Review of Bullitt (1968) by John Mcmurtrie for San Francisco Chronicle — 17 Jan 2006
Not to go all Pauline Kael on you, but Bullitt -- the 1968 crime drama starring a Ford Mustang GT390 and some guy named Steve McQueen -- is a fairly tedious bit of Aquarian cinema: the chicka-chicka-waah soundtrack, the inscrutable plot, the anaerobic dullness of every second that McQueen is off-camera.
Bullitt scrabbles to its minor footnote status in film history on two counts. The first: It marks the only time any man ever looked cool in a cardigan -- McQueen should have gotten the academy's knitwear award.
The second is the movie's remarkable seven-minute chase scene, with real cars (the Mustang and a black Dodge Charger), real drivers and real stunts, no special effects.
You can read the full review where it was originally posted online.
This review of Bullitt (1968) was written by John Mcmurtrie and published by San Francisco Chronicle on 17 Jan 2006.
Bullitt has generally received very positive reviews.
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