defining performance of Popeye Doyle in The French Connection propel his stardom, winning him an Oscar—Best Actor. Director William Friedkin adapted from Robin Moore's book follows two NYC narcotics detectives as they trail a heroin-smuggling ring; its iconic car chase is widely regarded as a cinema landmark. Hackman recalls the demanding intensity needed. It remains foundational in crime thriller cinema.
Sources
It’s the heart-stopping moment when a bashed-in Pontiac LeMans hurtles beneath NYC’s elevated subway at 90 miles an hour, dodging traffic and pedestrians in a wild race to keep up with a hijacked N train rumbling overhead. That five-minute sequence — a crash course in ‘70s guerrilla filmmaking — is now regarded by many to be the best movie car chase of all time.
www.foxnews.comThe French Connection(1971), starring Gene Hackman, Roy Scheider and Fernando Rey, and directed by William Friedkin from Robin Moore’s book, is a brilliant cop thriller set in New York city, …
manksjoint.home.blogIt’s the heart-stopping moment when a bashed-in Pontiac LeMans hurtles beneath NYC’s elevated subway at 90 miles an hour, dodging traffic and pedestrians in a wild race to keep up with a hijacked N train rumbling overhead. That five-minute sequence — a crash course in ‘70s guerrilla filmmaking — is now regarded by many to be the best movie car chase of all time.
noticias.foxnews.comReleased in 1971, The French Connection is an action film based on Robin Moore’s 1969 non-fiction novel of the same … Continue reading "20 Facts About ‘The French Connection’ Starring Gene Hackman"
www.giantfreakinrobot.comAlthough he inhabits the role as if he weren't even acting, Gene Hackman had one major problem with Popeye Doyle that he didn't want to perform.
faroutmagazine.co.uk