A seguito dell'ultimo crimine commesso da un gangster di bassa lega di Boston, che lo porterà a scontare una lunga pena detentiva per reiterazione di reato, l'uomo decide di fare delle soffi... Leggi tuttoA seguito dell'ultimo crimine commesso da un gangster di bassa lega di Boston, che lo porterà a scontare una lunga pena detentiva per reiterazione di reato, l'uomo decide di fare delle soffiate contro i suoi amici per evitare di finire in gattabuia.A seguito dell'ultimo crimine commesso da un gangster di bassa lega di Boston, che lo porterà a scontare una lunga pena detentiva per reiterazione di reato, l'uomo decide di fare delle soffiate contro i suoi amici per evitare di finire in gattabuia.
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Here's the point: Mitchum nails it. He doesn't over-do it (Cliff Claven) and doesn't under do it. Critics claim that Mitchum is good at accents but he really does nail this one - the toughest one: A native Boston accent. That is indicative of the whole movie. Mitchum nails everything. This is his most believable performance. Listen to him in this movie and you could really imagine him as a resident of Quincy. It fits. The bleak, cold hopelessness of the title character's life is played out to its inevitable conclusion. A real classic "not-trying-to-be-film-noir" example of classic film noir.
Signed, The Director's Son (Just Kidding - this is awesome! Watch it!)
Great script, with some memorable dialog, especially when Mitchum starts grousing in elegant vernacular. Too bad the gun dealer (Steven Keats, I believe) is overshadowed by Mitchum's icon. He's a fascinating study in criminal ethics. Those scenes with Mitchum are little gems of circling-dogs and wary self-interest.
For plain slimy characters, it's hard to beat Peter Boyle's moon-lighting bartender and Richard Jordan's angel-faced cop. Between the two of them, they could give law- enforcement a bad name. And that final scene is about as quietly shattering as any I've seen. There we learn just how important a working-class stiff is to our criminal justice system.
Then too, that brutal hockey game amounts to a vivid metaphor for the world these characters spring from. Probably the movie was too low-key and downbeat to attract much attention. But in my book, it's a genuine sleeper, the most honest look at the Darwinian world of urban crime that I've seen. As the movie likes to say, let's all have a nice day!
Mitchum is perfect as a man who has grown tired of risking his livelihood for his bosses, having grown old with little to show for it other than some extra knuckles gained from having his hand slammed into a drawer by a rival. Coyle is well-connected and reliable, with a keen eye for a good business deal. Yet as his superiors have grown rich, he still lives in a shabby neighbourhood, saving up any pennies he can. He purchases guns from the wild yet competent young gun-runner Jackie Brown (Steven Keats), but sees an opportunity to prove himself useful to Foley, who actually has more informants within Coyle's underworld than the old man realises. Coyle understands that this is his last chance to escape the world he has become weary of, and spend his remaining years enjoying the sunshine. Yet his information never seems to be enough for Foley, and as the rate of successful arrests rapidly increases, it isn't long until his 'friends' become suspicious.
The Friends of Eddie Coyle could have only been made in the 1970s, when studios in Hollywood were more open to taking risks and allowed writers to tell the story they wanted to tell. This is about as unsentimental and understated as crime dramas get, shot by cinematographer Victor J. Kemper in a loose style more akin to documentary than thriller. The tone is almost nihilistic at times, mirroring the mindset of the majority of the film's shifty characters. It makes for riveting viewing, with Mitchum delivering one of his finest performances in what was already a muscular career. The supporting cast is excellent too, with both Boyle and Keats utterly convincing as bottom-level scumbags, all of whom seem to exist in a state of constant paranoia and aggression. It will leave you incredibly cold, but only the very best crime sagas expose this dangerous world for what it actually is.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizPeter Boyle found it very difficult to draw a glass of tap beer for his part of a bartender. Director Peter Yates arranged for a correctly-filled glass to be available for Boyle below the camera line. Unseen by the camera eye, Boyle then switched glasses,
- BlooperAt the hockey game, Eddie and Dillon arrive and sit together. Eddie, wearing his jacket, goes to get beer for them. When he arrives back at their seats, Eddie's coat is folded and hanging on the rail in front of their seats.
- Citazioni
Jackie Brown: This life's HARD, man, but it's HARDER if you're stupid!
- ConnessioniFeatured in Crazy About the Movies: Robert Mitchum - The Reluctant Star (1991)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- El confidente
- Luoghi delle riprese
- MBTA station, 1 Upland Rd, Sharon, Massachusetts, Stati Uniti(Jackie waits for couple at train station to deliver machine guns)
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 3.000.000 USD (previsto)