Review of The French Connection (1971) by Justin M — 06 May 2010
"Popeye. You still picking your feet in Poughkeepsie?".
A pair of NYC cops in the Narcotics Bureau stumble onto a drug smuggling job with a French connection.
REVIEW.
"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 40 years ago. Excellent.
This review of The French Connection (1971) was written by Justin M on 06 May 2010.
The French Connection has generally received very positive reviews.
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