Rapid Response: Bullitt

“Bullitt” has not fully achieved the iconic status of some of its other ’60s cop movie peers.

Despite “Bullitt” being one of the definitive ’60s cop movies and being hailed as the starting point for all modern car chases, Peter Yates’s film lacks many of the in-movie charm and out-of-movie extras that would make it iconic.

No sequels, no catch phrases, no spin-offs or copycats, not even a classic villain. It does have the green Mustang, which Ford released as a special edition model in 2008 to commemorate the film. But for all “Bullitt’s” original critical accolade and box office success in 1968, perhaps the film has simply not aged well.

That’s not to call it bad, but it’s approach does not even begin to embellish the more cathartic pleasures of the action genre. Steve McQueen as Lt. Frank Bullitt is one of the era’s flatter male leads. He lacks a backstory, an attitude and even much dialogue, regardless of McQueen’s steely glances and reserved delivery. We realize how quiet he really is when he finally does have an “outburst” near the end of the film. He does have a girlfriend in the lovely Jacqueline Bisset, but her appearances seem superfluous.

I see “Bullitt” not as a gung-ho cop mystery with a salty Clint Eastwood as Dirty Harry, nor as a gritty, hard-nosed thriller like “The French Connection” (which in my view tops “Bullitt’s car chase), but as a strict procedural designed to show a cop immersed in the job, one whose tragedy is that he has no outside life. Continue reading “Rapid Response: Bullitt”

Rapid Response: Day for Night

We come to expect certain things when we watch a movie. If a big introductory shot shows a lot of people, it eventually lingers and picks out the handsome guy in the crowd who will quickly become our focus for the next two hours. But in “Day for Night,” the camera plays a trick on us, diverting our attention several times over before coming back to that first man.

But even that’s a trick, because it’s all a part of one big scene in a movie, and the take needs to be done again. We’ve seen intros like this so many times, but few directors have ever asked us to look twice.

Francois Truffaut’s “Day for Night” is one of the great movies about the movies. It’s a funny, ironic ode to cinema that simultaneously celebrates the realism of film while scoffing at the phoniness of big studio productions. Continue reading “Rapid Response: Day for Night”