Village Voice by Alan Scherstuhl
It's a fleet, engrossing, familiar drama, a movie that's forever moving.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
France, Belgium · 2014
Rated R · 2h 15m
Director Cédric Jimenez
Starring Jean Dujardin, Gilles Lellouche, Céline Sallette, Mélanie Doutey
Genre Action, Crime, Thriller
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Newly transferred to the bustling port city of Marseille to assist with a crackdown on organized crime, energetic young magistrate Pierre Michel is given a rapid-fire tutorial on the ins and outs of an out-of-control drug trade. Pierre's wildly ambitious mission is to take on the French Connection, a highly organized operation that controls the city's underground heroin economy and is overseen by the notorious —and reputedly untouchable— Gaetan Zampa. Fearless, determined and willing to go the distance, Pierre plunges into an underworld world of insane danger and ruthless criminals.
Village Voice by Alan Scherstuhl
It's a fleet, engrossing, familiar drama, a movie that's forever moving.
The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis
Fetishizing the tired tokens of the American gangster movie, The Connection is a slickly styled, overlong pastiche. Yet its denizens have a retro glamour and the soundtrack a shameless literalness that’s rather endearing.
The Connection feels at best like a cover version of the classic American crime films of the 1970s, and at worst like so much glossily mounted karaoke.
A passable French homage to the American crime epic, The Connection has plenty of visual style to go with stock characters.
The A.V. Club by Mike D'Angelo
Without a hair-trigger renegade like Popeye Doyle or a long-awaited De Niro-Pacino showdown at its center, this procedural account, running well over two hours, takes on a certain plodding, obligatory vibe.
Christian Science Monitor by Peter Rainer
From scene to scene The Connection is never less than watchable, although it is also never less than predictable.
RogerEbert.com by Peter Sobczynski
While the results inevitably pale in comparison to "The French Connection" — which could be said about virtually every other film currently in release — they do make for an above-average work that offers viewers a new perspective on a familiar story.
Los Angeles Times by Robert Abele
Despite the pedestrian screenplay (by Jimenez and Audrey Diwan), Dujardin and Lellouche are magnetic performers who slip easily into their antagonistic roles.
The grace notes in Dujardin’s performance are an important booster for The Connection, which conspicuously lacks the grit and flavor of William Friedkin’s tangentially related The French Connection, and at worst unfolds like Scorsese-lite.
Slant Magazine by Steve Macfarlane
The film feels utterly infatuated by the cop/crook dividing line long-since drawn, if not flogged, by Michael Mann.
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