Film Review
One of the best-known American police thrillers of the 1960s,
Bullitt helped redefine and
reinvigorate the genre at a time when it was starting to look distinctly
passé. The actor Steve McQueen had been impressed by the pace
and modernity of Peter Yates's
Robbery
(1967) and insisted that the young English director be hired
to direct
Bullitt.
With its gritty realism, use of real locations, and maverick cop, the
film provided a template for the plethora of police dramas and thrillers
that would blaze across cinema and television screens throughout the
1970s.
The French Connection,
Dirty Harry,
Starsky and Hutch and many more of
that ilk all have their origins in this iconic and massively influential film.
Bullitt is of course best
remembered for its hair-raising car chase in which McQueen's character
pursues a hired killer up and down the streets of San Francisco, a
sequence that offers the thrill and excitement you would only expect to
get from a dozen fairground rides in quick succession. Some highly innovative
camerawork (achieved in part with a handheld camera) draws the spectator
well and truly into the action, making this one of the most riveting
car chases ever filmed. Although McQueen liked to perform
his own stunts, several of the riskier stunts in this film were handed
over to professional stuntman Bud Ekins, who had doubled for McQueen on
The Great Escape (1963).
In one of the high points of his devastatingly short but brilliant
career (a close encounter with an unconvincing blobby
extra-terrestrial notwithstanding), Steve McQueen is well-cast in a role - the taciturn lone cop -
which suits his acting style and persona to a tee. The law
enforcer he portrays is a cold instrument of justice - incorruptible,
tenacious, almost dehumanised by his job. With an automaton-like
single-mindedness, Lieutenant Bullitt is motivated not by notions of
morality or self-interest, but by reasons that are unfathomable to
us. A modern anti-hero, he does what he has to do because of what
he is, the gangster's nemesis. McQueen plays the part to
perfection and would rarely be this convincing and enigmatic in any
subsequent role.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
What starts out as a routine assignment for San Francisco police
lieutenant Frank Bullitt soon turns into something far deadlier.
His job is to protect Johnny Ross, a key witness in a trial that will
smash a crime syndicate run by his brother, the mobster Pete
Ross. The man who stands to gain most from the witness's
testimony is Walter Chalmers, a ruthless career politician with
underworld connections. Johnny Ross is taken to an anonymous
hotel but his police protection proves ineffective and he is shot by
hitmen. When Ross later dies from his injuries, Bullitt conceals
the fact from Chalmers, who does all he can to have the lieutenant
taken off the case. Undeterred, Bullitt sets out to find Ross's
killers, knowing that he is up against a very wily and dangerous
adversary...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.