French Connection 2
The movie follows Detective 'Popeye' Doyle (Gene Hackman) as he is still hot on the trail of slippery drug trafficker Charnier (Fernando Rey), who eluded him in New York.
1 October 1944, Grenoble, Isère, France
10 March 1914, Montrouge, Seine [now Hauts-de-Seine], France
27 May 1931, Reims, Marne, France
30 October 1938, Long Beach, Long Island, New York, USA
20 September 1917, A Coruña, Galicia, Spain
23 December 1921, Novi Pavljani, Croatia, Yugoslavia [now Croatia]
February 23, 2009
If you take away comparisons with the original, it's a reasonably solid, if flawed, crime thriller; but it does shrink into the shadow cast by its vastly superior predecessor.July 02, 2007
Nearly as high powered and gritty as the first 'Connection.'April 01, 2009
may wrap up the story the original began, but it just doesn't have the same magicSeptember 26, 2004
A classic with a terrifid car chaseMarch 14, 2009
While it certainly is a couple of notches below its action classic original, French Connection II is still a darned good action film that maintains the core of its central character and has some added layers that are genuinely disturbing.December 17, 2009
looks lost in space and timeMarch 11, 2009
you can't help but feel a sense of disillusionment ... because the finality of it is so harsh and so sudden that it draws your attention less to the idea of justice served than it does to the brute simplicity of violent retribution and the ultimately cyclMarch 24, 2009
The last ten minutes are the best thing about it (that final shot is one of the best of the '70s), and it's no coincidence that in this ten minutes Frankenheimer returns to his technician passions.February 22, 2009
More conventional than its predecessor, but it's still unconventional by the cop thriller standard set by a wash of anonymous, lesser films. [Blu-ray]July 25, 2002
Couldn't even hold the original film's hat, but earns points just for not sucking outright.March 14, 2015
French Connection II, sequel or no, comes off as more of a felt work, and what I make contact with through it is a director.November 12, 2004
John Frankenheimer's ("The Manchurian Candidate") version outshines William Friedkin's 1971 original.