as cops and crooks, with thrills and chases, and lots of shoot-'em-up."[32] A review in Variety stated: "So many changes have been made in Robin Moore's taut, factual reprise of one of the biggest narcotics hauls in New York police history that only the skeleton remains, but producer Philip D'Antoni and screenwriter Ernest Tidyman have added enough fictional flesh to provide director William Friedkin and his overall topnotch cast with plenty of material, and they make the most of it."[33] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune awarded a full four stars out of four and raved: "From the moment a street-corner Santa Claus chases a drug pusher thru the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, to the final shootout on deserted Ward's Island, The French Connection is a gutty, flatout thriller, far superior to any caper film of recent vintage."[34][35]

Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times called it "every bit as entertaining as Bullitt, a slam-bang, suspenseful, plain-spoken, sardonically funny, furiously paced melodrama. But because it has dropped the romance and starry glamor of Steve McQueen and added a strong sociological concern, The French Connection is even more interesting, thought-provoking and reverberating."[36] Gary Arnold of The Washington Post called the film "an undeniably sensational movie, a fast, tense, explosively vicious little cops-and-robbers enterprise" with "a deliberately nervewracking, runaway quality ... It's a cheap thrill in the same way that a roller coaster ride is a cheap thrill. It seems altogether appropriate that the showiest sequence intercuts between a runaway train and a recklessly speeding car."[37] In his book Reverse Angle, John Simon wrote: "Friedkin has used New York locations better than anyone to day," "[t]he performances are all good", and "Owen Roizman's cinematography, grainy and grimy, is a brilliant rendering of urban blight."[38]

Pauline Kael of The New Yorker was generally negative, writing: "It's not what I want not because it fails (it doesn't fail), but because of what it is. It is, I think, what we once feared mass entertainment might become: jolts for jocks. There's nothing in the movie that you enjoy thinking about afterward—nothing especially clever except the timing of the subway-door-and-umbrella sequence. Every other effect of the movie—even the climactic car-versus-runaway-elevated-train chase—is achieved by noise, speed, and brutality."[39] David Pirie of The Monthly Film Bulletin called the film "consistently exciting" and Gene Hackman "extremely convincing as Doyle, trailing his suspects with a shambling determination; but there are times when the film (or at any rate the script) seems to be applauding aspects of his character which are more repulsive than sympathetic. Whereas in The Detective or Bullitt the hero's attention was directed unmistakably towards liberal ends (crooked businessmen, corrupt local officials, etc.) Doyle spends a fair part of his time beating up sullen blacks in alleys and bars. These violent sequences are almost all presented racily and amusingly, stressing Doyle's 'lovable' toughness as he manhandles and arrests petty criminals, usually adding a quip like 'Lock them up and throw away the key.'"[40]

The film has an approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes of 96% based on 90 reviews, with an average rating of 8.80/10. The website's critical consensus reads: "Realistic, fast-paced and uncommonly smart, The French Connection is bolstered by stellar performances by Gene Hackman and Roy Scheider, not to mention William Friedkin's thrilling production."[41] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 94% based on reviews from 18 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[42]

In 2014, Time Out listed The French Connection as the 31st best action film of all time, according to a poll of several film critics, directors, actors and stunt actors.[43]

The French Connection has been described as a neo-noir film by some authors.[44]

The Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa cited The French Connection as one of his favorite films.[45][46]

Director David Fincher cited The French Connection as one of the five films that "had a Profound Impact on my Life"[47] and served as an important influence on the cinematography on his film Seven;[48] Brad Pitt cited The French Connection as a reason he participated in Seven.[49]

Director Steven Spielberg said that he studied The French Connection in preparation for his 2005 historical action thriller film, Munich.[50]

Benny Safdie of the Safdie Brothers named The French Connection as one of his top five favorite films of all time.[51]

Awards and nominations edit

Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
Academy Awards Best Picture Philip D'Antoni Won [52]
[53]
Best Director William Friedkin Won
Best Actor Gene Hackman Won
Best Supporting Actor Roy Scheider Nominated
Best Screenplay – Based on Material from Another Medium Ernest Tidyman Won
Best Cinematography Owen Roizman Nominated
Best Film Editing Gerald B. Greenberg Won
Best Sound Christopher Newman and Theodore Soderberg Nominated
American Cinema Editors Awards Best Edited Feature Film Gerald B. Greenberg Nominated
British Academy Film Awards Best Film Philip D'Antoni Nominated [54]
Best Direction William Friedkin Nominated
Best Actor in a Leading Role Gene Hackman (also for The Poseidon Adventure) Won
Best Film Editing Gerald B. Greenberg Won
Best Sound Christopher Newman and Theodore Soderberg Nominated
David di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Film Philip D'Antoni Won
Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures William Friedkin Won [55]
Edgar Allan Poe Awards Best Motion Picture Ernest Tidyman Won [56]
Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture – Drama Won [57]
Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama Gene Hackman Won
Best Director – Motion Picture William Friedkin Won
Best Screenplay – Motion Picture Ernest Tidyman Nominated
Golden Reel Awards Best Sound Editing – Feature Film Won
Grammy Awards Best Instrumental Arrangement Don Ellis – "Theme from The French Connection" Won [58]
Kansas City Film Circle Critics Awards Best Film Won [59]
Best Actor Gene Hackman Won[b]
National Board of Review Awards Top Ten Films 4th Place [60]
Best Actor Gene Hackman Won
National Film Preservation Board National Film Registry Inducted
National Society of Film Critics Awards Best Actor Gene Hackman Nominated [61]
New York Film Critics Circle Awards Best Film Runner-up [62]
Best Actor Gene Hackman Won
Online Film & Television Association Awards Hall of Fame – Motion Picture Honored [63]
Writers Guild of America Awards Best Drama – Adapted from Another Medium Ernest Tidyman Won [64]

The American Film Institute recognizes The French Connection on several of its lists:

In 2012, the Motion Picture Editors Guild listed the film as the tenth best-edited film of all time based on a survey of its membership.[65]

Home media releases edit

The French Connection has been issued in a number of home video formats. On September 25, 2001, the film was released on VHS and DVD, with both formats being released in box sets featuring both the film and its sequel, French Connection II.[citation needed] For a 2009 reissue on Blu-ray, William Friedkin controversially altered the film's color timing to give it a "colder" look.[66] Cinematographer Owen Roizman, who was not consulted about the changes, dismissed the new transfer as "atrocious".[67] On March 18, 2012, a new Blu-ray transfer of the movie was released. This time, the color-timing was supervised by both Friedkin and Roizman, and the desaturated and sometimes over-grainy look of the 2009 edition has been corrected.[68][69]

In June 2023, media publications discovered that a version of the film available on digital platforms such as Apple TV and the Criterion Channel had been altered to excise a scene in the film that contains usage of racial slurs.[70][71] The decision received backlash from fans and film purists, who compared the censorship to vandalism and called out the decision for hiding its historical context. Joseph Wade compared the cut to vandalising a piece of art.[72]

Sequels and adaptations edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ R42 cars 4572 and 4573 were chosen for the film and had no B subway rollsigns because they were normally assigned to the N subway train. Consequently, they operated during the movie with an N displayed. As of July 2009, these cars were withdrawn from service, but are preserved as part of the New York Transit Museum fleet.[citation needed]
  2. ^ Tied with Walter Matthau for Kotch.

References edit

  1. ^ a b The French Connection at the American Film Institute Catalog
  2. ^ "THE FRENCH CONNECTION (18)". British Board of Film Classification. from the original on June 18, 2018. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  3. ^ a b Bart, Peter (August 8, 2011). "'Alien' territory: an economics lesson". Variety. p. 2. from the original on February 15, 2020. Retrieved September 14, 2019.
  4. ^ "The French Connection". The Numbers. Nash Information Services, LLC. Retrieved August 9, 2023.
  5. ^ Solomon, Aubrey (1989). Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, p. 167, ISBN 978-0-8108-4244-1.
  6. ^ Silver & Ward 1992
  7. ^ "The French Connection (1971) - William Friedkin". AllMovie. from the original on 2019-01-30. Retrieved 2019-01-30.
  8. ^ "Librarian of Congress Adds 25 Films to National Film Registry". Library of Congress. from the original on 2020-11-26. Retrieved October 2, 2020.
  9. ^ "Complete National Film Registry Listing". Library of Congress. from the original on October 31, 2016. Retrieved October 2, 2020.
  10. ^ "William Friedkin's Favorite Films of all Time". Fade In Magazine. Retrieved January 20, 2022 – via YouTube.
  11. ^ a b Friedkin recounts his casting opinions in Making the Connection: The Untold Stories (2001). Extra feature on 2001 Five Star Collection edition of DVD release.
  12. ^ "The Making of the French Connection". 4 February 2014.
  13. ^ "23 Things You Never Knew About 'The French Connection'".
  14. ^ Collins, Larry; Lapierre, Dominique (February 6, 1972). "The French Connection—In Real Life". The New York Times. from the original on October 20, 2020. Retrieved October 18, 2020.
  15. ^ "Agents Seize Heroin Worth Record 22M". Daily News. New York. June 27, 1968. from the original on October 24, 2020. Retrieved October 18, 2020.
  16. ^ Bigart, Homer (June 27, 1968). "$22.4-Million in Heroin Found in Car at City Pier; Narcotics, Secreted in Auto Sent From France, Called Largest Seizure in U.S. $22.4-Million in Heroin Is Found Hidden in a Car at Pier in City". The New York Times. from the original on October 21, 2020. Retrieved October 18, 2020.
  17. ^ "Biggest Heroin Haul Told". The Desert Sun. Palm Springs, California. June 26, 1968. from the original on October 22, 2020. Retrieved October 18, 2020.
  18. ^ Cox, Michael (Spring 1991). "Smuggler". The Citroën Quarterly. 9: 11.
  19. ^ "Turner Classic Movies spotlight". TCM. from the original on December 24, 2008. Retrieved August 2, 2014.
  20. ^ Moore, Robin (1969). The French Connection: A True Account of Cops, Narcotics, and International Conspiracy. ISBN 1592280447.[page needed]
  21. ^ Bauer, Alain; Soullez, Christophe (2012). La criminologie pour les nuls (Générales First ed.). ISBN 978-2754031622.
  22. ^ Film commentary[time needed]
  23. ^ . MSNBC. Archived from the original on October 22, 2004. Retrieved August 2, 2014.
  24. ^ This account of the shooting is described in Making the Connection, supra.
  25. ^ "From 'Popeye' Doyle to Puccini: William Friedkin with Robert Siegel (interview)". NPR.org. September 14, 2006. from the original on August 12, 2018. Retrieved August 2, 2014.
  26. ^ Director's commentary on DVD
  27. ^ "Making the Connection" and "The Poughkeepsie Shuffle", documentaries on The French Connection available on the deluxe DVD.
  28. ^ . The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved May 11, 2013.
  29. ^ "The French Connection". Reel Streets. from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved May 11, 2013.
  30. ^ "The Filming Locations of The French Connection, Then and Now". Scouting NY. May 21, 2014. from the original on August 10, 2016. Retrieved June 15, 2016.
  31. ^ Ebert, Roger (1971). "The French Connection Review". Chicago Sun-Times. from the original on June 17, 2018. Retrieved June 17, 2018 – via RogerEbert.com.
  32. ^ Greenspun, Roger (October 8, 1971). "Film Festival". The New York Times. p. 35. from the original on July 6, 2020. Retrieved August 2, 2014.
  33. ^ Frederick, Robert B. (October 6, 1971). "Film Reviews: The French Connection". Variety. p. 16. from the original on June 9, 2021. Retrieved June 9, 2021.
  34. ^ Siskel, Gene (November 8, 1971). "French Connection" 2021-06-09 at the Wayback Machine. Chicago Tribune. Section 2, p. 20 – via Newspapers.com.  
  35. ^ "The Movie Reviews". Chicago Tribune. October 15, 1999. from the original on 2020-06-05. Retrieved 2020-08-19.
  36. ^ Champlin, Charles (November 3, 1971). "High Adventure in 'Connection'". Los Angeles Times.
  37. ^ Arnold, Gary (November 12, 1971). "'French Connection': Running and Hitting". The Washington Post. p. C1.
  38. ^ Simon, John (1982). Reverse Angle: A Decade of American Films. New York: Potter. pp. 56–57. ISBN 978-0-517-54697-0.
  39. ^ Kael, Pauline (October 30, 1971). "The Current Cinema". The New Yorker. p. 115. from the original on June 9, 2021. Retrieved June 9, 2021.
  40. ^ Pirie, David (January 1972). "The French Connection". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 39 (456): 7.
  41. ^ "The French Connection (1971)". Rotten Tomatoes. from the original on November 12, 2020. Retrieved August 8, 2022.
  42. ^ "The French Connection". Metacritic. from the original on June 18, 2020. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  43. ^ "The 100 best action movies ever made". from the original on 2016-07-25. Retrieved 2020-04-28.
  44. ^ Silver, Alain; Ward, Elizabeth; eds. (1992). Film Noir: An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style (3rd ed.). Woodstock, New York: The Overlook Press. ISBN 0-87951-479-5
  45. ^ Lee Thomas-Mason (12 January 2021). "From Stanley Kubrick to Martin Scorsese: Akira Kurosawa once named his top 100 favourite films of all time". Far Out. Far Out Magazine. from the original on 10 June 2021. Retrieved 10 June 2021.
  46. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 March 2010.
  47. ^ David Fincher. "Movies That Had a Profound Impact on My Life". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 20 May 2022.
  48. ^ Alex Ballinger (October 12, 2004). New Cinematographers. HarperCollins. ISBN 9781856693349. In preparation [for the film, Seven], David [Fincher] showed me Klute (Alan J. Pakula, 1971) and the French Connection (William Freidkin, 1971) and Seven was inspired by a mixture of the stylised work of the former and the rawness and grittiness of the latter.
  49. ^ Amy Longsdorf (September 16, 1995). "Spotlight on Brad Pitt Golden Boy Turns Gritty In New Film". The Morning Call. Retrieved 20 May 2022. Why, with all his choices, did Pitt settle on "Seven"? "I love movies from the '70s like 'The French Connection' and that's what (director) David Fincher and I talked about during our first meeting. I was looking for something with a documentary feel. I wanted to play a character who has flaws, who has good intentions but makes mistakes. I also wanted to kill the mythic thing -- this, like, larger-than-life thing about me."
  50. ^ Paul O’Callaghan (January 23, 2018). "10 great films that inspired Steven Spielberg". British Film Institute. from the original on October 22, 2020. Retrieved October 21, 2020.
  51. ^ Jacqueline Coley (January 14, 2020). "The Safdie Brothers' Five Favorite Films". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved 15 July 2021. Benny Safdie: "Last one. I'm going to go with The French Connection, because it's one of the most incredible cop movies and pulp movies there is. The camera work, Gene Hackman, the shots from up on the rooftop looking down. That chase scene alone puts it on this list. You hear how they made that movie, and you really feel the bare hands that went into that thing, and it just reset how you make a movie like that. You know, totally changed the game on that level. Just seeing that car barrel through the streets, you feel the danger and you feel the pressure of all of these things. It's doing pulp in a whole new way and in a visceral way. Then, on top of that, you have these people with real stakes and real things happening to them, and [director William] Friedkin, he's a king."
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  66. ^ Kehr, Dave (February 20, 2009). "Filmmaking at 90 Miles Per Hour". The New York Times. from the original on May 24, 2014. Retrieved August 8, 2009.
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  68. ^ "The French Connection Gets a New Blu-ray Release, New Master". from the original on 2014-08-12. Retrieved 2014-08-10.
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  70. ^ Archer, John. "Apple TV And The Criterion Channel Outrage Film Fans By Censoring Classic Movie". Forbes. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
  71. ^ Don’t Censor Racism Out of the Past, The Atlantic, June 9, 2023
  72. ^ Aubrey, Elizabeth (2023-06-07). "'The French Connection' has been censored and fans are furious". NME. Retrieved 2023-06-08.

Bibliography edit

  • Berliner, Todd. "The Genre Film as Booby Trap: 1970s Genre Bending and 'The French Connection'." Cinema Journal (2001): 25–46. online
  • Collins, Dave (November 29, 2014). "Man linked to heroin ring in '71 film nabbed again". Associated Press.
  • Friedkin, William (April 15, 2003). "Under the Influence: The French Connection". DGA Magazine.
  • Friedkin, William (Fall 2006). "Anatomy of a Chase: The French Connection". DGA Magazine.
  • Friedkin, William (2013). The Friedkin Connection. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 9780061775147.
  • Kehr, Dave (February 20, 2009). "Filmmaking at 90 Miles Per Hour: A 2009 retrospective". The New York Times.
  • King, Neal, Rayanne Streeter, and Talitha Rose. "Cultural Studies Approaches to the Study of Crime in Film and on Television." Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice (2016). online
  • Lichtenfeld, Eric. Action speaks louder: Violence, spectacle, and the American action movie (Wesleyan University Press, 2007).
  • Ramaeker, Paul. "Realism, revisionism and visual style: The French Connection and the New Hollywood policier." New Review of Film and Television Studies 8.2 (2010): 144–163. online

External links edit

french, connection, film, french, connection, 1971, american, noir, action, thriller, film, directed, william, friedkin, starring, gene, hackman, scheider, fernando, screenplay, written, ernest, tidyman, based, robin, moore, 1969, fiction, book, same, name, te. The French Connection is a 1971 American neo noir 6 action thriller film 7 directed by William Friedkin and starring Gene Hackman Roy Scheider and Fernando Rey The screenplay written by Ernest Tidyman is based on Robin Moore s 1969 non fiction book of the same name It tells the story of fictional NYPD detectives Jimmy Popeye Doyle and Buddy Cloudy Russo whose real life counterparts were narcotics detectives Eddie Egan and Sonny Grosso in pursuit of wealthy French heroin smuggler Alain Charnier played by Rey The French ConnectionTheatrical release posterDirected byWilliam FriedkinScreenplay byErnest TidymanBased onThe French Connectionby Robin MooreProduced byPhilip D AntoniStarringGene Hackman Fernando Rey Roy Scheider Tony Lo Bianco Marcel BozzuffiCinematographyOwen RoizmanEdited byGerald B GreenbergMusic byDon EllisProductioncompaniesPhilip D Antoni Productions Schine Moore ProductionsDistributed by20th Century FoxRelease dateOctober 7 1971 1971 10 07 United States 1 Running time104 minutes 2 CountryUnited StatesLanguagesEnglish FrenchBudget 1 8 2 2 million 3 4 Box office 75 million worldwide theatrical rental 5 At the 44th Academy Awards the film earned eight nominations and won five for Best Picture Best Actor Hackman Best Director Best Film Editing and Best Adapted Screenplay It was also nominated for Best Supporting Actor Scheider Best Cinematography and Best Sound Mixing Tidyman also received a Golden Globe Award nomination a Writers Guild of America Award and an Edgar Award for his screenplay A sequel French Connection II followed in 1975 with Hackman and Rey reprising their roles Often considered one of the greatest films ever made The French Connection appeared in the American Film Institute s list of the best American films in 1998 and again in 2007 In 2005 the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being culturally historically or aesthetically significant 8 9 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Casting 3 2 Comparison to actual people and events 3 3 Car chase 3 4 Filming locations 4 Reception 5 Awards and nominations 6 Home media releases 7 Sequels and adaptations 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksPlot editIn Marseille a police detective follows Alain Charnier who runs a large heroin smuggling syndicate The policeman is murdered by Charnier s hitman Pierre Nicoli Charnier plans to smuggle 32 million worth of heroin into the United States by hiding it in the car of his unsuspecting friend television personality Henri Devereaux who is traveling to New York by ship In New York City detectives Jimmy Popeye Doyle and Buddy Cloudy Russo go out for drinks at the Copacabana Popeye notices Salvatore Sal Boca and his young wife Angie entertaining mobsters involved in narcotics They tail the couple and establish a link between the Bocas and lawyer Joel Weinstock a major buyer in the narcotics underworld Popeye learns that a massive shipment of heroin will arrive within two weeks The detectives convince their supervisor to wiretap the Bocas phones Popeye and Cloudy are joined by federal agents Mulderig and Klein Devereaux s vehicle arrives in New York City Boca is anxious to make the purchase while Weinstock urges patience knowing they are being surveiled Charnier realizes he is as well makes Popeye and escapes on a departing subway shuttle at Grand Central Station To shake his tail he has Boca meet him in Washington D C where Boca asks for a delay to avoid the police Charnier is impatient and wants to conclude the deal quickly On the flight back to New York City Nicoli offers to kill Popeye but Charnier objects knowing that Popeye would be replaced by another policeman Nicoli insists however saying they will be back in France before a replacement is assigned Soon after Nicoli attempts to shoot Popeye but misses Popeye chases Nicoli who boards an elevated train Popeye shouts to a policeman on the train to stop Nicoli and then commandeers a passenger car He gives chase accidentally crashing into several vehicles on the way Realizing he is being pursued Nicoli works his way forward through the carriages shoots the pursuing policeman who tries to intervene and hijacks the motorman at gunpoint He forces him to drive straight through the next station and shoots the train conductor The motorman passes out and they are just about to slam into a stationary train when an emergency trackside brake engages hurling the assassin violently to the floor A battered Popeye arrives to see the killer descending from the platform Nicoli sees Popeye turns to run but is shot dead After a lengthy stakeout Popeye impounds Devereaux s Lincoln In a police garage he and his team tear the car apart piece by piece searching for the drugs but seemingly come up empty handed Then Cloudy notes that the vehicle s shipping weight is 120 pounds 54 kg over its listed manufacturer s weight indicating that the contraband must still be in the car Further search reveals heroin packages hidden inside the rocker panels The police reassemble and return the car to Devereaux who delivers it to Charnier Charnier drives to an old factory on Wards Island to meet Weinstock and deliver the drugs After Charnier has the rocker panel covers removed Weinstock s chemist tests one of the bags and confirms its quality Charnier removes the drugs and hides the money concealing it inside the rocker panels of another car purchased at an auction of junk cars which he will take back to France Charnier and Sal drive off in the Lincoln but hit a roadblock with a large contingent of police led by Popeye The police chase the Lincoln back to the factory where Boca is killed during a shootout while most of the other criminals surrender Charnier escapes into a nearby warehouse with Popeye and Cloudy in pursuit Popeye sees a shadowy figure in the distance and opens fire too late to heed a warning killing Mulderig Undaunted Popeye tells Cloudy that he will get Charnier After reloading his gun Popeye runs into another room and a single gunshot is heard Title cards describe the fates of various characters Weinstock was indicted but his case was dismissed for lack of proper evidence Angie Boca received a suspended sentence for an unspecified misdemeanor Lou Boca Sal s brother an accessory to the handoff received a reduced sentence Devereaux served four years in a federal penitentiary for conspiracy and Charnier was never caught Popeye and Cloudy were transferred out of the narcotics division and reassigned Cast editGene Hackman as Detective Jimmy Popeye Doyle Fernando Rey as Alain Frog One Charnier Roy Scheider as Detective Buddy Cloudy Russo Tony Lo Bianco as Salvatore Sal Boca Marcel Bozzuffi as Pierre Frog Two Nicoli Frederic de Pasquale as Henri Devereaux Bill Hickman as FBI Agent Bill Mulderig Ann Rebbot as Mrs Marie Charnier Harold Gary as Joel Weinstock Arlene Farber as Angie Boca Eddie Egan as Captain Walt Simonson Andre Ernotte as La Valle Sonny Grosso as FBI Agent Clyde Klein Randy Jurgensen as Police Sergeant Alan Weeks as PusherProduction editThe film was originally set up at National General Pictures but they later dropped it and Richard Zanuck and David Brown offered to make it at Fox with a production budget of 1 5 million 1 The film came in 300 000 over budget at a total cost of 1 8 million 3 In an audio commentary track recorded by Friedkin for the Collector s Edition DVD release of the film Friedkin notes that the film s documentary like realism was the direct result of the influence of having seen Z a French film by Costa Gavras Friedkin mentioned the film s influence on him when directing The French Connection After I saw Z I realized how I could shoot The French Connection Because he shot Z like a documentary It was a fiction film but it was made like it was actually happening Like the camera didn t know what was gonna happen next And that is an induced technique It looks like he happened upon the scene and captured what was going on as you do in a documentary My first films were documentaries too So I understood what he was doing but I never thought you could do that in a feature at that time until I saw Z 10 The film was among the earliest to show the World Trade Center the completed North Tower and the partially completed South Tower are seen in the background of the scenes at the shipyard following Devereaux s arrival in New York Casting edit Though the cast ultimately proved to be one of the film s greatest strengths Friedkin had problems with casting choices from the start He was strongly opposed to the choice of Gene Hackman for the lead and actually first considered Paul Newman out of the budget range then Jackie Gleason Peter Boyle and a New York columnist Jimmy Breslin who had never acted before 11 However at that time Gleason was considered box office poison by the studio after his film Gigot had flopped several years before Boyle declined the role after disapproving of the violent theme of the film and Breslin refused to get behind the wheel of a car which was required of Popeye s character for an integral car chase scene Steve McQueen was also considered but he did not want to do another police film after Bullitt and as with Newman his fee would have exceeded the movie s budget Tough guy Charles Bronson was also considered for the role Lee Marvin James Caan and Robert Mitchum were also considered all turned it down 12 13 Friedkin almost settled for Rod Taylor who had actively pursued the role according to Hackman another choice the studio approved before he went with Hackman The casting of Fernando Rey as the main French heroin smuggler Alain Charnier irreverently referred to throughout the film as Frog One resulted from mistaken identity Friedkin had seen Luis Bunuel s 1967 French film Belle de Jour and had been impressed by the performance of Francisco Rabal who had a small role in the film However Friedkin did not know his name and remembered only that he was a Spanish actor He asked his casting director to find the actor and the casting director instead contacted Rey a Spanish actor who had appeared in several other films directed by Bunuel After Rabal was finally reached they discovered he spoke neither French nor English and Rey was kept in the film 11 Friedkin recounts his casting opinions in Making the Connection The Untold Stories 2001 Extra feature on 2001 Five Star Collection edition of DVD release After screening the film s final cut Rey s French was deemed unacceptable by the filmmakers They decided to dub his French while preserving his English dialogue Comparison to actual people and events edit The plot centers on drug smuggling in the 1960s and early 1970s when most of the heroin illegally imported into the East Coast came to the United States through France see French Connection 14 On April 26 1968 a record setting seizure of 246 lb 111 6 kg of heroin was made concealed in a Citroen DS and smuggled to New York on the SS France ocean liner 15 16 17 The total amount smuggled during the many transatlantic voyages of this DS was 1 606 lb 728 5 kg according to arrested smuggler Jacques Bousquet 18 In addition to the two main protagonists several of the fictional characters depicted in the film also have real life counterparts The Alain Charnier character is based upon Jean Jehan who was arrested later in Paris for drug trafficking though he was not extradited since France does not extradite its citizens 19 Sal Boca is based on Pasquale Patsy Fuca and his brother Anthony Angie Boca is based on Patsy s wife Barbara who later wrote a book with Robin Moore detailing her life with Patsy The Fucas and their uncle were part of a heroin dealing crew that worked with some of the New York City crime families 20 Henri Devereaux who takes the fall for importing the film s drug laden Lincoln into New York City is based on Jacques Angelvin a television actor arrested and sentenced to three to six years in a federal penitentiary for his role serving about four before returning to France and turning to real estate 21 The Joel Weinstock character is according to the director s commentary a composite of several similar drug dealer financiers 22 Car chase edit The film is often cited as featuring one of the greatest car chase sequences in movie history 23 The chase involves Popeye commandeering a civilian s car a 1971 Pontiac LeMans and then frantically chasing an elevated train on which a hitman is trying to escape The scene was filmed in Bensonhurst Brooklyn roughly running under the BMT West End Line currently the D train then the B train which runs on an elevated track above Stillwell Avenue 86th Street and New Utrecht Avenue in Brooklyn with the chase ending just north of the 62nd Street station At that point the train hits a train stop but is going too fast to stop in time and collides with the train ahead of it which has just left the station a The most famous shot of the chase is made from a front bumper mount and shows a low angle point of view shot of the streets racing Director of photography Owen Roizman wrote in American Cinematographer magazine in 1972 that the camera was undercranked to 18 frames per second to enhance the sense of speed this effect can be seen on a car at a red light whose exhaust pipe is pumping smoke at an accelerated rate Other shots involved stunt drivers who were supposed to barely miss hitting the speeding car but due to errors in timing accidental collisions occurred and were left in the final film 24 Friedkin said that he used Santana s cover of Peter Green s song Black Magic Woman during editing to help shape the chase sequence though the song does not appear in the film it the chase scene did have a sort of pre ordained rhythm to it that came from the music 25 The scene concludes with Doyle confronting Nicoli the hitman at the stairs leading to the subway and shooting him as he tries to run back up them its climax captured as a still shot in a theatrical release movie poster for the film Many of the police officers acting as advisers for the film objected to the scene on the grounds that shooting a suspect in the back was simply murder not self defense but director Friedkin stood by it stating that he was secure in my conviction that that s exactly what Eddie Egan the model for Doyle would have done and Eddie was on the set while all of this was being shot 26 27 Filming locations edit The French Connection was filmed in the following locations 28 29 30 50th Street and First Avenue New York City where Doyle waits outside the restaurant 82nd Street and Fifth Avenue near the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Weinstock s apartment 86th Street Brooklyn New York City the chase scene 91 Wyckoff Avenue Bushwick Brooklyn Sal and Angie s Cafe 940 2nd Avenue Manhattan where Charnier and Nicoli buy fruit and Popeye is watching 177 Mulberry Street near Broome street Little Italy New York City where Sal makes a drop Avenue De L Amiral Ganteaume Cassis Bouches du Rhone France Charnier s house Chateau d If Marseille Bouches du Rhone France where Charnier and Nicoli meet Devereaux Chez Fon Fon Rue Du Vallon Des Auffes Marseille Bouches du Rhone France where Charnier dines Columbia Heights Brooklyn New York City where Sal parks the Lincoln Le Copain 891 First Ave New York City where Charnier dines Doral Park Avenue Hotel now 70 Park Avenue Hotel 38th Street and Park Avenue New York City Devereaux s hotel Dover street near by the Brooklyn Bridge New York City where Sal leaves the Lincoln Forest Avenue Ridgewood Queens New York City 42nd Street Shuttle platform at Grand Central Terminal Manhattan New York City Henry Hudson Parkway Route 9A at Junction 24 car accident Marlboro Housing Project Avenues V W and X off Stillwell Avenue Brooklyn New York City where Popeye lives Marseille Bouches du Rhone France Montee Des Accoules Marseille Bouches du Rhone France Onderdonk Avenue Ridgewood Queens New York City Plage du bestouan Cassis Bouches du Rhone France Putnam Avenue Ridgewood Queens New York City Randalls Island East River New York City Ratner s Restaurant 138 Delancey Street New York City where Sal and Angie emerge Remsen Street Brooklyn New York City where Charnier and Nicoli watch the car being unloaded Rio Piedras now demolished 912 Broadway Brooklyn New York City where the Santa Claus chase starts Rapid Park Garage East 38th Street near Park Avenue New York City where Cloudy follows Sal Ronaldo Maia Flowers 27 East 67th Street at Madison New York City where Charnier gives Popeye the slip The Roosevelt Hotel 45th Street and Madison Avenue Manhattan New York City Rue des Moulins off Rue Du Panier Old Town of Marseille Bouches du Rhone France where the French policeman with the bread walks La Samaritaine at 2 Quai Du Port Marseille Bouches du Rhone France South Street at Market Street at the foot of Manhattan Bridge New York City where Doyle emerges from a bar Triborough Bridge to Randall s Island toll bridge at the east end of 125th Street New York City Wards Island New York City the final shootout The National Mall in Washington D C near The Capitol where Charnier and Sal meet Westbury Hotel 15 East 69th Street Manhattan New York City Charnier s hotel Reception editRoger Ebert of the Chicago Sun Times gave the film four out of four stars and ranked it as one of the best films of 1971 31 Roger Greenspun of The New York Times wrote The French Connection is in fact a very good new kind of movie and that in spite of its being composed of such ancient material as cops and crooks with thrills and chases and lots of shoot em up 32 A review in Variety stated So many changes have been made in Robin Moore s taut factual reprise of one of the biggest narcotics hauls in New York police history that only the skeleton remains but producer Philip D Antoni and screenwriter Ernest Tidyman have added enough fictional flesh to provide director William Friedkin and his overall topnotch cast with plenty of material and they make the most of it 33 Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune awarded a full four stars out of four and raved From the moment a street corner Santa Claus chases a drug pusher thru the Bedford Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn to the final shootout on deserted Ward s Island The French Connection is a gutty flatout thriller far superior to any caper film of recent vintage 34 35 Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times called it every bit as entertaining as Bullitt a slam bang suspenseful plain spoken sardonically funny furiously paced melodrama But because it has dropped the romance and starry glamor of Steve McQueen and added a strong sociological concern The French Connection is even more interesting thought provoking and reverberating 36 Gary Arnold of The Washington Post called the film an undeniably sensational movie a fast tense explosively vicious little cops and robbers enterprise with a deliberately nervewracking runaway quality It s a cheap thrill in the same way that a roller coaster ride is a cheap thrill It seems altogether appropriate that the showiest sequence intercuts between a runaway train and a recklessly speeding car 37 In his book Reverse Angle John Simon wrote Friedkin has used New York locations better than anyone to day t he performances are all good and Owen Roizman s cinematography grainy and grimy is a brilliant rendering of urban blight 38 Pauline Kael of The New Yorker was generally negative writing It s not what I want not because it fails it doesn t fail but because of what it is It is I think what we once feared mass entertainment might become jolts for jocks There s nothing in the movie that you enjoy thinking about afterward nothing especially clever except the timing of the subway door and umbrella sequence Every other effect of the movie even the climactic car versus runaway elevated train chase is achieved by noise speed and brutality 39 David Pirie of The Monthly Film Bulletin called the film consistently exciting and Gene Hackman extremely convincing as Doyle trailing his suspects with a shambling determination but there are times when the film or at any rate the script seems to be applauding aspects of his character which are more repulsive than sympathetic Whereas in The Detective or Bullitt the hero s attention was directed unmistakably towards liberal ends crooked businessmen corrupt local officials etc Doyle spends a fair part of his time beating up sullen blacks in alleys and bars These violent sequences are almost all presented racily and amusingly stressing Doyle s lovable toughness as he manhandles and arrests petty criminals usually adding a quip like Lock them up and throw away the key 40 The film has an approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes of 96 based on 90 reviews with an average rating of 8 80 10 The website s critical consensus reads Realistic fast paced and uncommonly smart The French Connection is bolstered by stellar performances by Gene Hackman and Roy Scheider not to mention William Friedkin s thrilling production 41 On Metacritic the film has a score of 94 based on reviews from 18 critics indicating universal acclaim 42 In 2014 Time Out listed The French Connection as the 31st best action film of all time according to a poll of several film critics directors actors and stunt actors 43 The French Connection has been described as a neo noir film by some authors 44 The Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa cited The French Connection as one of his favorite films 45 46 Director David Fincher cited The French Connection as one of the five films that had a Profound Impact on my Life 47 and served as an important influence on the cinematography on his film Seven 48 Brad Pitt cited The French Connection as a reason he participated in Seven 49 Director Steven Spielberg said that he studied The French Connection in preparation for his 2005 historical action thriller film Munich 50 Benny Safdie of the Safdie Brothers named The French Connection as one of his top five favorite films of all time 51 Awards and nominations editAward Category Nominee s Result Ref Academy Awards Best Picture Philip D Antoni Won 52 53 Best Director William Friedkin WonBest Actor Gene Hackman WonBest Supporting Actor Roy Scheider NominatedBest Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium Ernest Tidyman WonBest Cinematography Owen Roizman NominatedBest Film Editing Gerald B Greenberg WonBest Sound Christopher Newman and Theodore Soderberg NominatedAmerican Cinema Editors Awards Best Edited Feature Film Gerald B Greenberg NominatedBritish Academy Film Awards Best Film Philip D Antoni Nominated 54 Best Direction William Friedkin NominatedBest Actor in a Leading Role Gene Hackman also for The Poseidon Adventure WonBest Film Editing Gerald B Greenberg WonBest Sound Christopher Newman and Theodore Soderberg NominatedDavid di Donatello Awards Best Foreign Film Philip D Antoni WonDirectors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures William Friedkin Won 55 Edgar Allan Poe Awards Best Motion Picture Ernest Tidyman Won 56 Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture Drama Won 57 Best Actor in a Motion Picture Drama Gene Hackman WonBest Director Motion Picture William Friedkin WonBest Screenplay Motion Picture Ernest Tidyman NominatedGolden Reel Awards Best Sound Editing Feature Film WonGrammy Awards Best Instrumental Arrangement Don Ellis Theme from The French Connection Won 58 Kansas City Film Circle Critics Awards Best Film Won 59 Best Actor Gene Hackman Won b National Board of Review Awards Top Ten Films 4th Place 60 Best Actor Gene Hackman WonNational Film Preservation Board National Film Registry InductedNational Society of Film Critics Awards Best Actor Gene Hackman Nominated 61 New York Film Critics Circle Awards Best Film Runner up 62 Best Actor Gene Hackman WonOnline Film amp Television Association Awards Hall of Fame Motion Picture Honored 63 Writers Guild of America Awards Best Drama Adapted from Another Medium Ernest Tidyman Won 64 The American Film Institute recognizes The French Connection on several of its lists AFI s 100 Years 100 Movies 70 AFI s 100 Years 100 Movies 10th Anniversary Edition 93 AFI s 100 Years 100 Thrills 8 AFI s 100 Years 100 Heroes and Villains Jimmy Popeye Doyle 44 HeroIn 2012 the Motion Picture Editors Guild listed the film as the tenth best edited film of all time based on a survey of its membership 65 Home media releases editThe French Connection has been issued in a number of home video formats On September 25 2001 the film was released on VHS and DVD with both formats being released in box sets featuring both the film and its sequel French Connection II citation needed For a 2009 reissue on Blu ray William Friedkin controversially altered the film s color timing to give it a colder look 66 Cinematographer Owen Roizman who was not consulted about the changes dismissed the new transfer as atrocious 67 On March 18 2012 a new Blu ray transfer of the movie was released This time the color timing was supervised by both Friedkin and Roizman and the desaturated and sometimes over grainy look of the 2009 edition has been corrected 68 69 In June 2023 media publications discovered that a version of the film available on digital platforms such as Apple TV and the Criterion Channel had been altered to excise a scene in the film that contains usage of racial slurs 70 71 The decision received backlash from fans and film purists who compared the censorship to vandalism and called out the decision for hiding its historical context Joseph Wade compared the cut to vandalising a piece of art 72 Sequels and adaptations editFrench Connection II 1975 is a fictional sequel NBC TV aired a made for TV movie Popeye Doyle 1986 another fictional sequel starring Ed O Neill in the title role See also editCrime film List of American films of 1971 Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen a fried chicken restaurant chain that was founded in 1972 and had its name inspired by the Popeye Doyle character in the filmNotes edit R42 cars 4572 and 4573 were chosen for the film and had no B subway rollsigns because they were normally assigned to the N subway train Consequently they operated during the movie with an N displayed As of July 2009 these cars were withdrawn from service but are preserved as part of the New York Transit Museum fleet citation needed Tied with Walter Matthau for Kotch References edit a b The French Connection at the American Film Institute Catalog THE FRENCH CONNECTION 18 British Board of Film Classification Archived from the original on June 18 2018 Retrieved June 17 2018 a b Bart Peter August 8 2011 Alien territory an economics lesson Variety p 2 Archived from the original on February 15 2020 Retrieved September 14 2019 The French Connection The Numbers Nash Information Services LLC Retrieved August 9 2023 Solomon Aubrey 1989 Twentieth Century Fox A Corporate and Financial History Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press p 167 ISBN 978 0 8108 4244 1 Silver amp Ward 1992 The French Connection 1971 William Friedkin AllMovie Archived from the original on 2019 01 30 Retrieved 2019 01 30 Librarian of Congress Adds 25 Films to National Film Registry Library of Congress Archived from the original on 2020 11 26 Retrieved October 2 2020 Complete National Film Registry Listing Library of Congress Archived from the original on October 31 2016 Retrieved October 2 2020 William Friedkin s Favorite Films of all Time Fade In Magazine Retrieved January 20 2022 via YouTube a b Friedkin recounts his casting opinions in Making the Connection The Untold Stories 2001 Extra feature on 2001 Five Star Collection edition of DVD release The Making of the French Connection 4 February 2014 23 Things You Never Knew About The French Connection Collins Larry Lapierre Dominique February 6 1972 The French Connection In Real Life The New York Times Archived from the original on October 20 2020 Retrieved October 18 2020 Agents Seize Heroin Worth Record 22M Daily News New York June 27 1968 Archived from the original on October 24 2020 Retrieved October 18 2020 Bigart Homer June 27 1968 22 4 Million in Heroin Found in Car at City Pier Narcotics Secreted in Auto Sent From France Called Largest Seizure in U S 22 4 Million in Heroin Is Found Hidden in a Car at Pier in City The New York Times Archived from the original on October 21 2020 Retrieved October 18 2020 Biggest Heroin Haul Told The Desert Sun Palm Springs California June 26 1968 Archived from the original on October 22 2020 Retrieved October 18 2020 Cox Michael Spring 1991 Smuggler The Citroen Quarterly 9 11 Turner Classic Movies spotlight TCM Archived from the original on December 24 2008 Retrieved August 2 2014 Moore Robin 1969 The French Connection A True Account of Cops Narcotics and International Conspiracy ISBN 1592280447 page needed Bauer Alain Soullez Christophe 2012 La criminologie pour les nuls Generales First ed ISBN 978 2754031622 Film commentary time needed Top 10 car chase movies MOVIES MSNBC com MSNBC Archived from the original on October 22 2004 Retrieved August 2 2014 This account of the shooting is described in Making the Connection supra From Popeye Doyle to Puccini William Friedkin with Robert Siegel interview NPR org September 14 2006 Archived from the original on August 12 2018 Retrieved August 2 2014 Director s commentary on DVD Making the Connection and The Poughkeepsie Shuffle documentaries on The French Connection available on the deluxe DVD The French Connection film locations The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved May 11 2013 The French Connection Reel Streets Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved May 11 2013 The Filming Locations of The French Connection Then and Now Scouting NY May 21 2014 Archived from the original on August 10 2016 Retrieved June 15 2016 Ebert Roger 1971 The French Connection Review Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on June 17 2018 Retrieved June 17 2018 via RogerEbert com Greenspun Roger October 8 1971 Film Festival The New York Times p 35 Archived from the original on July 6 2020 Retrieved August 2 2014 Frederick Robert B October 6 1971 Film Reviews The French Connection Variety p 16 Archived from the original on June 9 2021 Retrieved June 9 2021 Siskel Gene November 8 1971 French Connection Archived 2021 06 09 at the Wayback Machine Chicago Tribune Section 2 p 20 via Newspapers com nbsp The Movie Reviews Chicago Tribune October 15 1999 Archived from the original on 2020 06 05 Retrieved 2020 08 19 Champlin Charles November 3 1971 High Adventure in Connection Los Angeles Times Arnold Gary November 12 1971 French Connection Running and Hitting The Washington Post p C1 Simon John 1982 Reverse Angle A Decade of American Films New York Potter pp 56 57 ISBN 978 0 517 54697 0 Kael Pauline October 30 1971 The Current Cinema The New Yorker p 115 Archived from the original on June 9 2021 Retrieved June 9 2021 Pirie David January 1972 The French Connection The Monthly Film Bulletin 39 456 7 The French Connection 1971 Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on November 12 2020 Retrieved August 8 2022 The French Connection Metacritic Archived from the original on June 18 2020 Retrieved May 4 2020 The 100 best action movies ever made Archived from the original on 2016 07 25 Retrieved 2020 04 28 Silver Alain Ward Elizabeth eds 1992 Film Noir An Encyclopedic Reference to the American Style 3rd ed Woodstock New York The Overlook Press ISBN 0 87951 479 5 Lee Thomas Mason 12 January 2021 From Stanley Kubrick to Martin Scorsese Akira Kurosawa once named his top 100 favourite films of all time Far Out Far Out Magazine Archived from the original on 10 June 2021 Retrieved 10 June 2021 Akira Kurosawa s Top 100 Movies Archived from the original on 27 March 2010 David Fincher Movies That Had a Profound Impact on My Life Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Retrieved 20 May 2022 Alex Ballinger October 12 2004 New Cinematographers HarperCollins ISBN 9781856693349 In preparation for the film Seven David Fincher showed me Klute Alan J Pakula 1971 and the French Connection William Freidkin 1971 and Seven was inspired by a mixture of the stylised work of the former and the rawness and grittiness of the latter Amy Longsdorf September 16 1995 Spotlight on Brad Pitt Golden Boy Turns Gritty In New Film The Morning Call Retrieved 20 May 2022 Why with all his choices did Pitt settle on Seven I love movies from the 70s like The French Connection and that s what director David Fincher and I talked about during our first meeting I was looking for something with a documentary feel I wanted to play a character who has flaws who has good intentions but makes mistakes I also wanted to kill the mythic thing this like larger than life thing about me Paul O Callaghan January 23 2018 10 great films that inspired Steven Spielberg British Film Institute Archived from the original on October 22 2020 Retrieved October 21 2020 Jacqueline Coley January 14 2020 The Safdie Brothers Five Favorite Films Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Retrieved 15 July 2021 Benny Safdie Last one I m going to go with The French Connection because it s one of the most incredible cop movies and pulp movies there is The camera work Gene Hackman the shots from up on the rooftop looking down That chase scene alone puts it on this list You hear how they made that movie and you really feel the bare hands that went into that thing and it just reset how you make a movie like that You know totally changed the game on that level Just seeing that car barrel through the streets you feel the danger and you feel the pressure of all of these things It s doing pulp in a whole new way and in a visceral way Then on top of that you have these people with real stakes and real things happening to them and director William Friedkin he s a king The 44th Academy Awards 1972 Nominees and Winners oscars org Retrieved 2011 08 28 Awards for The French Connection at IMDb BAFTA Awards Film in 1973 BAFTA 1973 Retrieved June 3 2021 24th DGA Awards Directors Guild of America Awards Retrieved July 5 2021 Category List Best Motion Picture Edgar Awards Retrieved August 15 2021 The French Connection Golden Globes HFPA Retrieved July 5 2021 1972 Grammy Awards Grammy Awards Retrieved December 18 2021 KCFCC Award Winners 1970 79 December 14 2013 Retrieved July 10 2021 1971 Award Winners National Board of Review Retrieved July 5 2021 Past Awards National Society of Film Critics 19 December 2009 Retrieved July 5 2021 1971 New York Film Critics Circle Awards New York Film Critics Circle Retrieved July 5 2021 Film Hall of Fame Inductees Productions Online Film amp Television Association Retrieved August 15 2021 Awards Winners wga org Writers Guild of America Archived from the original on 2012 12 05 Retrieved 2010 06 06 The 75 Best Edited Films Editors Guild Magazine 1 3 May 2012 Archived from the original on 2015 03 17 Retrieved 2017 04 19 Kehr Dave February 20 2009 Filmmaking at 90 Miles Per Hour The New York Times Archived from the original on May 24 2014 Retrieved August 8 2009 Jeffrey Wells February 25 2009 Atrocious Horrifying Hollywood Elsewhere Archived from the original on June 2 2009 Retrieved August 8 2009 The French Connection Gets a New Blu ray Release New Master Archived from the original on 2014 08 12 Retrieved 2014 08 10 The French Connection Blu ray Archived from the original on 2014 08 12 Retrieved 2014 08 10 Archer John Apple TV And The Criterion Channel Outrage Film Fans By Censoring Classic Movie Forbes Retrieved 2023 06 08 Don t Censor Racism Out of the Past The Atlantic June 9 2023 Aubrey Elizabeth 2023 06 07 The French Connection has been censored and fans are furious NME Retrieved 2023 06 08 Bibliography editBerliner Todd The Genre Film as Booby Trap 1970s Genre Bending and The French Connection Cinema Journal 2001 25 46 online Collins Dave November 29 2014 Man linked to heroin ring in 71 film nabbed again Associated Press Friedkin William April 15 2003 Under the Influence The French Connection DGA Magazine Friedkin William Fall 2006 Anatomy of a Chase The French Connection DGA Magazine Friedkin William 2013 The Friedkin Connection New York HarperCollins ISBN 9780061775147 Kehr Dave February 20 2009 Filmmaking at 90 Miles Per Hour A 2009 retrospective The New York Times King Neal Rayanne Streeter and Talitha Rose Cultural Studies Approaches to the Study of Crime in Film and on Television Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice 2016 online Lichtenfeld Eric Action speaks louder Violence spectacle and the American action movie Wesleyan University Press 2007 Ramaeker Paul Realism revisionism and visual style The French Connection and the New Hollywood policier New Review of Film and Television Studies 8 2 2010 144 163 onlineExternal links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to The French Connection film The French Connection at the American Film Institute Catalog The French Connection at AllMovie The French Connection at IMDb The French Connection at the TCM Movie Database The French Connection at the Internet Movie Cars Database The French Connection essay by Daniel Eagan in America s Film Legacy The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry A amp C Black 2010 ISBN 0826429777 pages 674 676 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The French Connection film amp oldid 1183544900, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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