The French Connection II
1975 -
Rated
R (MPAA)
Release Date: 02/24/2009
Features:
Blu-ray Disc Features:
Full Frame - 1.33
Widescreen - 2.35
Audio:
DTS Master Audio 5.1 - English
Mono - English, French, Spanish
Subtitles - English, Spanish - Optional
Additional Release Material:
Interviews: A Conversation with Gene Hackman
Audio Commentary: Director John Frankenheimer
Trailers: Theatrical Trailers: Fox On Blu-ray, THE FRENCH CONNECTION, THE OMEN, YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN
Text/Photo Galleries:
Galleries: Still Galleries
Time:
119
mins.
J&R Item # 1007876_4
UPC # 024543529910
Label: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
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Buying Info
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Gene Hackman stars as hard-boiled New York narcotics cop Popeye Doyle in the sequel to the Oscar-winning FRENCH CONNECTION. Still on the trail of heroin kingpin Charnier (Fernando Rey), whom he's dubbed Frog One, Doyle heads for Marseilles. On arrival, his aggressive ugly-American persona alienates French inspector Barthelmy (Bernard Fresson), and his limited ability to speak French doesn't help. Frustrated by Barthelmy's lack of progress, he slips his assigned police protection and goes looking for Frog One on his own. He's soon captured by Charnier's minions, who lock him in a fleabag hotel and shoot him up repeatedly with free samples of their product until Doyle is completely addicted. Charnier uses the detective's narcotized state to interrogate him and is surprised to find that he's virtually ignorant about his operation. The disdainful Charnier has him dumped in front of police headquarters, and Barthemy arranges for him to be put in isolation. Doyle undergoes the lengthy, grueling ordeal of quitting heroin cold turkey while his desperation to capture Charnier builds inside him. Hackman's brilliant performance highlights this somewhat overlooked sequel; Claude Renoir's camera fully captures the squalor of the milieu, and Frankenheimer engineers a harrowing final chase.
Cast:
"...Hackman exploit[s the tension] most effectively. The perverse intensity and the anguish...recall some of [Frankenheimer's] best work in THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE and SECONDS..."
-- Vincent Canby
, (New York Times)
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