It’s safe to say The
French Connection is a seminal film. Not just among the all-time greats,
but as influential a movie as one can think of. All subsequent crime films had
to take The French Connection into
consideration when making artistic decisions. (The Godfather is not a crime film. It’s an epic soap opera about
criminals. One of a handful of the greatest films ever made, but it’s just
proof that no genre is irredeemable when done properly.) I’ve lost track of how
many times I’ve seen The French
Connection, and I can reliably be counted on to watch the chase scene
anytime some Facebook reference gets me to looking at car chases in general. (The Seven Ups will also get a chunk of
my time in those circumstances.)
A couple of years ago I wrote a post about the greatest
screen adaptations of all time, particularly those where the film exceeded
the book. Jaws. The Godfather. L.A. Confidential. I mentioned The French Connection, too, but it had been years since I read the
book. I decided it was time to renew acquaintance. I was 15 years old and had
never read such a documentary account of the innards of a detail police
investigation when I read it the first time. I wondered how it would hold up to
my more experienced eyes.
I needn’t have wondered. In fact, I wish I hadn’t. To be
fair, the book is dated. Tastes, even
in reportage, have changed dramatically.
Robin Moore’s The French Connection
came years before Tom Wolfe’s The Right
Stuff. Still, it’s been a long time since I read such a deadly dull
recitation of events that are themselves not inherently interesting.
Legend has it that much of the movie was improvised, even
though Ernest Tidyman won an Oscar for his screenplay. He earned it, if only
for getting people to realize Moore’s examination of every goddamn tree in the
forest could be turned into an entertaining and still realistic film. Where
Tidyman and William Friedkin use Popeye Doyle’s obsessive investigational
techniques to hold together what is, when viewed closely and critically, a
pretty flimsy plot, they never let you forget what’s at stake. Sure, Popeye’s
an asshole—so was Eddie Egan, the cop that character is based on—but we’re
fascinated to watch how he relentlessly pursues an investigation no one else
has much confidence in. (When Doyle’s boss, Samuelson—played by the real Eddie
Egan—asks Popeye’s partner if he agrees with Doyle’s wild claims, the best Buddy
Russo can come up with is, “I go with my partner.”)
Granted, the film has the luxury of making the entire
investigation seem as if two cops and two feds handled it all; in fact there
were over a hundred investigators. The film also has the advantage of being
able to gloss over things the book pretty much has to explain. The problem is
that those are often the best parts of the book. How they figure out who Patsy
Fuca (Sal Boca in the movie) really is. How they get the name of Jean Jehan
(Alain Charnier in the film) after following him to his hotel. That was
fascinating. Unfortunately it’s only about 20% of the book. The rest is spent
describing, in detail, which streets the cops followed Patsy down as he tried
to lose them. Then which streets they travelled trying to find him after he
gave them the slip. Gruesome detail of the most tedious events until it’s hard
for a reader who knows what’s going on to figure out where they are. Maybe a
native New Yorker would bask in the intimacy. I’m a country boy and it just got
tedious.
The French Connection
is a wonderful example of how fiction can tell a better truth than facts. The
filmmakers made up almost everything about the main story except for its
inciting event—Egan and Grosso actually did stop by the Copa for a drink when
they stumbled across Fuca and his friends throwing money around “Like the
Russians were in Jersey,” to use a line from the movie. Little throwaway lines
characterize the cops and provide backstory better than twenty pages of
minutiae.
I already considered The
French Connection a film that exceeded its source material; I
underestimated
how much. No need to read the book. Watch the movie, understanding it’s a
fictionalized account and what really happened took a lot longer and was a lot
harder than what you see. (Not that the real cops weren’t extraordinarily lucky
a few times.) Keep all that in the back of your mind and enjoy one of the best
examples ever of not letting facts get in the way of the truth.
(Someday I’ll get around to breaking down Don Ellis’s superb
soundtrack.)
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