The Seven-Ups

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The Seven-Ups

1973 movie poster
Directed by Philip D'Antoni
Produced by Philip D'Antoni
Written by Albert Ruben
Alexander Jacobs
(screenplay)
Sonny Grosso
(story)
Starring Roy Scheider
Tony Lo Bianco
Larry Haines
Richard Lynch
Music by Don Ellis
Cinematography Urs Furrer
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) December 14, 1973
Running time 103 Min.
Country USA
Language English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The Seven-Ups is a 1973 American film released by 20th Century Fox. It stars Roy Scheider as a renegade policeman who is the leader of The Seven-Ups, a police team who uses dirty, unorthodox tactics to snare their quarry. The film was produced and directed by Philip D'Antoni, who was responsible for producing such other gritty cop films as Bullitt and The French Connection.

Contents

[edit] Story

Buddy Manucci (played by Scheider and is a loose remake of the character of Buddy he played in The French Connection, a character who also used dirty tactics to capture his enemies) has been getting flak from the higher-ups in the New York City police force he works for due to the fact that his team of renegade policemen, known as The Seven-Ups (the name comes from the fact that most convictions done by the team heralds jail sentences to criminals from Seven years and Up) has been using unorthodox methods to capture criminals. Also, lately, there has been a rash of kidnappings. The twist is that it seems that only upper echelon criminals (Mafioso and white collar types) are the ones being kidnapped. This leads to many plot twists in which Manucci tries to figure out the puzzle, with help supplied to him by an informant (Tony Lo Bianco), who turns out to be untrustworthy, which leads to a death. Manucci figures out the puzzle, but not before The Seven-Ups splinter from the fallout of the film's events, and Manucci's life is in jeopardy.

[edit] Chase Scene

As he did with Bullitt and The French Connection, Philip D'Antoni again utilized the work of stunt driver Bill Hickman (who also has a small role in the film) to create another chase sequence for this film. Upper Manhattan is the place of choice for this sequence, which was edited by Jerry Greenberg who also has a producer credit here and who won Academy Awards for his editing work on Bullitt and The French Connection.

The chase sequence is regarded as one of cinemas greats, and is located near the middle of the film. Hickman performed yet another memorable chase sequence in which he drove the car being chased by Roy Scheider. The chase itself lends heavily to the Bullitt chase, with the two cars bouncing down the gradients of uptown New York (a la San Francisco's steep hills) with Hickman's 1973 Pontiac Grandville pursued at wheel-breaking speed by Scheider's Pontiac Ventura. Even the engines sound alike - Scheider's Pontiac and McQueen's Mustang.

Everything is rendered to painstaking detail, the gritty realism and danger of each tire-busting slide, accompanied by close camera angles and camera-cars moving at high speed, parallel to the action car, added to which an almost complete lack of dialogue and music.

In the accompanying behind-the-scenes featurette of the 2006 DVD release of the film, Hickman can be seen co-ordinating the chase from the street where we also see another example of how memorable (and dangerous) these sequences were: on cue, a stuntman in parked car opens his door, only for Hickman's vehicle to take it completely off its hinges, where (from the behind-the-scenes footage) we see the door fly off at such a force it could so easily have killed the close-quarter camera team set-up only yards away (it missed them only by chance). The end of the chase was Bill's own idea, an 'homage' to the death of Jayne Mansfield, where one of the cars smashes into the back of an eighteen-wheel truck, peeling off its roof like a tin of sardines.

[edit] Trivia

  • Sonny Grosso, who was one half of the real police team that cracked The French Connection case (Eddie Egan was the other half), and served as a technical advisor in the film adaptation, shares a story credit here on The Seven-Ups and has an uncredited cameo in the film as the courier for the counterfeit money sequence that opens the film. As a side note, Scheider played the Sonny Grosso character in The French Connection.

[edit] External links