"Picking your feet in Poughkeepsie" is one of The French Connection's most memorable quotes, but what does the bizarre line actually mean? Director William Friedkin has directed several movies that are considered classics. The most famous would be 1973's The Exorcist, a possession movie based on a true story that is regarded as one of the greatest horror movies of all time — though Friedkin disputes it's a horror film. His follow-up Sorcerer is a grueling reimaging of The Wages Of Fear and is a nail-biting suspense thriller. While it was positioned to be a major success in 1977, it was thoroughly beaten at the box office by a certain underdog called Star Wars.
Friedkin's run of classics began with 1971's French Connection - a movie that holds up today — which cast Gene Hackman and Roy Scheider as New York cops «Popeye» Doyle and Buddy Russo respectively. The film was based on a 1969 book of the same name, which charted the real-life investigation of officers Eddie Egan and Sonny Grosso as they investigated a major drug ring. The French Connection had a profound impact on the cop movie genre, thanks to its documentary-feel, iconic car/elevated train chase and Hackman's uncompromising — and often unlikable — turn as the uncompromising Popeye.
Related: The Exorcist True Story: What Happened To Roland Doe, The Real Regan
The studio didn't have much in the way of expectation for The French Connection, so its critical and commercial success came as a major surprise. One of The French Connection's most famous scenes involves Popeye and Buddy chasing down a suspect, and during their interrogation, they play a strange game of «Good Cop, Bad Cop.»Jaws' star Scheider's Buddy tries to calm down his seemingly agitated partner to bond
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