French Connection II
(1975)
Director: John
Frankenheimer
Cast:
Gene Hackman, Fernando Rey, Bernard Fresson
It's been a while since I've seen the Oscar-winning
movie
The
French Connection, so my mind is a little hazy when I try to
recall
both the movie and what I thought of it. From what I recall, I think I
was a little let down by it, after hearing so many raves about it for
several
years prior to watching it. Yes, I could see possibly why it had
received
so much notice at the time - Gene
Hackman was indeed great as Jimmy "Popeye"
Doyle, the hard look at the life of the New York underbelly was unlike
anything previously seen, and the action sequences packed an equal
punch
as well. Though possibly due to seeing similar - and harder - stuff
previously,
the movie just came across as average to me. Even the famous scene of
Doyle
barrelling his car down the streets to catch a suspect on a subway
train
didn't do much for me.
So when I had a chance to watch French Connection
II (yes, there is no "The" in the title), I
wasn't
expecting much, considering how so many sequels are inferior to the
original.
Also by the fact that memory of this sequel has faded so much over the
years, it's become an unknown movie. Yes, this sequel does indeed have
some problems that weigh it down. But to my surprise, it also had a lot
of strengths. In fact, at the end of the movie, I felt more satisfied
with
this sequel than I had felt with the original.
You will recall that at the end of the first movie, the
cops Hackman and Roy Scheider played made a valiant effort to get drug
kingpin Alain Charnier (Rey), but he still managed to slip out of their
fingers and escape from New York. The sequel starts several years
later,
though Scheider's character is nowhere to be found, nor is there any
mention
of him. (Scheider did, however, play a tough cop that shared the same
first
name in the unofficial follow-up The Seven-Ups in
1973.)
Hackman, however, does return as Doyle, and in the
beginning
of this sequel, he has just arrived in Marseilles after receiving
orders
from his New York captain to assist the French police with their
struggle
to shut down the drug network in the city. The reason Doyle's
assistance
is needed is because of his previous dealings with the rumored
mastermind
of the organization, Alain Charnier. Doyle is still his old racist and
ornery self, and it doesn't come as a surprise that he resents being
held
back by the French task force, and ordered just to observe. His
determination
to do things his way just leads to disaster and more of a feeling of
contempt
from those "frogs" he's forced to work with. To make matters worse,
Charnier
not long afterwards discovers by accident that Doyle is there, and gets
his goons to not only humiliate Doyle by kidnapping him, but shooting
him
up with heroin and turning him into an addict.
The next part of the movie - Doyle forced to go cold
turkey
in an effort to cure him - is extremely grueling to sit through. It not
only shows us in graphic detail the torturous aspects of drug
addiction,
but a huge chunk of the total running time of the movie is devoted to
showing
us all this graphic detail. The horror of drugs is definitely not left
to the imagination in this movie. It goes without saying that the key
to
showing us these gruesome detail lies on Hackman, and his performance
of
his slow withdrawal is outstanding - another Oscar-worthy performance.
He
doesn't just have to show the torture he's going through, he has to
perform
drunk as well as in agony at one point. And during that part of the
entire
sequence, he has a monologue that goes on for several minutes non-stop.
It's one of the greatest bits of acting that I've ever seen.
Hackman isn't just good in this particular part of the
movie. Earlier in the movie, he manages to show us several times a part
of Doyle previously not seen. In one scene, we see him in a bar,
struggling
to communicate with the bartender and getting frustrated in the
process.
Though we see here another example of Doyle's contempt to people unlike
him, we see something else that's surprising. As he keeps talking, it
becomes
clear that Doyle is lonely. Stuck in a country where there is precious
little English, and managing to unconsciously mask his loneliness by
talking
to someone who doesn't really understand him, he shows this hidden side
of himself. Of course, we don't get to see Doyle give us many examples
of this, especially after he goes through withdrawal. After getting
back
on the street, although he may not actually say it, it's clear that
Doyle
desperately wants to kill those responsible for hurting him.
Hackman makes that rage of Doyle's very convincing, and
we know that somewhere soon, someone's blood is going to spill. Of
course,
that means there's going to be some action sequences, though there
aren't
as many here (or elsewhere in the movie) that you might think there
would
be. Though the number of action sequences in French Connection
II might
not be exceptional, the quality of them certainly are. The best action
sequence of all is one that takes place at a ship at dry dock. The
sheer
scale of it all is a wonder to behold, plus it is an original action
sequence
- there's no other action sequence like it in any other movies I have
seen.
The hotel sequence is very satisfying, considering what happened there
previously and why it is happening. Several times in the movie are
chases
on foot that are quite exhausting to watch, since they go on for some
time
and you can feel just how tired the characters get.
In those foot chases, director Frankenheimer
occasionally
throws in some shots from the perspective of the runner as he climbs
over
obstacles or opens gates (with their hand sticking out from the bottom
of the screen), a novel approach that takes you by surprise and keeps
you
watching. Frankenheimer directs this sequel with a much different
approach
than the style of the original. One interesting thing he does is not
bother
to use subtitles whenever there is any French dialogue - and there is a
lot of French dialogue. Clearly, he was trying to give the audience a
taste
of what the character of Doyle was feeling, that he was a fish out of
water
and unable to adjust to this new environment. This feeling does come
across,
though sometimes it is as frustrating to us as it is to Doyle, because
we don't know what is being said in a few key bits of dialogue.
There is a part of Frankenheimer's directorial style for
this movie that comes off even stronger. In previous movies, France
seems
like a beautiful place, but Frankenhimer here drags us to the
underbelly
of France. We are shown the side of France the French Tourist Board
doesn't
want us to see - crumbling buildings, ghetto neighborhoods, street scum
of all different sorts. Even the police station is a filthy place - the
opening sequence shows the French police gutting fish in the courtyard,
looking for smuggled drugs. This is not the France we know, and it also
gives us that feeling of unfamiliarity, of confusion, as well as
generating
a bleak feeling that maybe this war the police are fighting is
unwinnable.
There is fault with the movie, but the blame does not
fall on Hackman or Frankenheimer - the faults lies with
the script. Aside
from Doyle, the script fails to make any other character reasonably
compelling.
Though Doyle does primarily work with one particular French policeman
(played
by Bernard Fresson), we learn next to nothing about this guy, not just
with his private life, but why he feels his own way is the best way to
enforce the law. Charnier, Doyle's antagonist, has even less of a
personality,
and precious little screen time. If Doyle could have bounced off
stronger
characters, we might have had some great interactions.
The other fault I found with the script is that there
is really not much story. Though plenty does happen in the movie that
doesn't
make it boring, after a while it occurred to me that there hadn't been
that much that progressed the key elements of the story that much.
There's
a lot that we don't need to see, especially with a running length at
almost
two hours long - though if that material had been eliminated, we would
have had quite a short movie. I can't help but look at the wasted time
and the thin characters, and think about the movie that might have
been.
If it had been, I think this movie wouldn't be unknown. As it is right
now, it does at least manage to more than qualify itself as very
satisfying
entertainment when you want to relax and not have something
particularly
heavy to watch.
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See also: Crack House, Keaton's Cop, The Last
Marshal
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