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IMDbPro

Il braccio violento della legge

Titolo originale: The French Connection
  • 1971
  • T
  • 1h 44min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,7/10
145.545
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
POPOLARITÀ
1616
611
Gene Hackman in Il braccio violento della legge (1971)
Trailer for The French Connection
Riproduci trailer2: 48
4 video
99+ foto
Cop DramaDrug CrimePolice ProceduralActionCrimeDramaThriller

Una coppia di poliziotti della Narcotici di New York si imbattono in un lavoro di contrabbando di droga con una connessione francese.Una coppia di poliziotti della Narcotici di New York si imbattono in un lavoro di contrabbando di droga con una connessione francese.Una coppia di poliziotti della Narcotici di New York si imbattono in un lavoro di contrabbando di droga con una connessione francese.

  • Regia
    • William Friedkin
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Ernest Tidyman
    • Robin Moore
    • William Friedkin
  • Star
    • Gene Hackman
    • Roy Scheider
    • Fernando Rey
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,7/10
    145.545
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    POPOLARITÀ
    1616
    611
    • Regia
      • William Friedkin
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Ernest Tidyman
      • Robin Moore
      • William Friedkin
    • Star
      • Gene Hackman
      • Roy Scheider
      • Fernando Rey
    • 458Recensioni degli utenti
    • 139Recensioni della critica
    • 94Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Vincitore di 5 Oscar
      • 22 vittorie e 13 candidature totali

    Video4

    The French Connection
    Trailer 2:48
    The French Connection
    'The French Connection' | Anniversary Mashup
    Clip 1:00
    'The French Connection' | Anniversary Mashup
    'The French Connection' | Anniversary Mashup
    Clip 1:00
    'The French Connection' | Anniversary Mashup
    The French Connection
    Interview 1:36
    The French Connection
    Christopher Meloni Knows How to Spot a Good Cop
    Video 2:34
    Christopher Meloni Knows How to Spot a Good Cop

    Foto194

    Visualizza poster
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    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
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    + 187
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    Interpreti principali45

    Modifica
    Gene Hackman
    Gene Hackman
    • Jimmy Doyle
    Roy Scheider
    Roy Scheider
    • Buddy Russo
    Fernando Rey
    Fernando Rey
    • Alain Charnier
    Tony Lo Bianco
    Tony Lo Bianco
    • Sal Boca
    Marcel Bozzuffi
    Marcel Bozzuffi
    • Pierre Nicoli
    Frédéric de Pasquale
    • Devereaux
    • (as Frederic De Pasquale)
    Bill Hickman
    Bill Hickman
    • Mulderig
    Ann Rebbot
    • Marie Charnier
    Harold Gary
    • Weinstock
    Arlene Farber
    • Angie Boca
    Eddie Egan
    Eddie Egan
    • Simonson
    André Ernotte
    • La Valle
    • (as Andre Ernotte)
    Sonny Grosso
    • Klein
    Benny Marino
    • Lou Boca
    Patrick McDermott
    Patrick McDermott
    • Chemist
    • (as Pat McDermott)
    Alan Weeks
    Alan Weeks
    • Pusher
    Al Fann
    Al Fann
    • Informant
    Irving Abrahams
    • Police Mechanic
    • Regia
      • William Friedkin
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Ernest Tidyman
      • Robin Moore
      • William Friedkin
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti458

    7,7145.5K
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    Riepilogo

    Reviewers say 'The French Connection' is acclaimed for its gritty realism, groundbreaking action, and Gene Hackman's compelling performance. The film captures the essence of 1970s New York, highlighting the cat-and-mouse game between cops and criminals, and the moral complexities of police work. However, criticisms include a convoluted plot, underdeveloped characters, and over-reliance on the iconic car chase. Some note narrative inconsistencies and clichés. Despite these flaws, its influence on the crime genre and raw cinematography are often lauded.
    Generato dall’IA a partire dal testo delle recensioni degli utenti

    Recensioni in evidenza

    bob the moo

    An enjoyable cop thriller with plenty of good touches and an unmistakably 1970's feel

    Following a mix of hunches and leads, two tough NYPD narcotic cops set up surveillance on a candy store in the belief that the owners of the store are somehow involved in drug dealing on the side. Putting the squeeze on the store leads them to a couple of new people, specifically a smooth French criminal called Alain Charnier who is trying to orchestrate a massive drug sale in New York. The pressure looks like bringing success to Detectives Doyle and Russo, but Charnier's organisation has tight time targets and decides to take action to remove the heat from the job.

    Sometimes with "classic" films it is easy to get sucked into the hype and reputation and just love it before you have even seen it; for that reason, although I have seen it several times, I decided to give it a fresh viewing before I dared try to write my thoughts on it – it finished ten minutes ago, so my memory is still fresh. Although I feel that it has remained well known thanks to "that" car chase, I think that recalling only that scene is to do a disservice to a film that is an enjoyable thriller in a tough, typically 1970's mould. The plot sees a minor hunch turn into a bigger police job and it would be easy to pick holes in some of the logic within it, it still grips and provides a nicely gritty cop thriller. It isn't as clever or as original as those coming to it on the back of its reputation might expect it to be, as it does pretty much what the rest of the genre does. Now I'll be fair and acknowledge that I don't know whether this film was the first to create this type of film or if it was just part of the development of them, but certainly watching it now it does blend in with others in the same genre.

    The direction makes it better than the material as Friedkin injects real tension and grit into the story keeping it exciting while also being rather sombre and low-key. The acting also makes it and, rightly, Hackman carries much of the film with a great performance as Doyle. Grizzled, bigoted and apparently heartless, it is interesting to contrast his character with Rey's Charnier, who is much cooler and effective. Scheider is, as always, reliable in support and he gives a good performance throughout while the rest of the cast play their roles well enough. There is no doubt though, that Hackman is the heart of the film and his performance reflects this and makes the audience emotionally involved with his story from the very start.

    Overall this is a great 1970's cop thriller with all that comes with that genre. It is enjoyably gritty and fast paced with "heroes" of questionable morality and smooth criminals. People will always hark on about that car chase and, yes, it is good, but there is more to this film and it stands out as one of the best of the genre.
    Infofreak

    One of the 1970s best crime movies, and yes, that means one of the best ever.

    'The French Connection' has really stood the test of time. William Friedkin is one American director who has almost been forgotten about, despite making some excellent movies like 'The Birthday Party', 'The Exorcist' and 'Cruising'. 'The French Connection' is his best movie by far, and one of the 1970s best crime movies, which means it's one of the best EVER. The lead actors are first rate, and the script by Ernest Tidyman ('Shaft') is a good one, but Friedkin makes this something special by applying documentary film techniques to this gritty and realistic detective story. 'The French Connection' was groundbreaking in this respect and influenced just about every subsequent cop movie, all the way up to contemporary TV shows like 'NYPD Blue' and the like. Gene Hackman is just terrific as Popeye Doyle. Hackman had been around for about ten years, and impressed many with his supporting role in 'Bonnie And Clyde', but this movie made him a major star. Along with 'The Conversation' and 'Scarecrow' it's still one of his most impressive performances. Roy Scheider was almost a complete unknown prior to this but he's also very good as Popeye's partner Buddy Russo. Scheider went on to some fine work in movies such as 'Jaws', 'Marathon Man', 'Last Embrace', '52 Pick-Up' and 'Naked Lunch', but never quite became the big name star that Hackman did. Bunuel regular Fernando Rey (cast by mistake after a misunderstanding, Friedkin thinking he was hiring a different actor!) and the underrated character actor Tony Lo Bianco, who had recently appeared in the cult classic 'The Honeymoon Killers', lead a fine supporting cast who really add to the movie's success. The exciting car chase sequence in this movie is now legendary, and is arguably the best one ever filmed, but there is so much more to this film than just that. 'The French Connection' is a superb movie, and still better than just about any similar Hollywood crime thriller made in the last few years. Highly recommended!
    8secondtake

    Dirty, real, harsh--cops after big drug dealers in New York, 1971.

    The French Connection (1971)

    Director William Friedkin would make it impossible to see his career straight two years after "The French Connection" by directing "The Exorcist," which took on a life of its own. But prior to that, this was the movie that defined his career. It was the New Hollywood answer to film noir, and the lead male (Gene Hackman) is presented without glamour, the gritty city (New York) without dramatic shadows and light, and the plot (about modern drug dealing) without hyped up dramatics. This is a movie as down in the mouth as the world it represents, and it's all deliberate, and smart.

    This is the stuff of a breakthrough movie. It isn't quite as gripping now, I think, but it still sucks you in. There are lots of scenes in cars, including the famous car chase, and lots of good old street stuff in Manhattan, very 1970 (when it was shot). The plot and pace of things is more steady than exciting, usually, not cinema verite but a kind of camera work that is unglamorous with the idea that this really is the way it is, and it works great. It would have been easy to push this farther and make it truly boring, but it doesn't go there. Instead we see the details of a couple of cops out to break a huge dope ring.

    Most of the movie (I'm going to guess three quarters) is simply the cops trailing the bad guys, on foot or by car. There are very brief interspersed personal dramas, and there are conversations that keep the plot clear, but the overall big vector here is one direction, and the cops get closer in spurts and jerks to their prey. The velocity does increase gradually in the second half, with a kind of brilliant building to a finale, and by the end it's a thrilling climax.

    In a way, this kind of film is the exact opposite of something like "Die Hard," which is all exaggeration and excess. And if those other kinds of movies are more fun, this is not only edgy, it's pertinent. And the music is by jazz great Don Ellis. Look for a scene with the World Trade Center towers under construction in the distance.

    Check this film out. A special movie that actually reveals something about police life, hard core, no glitz.
    Bastian Balthazar Bux

    Slow, but worth it.

    The French Connection is number seventy on the AFI's list of top 100 movies, right before Forrest Gump. But why is it known as such a great film? Why did it win Best Picture at the 1971 Academy Awards? Why was it so important?

    The French Connection was made in 1971, starring a then 41-year-old Gene Hackman in the lead, and directed by William Friedkin, who started his directing career with `Alfred Hitchcock Presents' in 1955. The film follows an aging but truculent `bad-boy' police officer Popeye Doyle and his slightly kinder partner (Roy Schneider) in their journey to bust a drug-smuggling ring of French origin. The movie itself is basically one big chase scene, following Popeye on his cat and mouse game of catch the crook.

    The film has been classified as both an action and drama movie. Both are right, in their own way. The film at its core is a tense, slow-moving thriller, dramatic in its musical score and over-acted brutality. Scenes are left to their own devices, moving forth indeterminately, in a very drama-characteristic fashion. However, there's plenty of chasing and violence to satisfy an `action' classification. This action, however, is played so that it's less about the adrenaline rush (so common in today's big-budget action flicks), and more about that tense underlying heartbeat. The style of the film then, is a very paced and dingy chase scene. By today's post-Matrix standards, the film is slow. But in its own way, it's subterrainiously charged.

    The camera is mastered by cinematographer Owen Roizman, whose previous film, Stop, is essentially unheard of, and who went on to make The Exorcist with Friedkin two years later. Shots are varied. There are handheld shots of the streets, coupled with static medium wide, along with crane shots, along with close-ups and wide shots. And even though the shots are extremely eclectic, one common theme shines through-realism. Every shot composed is just a little bit shaky, a little bit unclean. There's no truly innovative lighting used, simply that yellow coarse light that everything is eternally bathed in. It succeeds in making the movie that much more tangible to the eye. The mood created within is one of belief. You can believe the movie, because it's shot in such a rugged manner. The car scenes, filmed at night, use the same technique; red and white car lights with a subtlety lit car. It is clear that the film Taxi Driver, made 5 years later, contained car shots obviously influenced by the ones in The French Connection. Furthermore, actors' faces are lit without any superfluous shine or luster-they are simply real human faces, and are not hyped up. This influenced cinema in the way that it brings the mood and story above the actors' egos.

    The editing, done by Gerald Greenberg, is, in the same manner, very real. Characteristic of films made pre-computer based editing, shots are held for longer periods of time, and not as many cuts are used. The editing is almost unnoticeable, because it seems to pass by so soft, especially during dialog. However, conversely, it cuts much more often (but never frantically) during action sequences, like the bar roust or the car chase under the train tracks. But still, drama is tensed out by holding shots long during action sequences, and it works. But this never comes to fault. The few times when quick cuts are needed, they are used, such as the train crash. In general though, the editing satisfies the mood of the film.

    It is said that silence is golden, and in The French Connection, it seems to be just as valuable. While the tense, stringy score (by Don Ellis) is important to the film in some aspects, its not used very often, and instead, director Friedkin employs simple background noise. For instance, most of the scenes in the movie simply work with dialog and city noise. This all goes back to the pre-established mood: realism. The music is used only when it wont get in the way of the framework of the film. So therefore, background noise suffices wonderfully for most action and dialog scenes. Some of the music is setting-based as well, and so, comes from the movie's plot itself, and doesn't break the reality theme. Modern audiences might be surprised by the lack of `action-music', but car chases and fight scenes sans pumping bass are surprisingly welcome, and help the film, as well as add an aire of classiness.

    Director William Friedkin is a director who knows what he wants out of a film. For The Exorcist, it is told he violently slapped an actor who wouldn't cry, and, with The French Connection, he establishes his premise, and lets the story tell itself. It is a different style of filmmaking. The French Connection is important to modern cinema not only because it taught modern directors the art of silence and visual suspense, but because it artfully embodies its theme. Its story, rough characters, locales, color, and pace all bleed a very dark, yet very familiar reality; one that has shaped nearly every cop movie since its making. While the film is at times hard to follow, simply because the story is left to its own devices so much (there are 15 minute periods of no dialog), but in the end, it succeeds admirably. While not the best film ever made,

    The French Connection is a classic, and worthy of the honors it has received.
    8planktonrules

    An important film due to its impact on the genre

    While the 1960s brought us a slew of anti-heroes that even made their way to police films, predecessors such as BULLIT and MADIGAN are tame compared to this ground-breaking film. While these previous films gave a much bleaker view of police work and corruption, THE FRENCH CONNECTION was unique in the intensity of the sleaze that permeates the film. In most ways, this serves to heighten the realism, though even today some viewers will blanch at the films frequent use of the f-word and the general griminess of the city. Fortunately, in recent trips to the city, I was pleased to see how clean and safe the New York has become, but for the New York City office of tourism, this film must have been a nightmare!! Junkies, garbage, murders and the lowest elements frequent this interpretation of the Big Apple--making it look a bit worm-eaten and squishy!

    The lead of the film is Gene Hackman and his quiet partner is Roy Scheider. Hackman's character, in particular, made it hard to differentiate him from the criminals because he played fast and loose with some people's rights and because he was prone to getting drunk and picking up one night stands. This was definitely NOT the cop your daddy would have seen in films in the good old days and I am pretty sure Jack Webb didn't approve of this Popeye Doyle character!!!

    Despite the seaminess of the film, it was a great detective film because of its exceptional action sequences that made up for the very mundane nature of the job. Long periods of wire tapping and grunt work were punctuated with some of the most exciting scenes in film history--including what most experts would concede is the best chase scene on film. Additionally, the script and direction made the film quite exciting and gritty--thanks also to improvisations to spice up the cop lingo. In so many ways, this film helped create a new type of police film and led to movies such as SERPICO, THE BLUE KNIGHT and the DIRTY HARRY films. See this film and see where it all began--as this was the first rated-R cop film to win the Oscar for Best Picture and STILL today is a film you don't want to let your kids watch (unless you are an irresponsible idiot).

    Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

    Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

    See the complete list of Oscars Best Picture winners, ranked by IMDb ratings.
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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      The car chase was filmed without obtaining the proper permits from the city. Members of the NYPD's tactical force helped control traffic. But most of the control was achieved by the assistant directors with the help of off-duty NYPD officers, many of whom had been involved in the actual case. The assistant directors, under the supervision of Terence A. Donnelly, cleared traffic for approximately five blocks in each direction. Permission was given to literally control the traffic signals on those streets where they ran the chase car. Even so, in many instances, they illegally continued the chase into sections with no traffic control, where they actually had to evade real traffic and pedestrians. Many of the (near) collisions in the movie were therefore real and not planned (with the exception of the near-miss of the lady with the baby carriage, which was carefully rehearsed). A flashing police light was placed on top of the car to warn bystanders. A camera was mounted on the car's bumper for the shots from the car's point-of-view. Hackman did some of the driving but the extremely dangerous stunts were performed by Bill Hickman, with Friedkin filming from the backseat. Friedkin operated the camera himself because the other camera operators were married with children and he was not.
    • Blooper
      As Henri and his associate are waiting for the Lincoln at the garage, the police are literally tearing the car apart before finding the drugs. Shortly after finding the drugs, Henri is told his car is ready. It would have taken days to put the Lincoln back together and it would not be plausible for the police to find an exact duplicate of the car and replace the drugs in such short time.
    • Citazioni

      Jimmy 'Popeye' Doyle: You dumb guinea.

      Buddy "Cloudy" Russo: How the hell did I know he had a knife.

      Jimmy 'Popeye' Doyle: Never trust a nigger.

      Buddy "Cloudy" Russo: He could have been white.

      Jimmy 'Popeye' Doyle: Never trust anyone!

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      The 20th-Century Fox logo appears in black and white and then slowly dissolving to color.
    • Versioni alternative
      The version released on first Blu-ray release features a radically-different color scheme from all earlier versions - it was recolored with the assistance of director William Friedkin. The second Blu-ray release features a color scheme more like all the previous versions.
    • Connessioni
      Edited into The French Connection: Deleted Scenes (2001)
    • Colonne sonore
      Everybody Gets to Go to the Moon
      (1969) (uncredited)

      Written by Jimmy Webb

      Performed by The Three Degrees in the club

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    Domande frequenti24

    • How long is The French Connection?Powered by Alexa
    • Why exactly is the lead cop named "Popeye" if it's not a reference to the cartoon character?
    • What does Popeye mean when he calls Charnier "Frog One"?
    • Why does Popeye keep hammering Willy with the "pick your feet Poughkeepsie" line?

    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 3 marzo 1972 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Sito ufficiale
      • 20th Century Studios (United States)
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Francese
      • Italiano
    • Celebre anche come
      • Contacto en Francia
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Château d'If, Marsiglia, Bouches-du-Rhône, Francia(secret meeting between Charnier, Nicoli and Devereaux)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Twentieth Century Fox
      • Philip D'Antoni Productions
      • Schine-Moore Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

    Modifica
    • Budget
      • 1.800.000 USD (previsto)
    • Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
      • 51.700.000 USD
    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 51.708.862 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 44 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • 4-Track Stereo
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.85 : 1

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