Bullitt
Bullitt is a 1968 Warner Bros. action crime/mystery/thriller motion picture starring Steve McQueen, Robert Vaughn, and Jacqueline Bisset, with Don Gordon, Carl Reindel, Felice Orlandi, Vic Tayback, Pat Renella, Paul Genge, Bill Hickman, and Brandy Carroll.
Related Topics:
1968 - Warner Bros. - Action - Crime - Mystery - Thriller - Motion picture - Steve McQueen - Robert Vaughn - Jacqueline Bisset - Don Gordon - Carl Reindel - Felice Orlandi - Vic Tayback - Pat Renella - Paul Genge - Bill Hickman - Brandy Carroll
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The director was Peter Yates. The story was adapted for the screen by Alan Trustman and Harry Kleiner, based on the novel titled Mute Witness (1963) by Robert L. Fish. Lalo Schifrin wrote the original music score, a memorable mix of jazz, brass and percussion.
Related Topics:
Director - Peter Yates - Alan Trustman - Harry Kleiner - Novel - Mute Witness - 1963 - Robert L. Fish - Lalo Schifrin - Music - Score - Jazz - Brass - Percussion
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The movie won the Academy Award for Best Film Editing (Frank P. Keller); and was nominated for Best Sound.
Related Topics:
Academy Award - Best Film Editing - Frank P. Keller - Best Sound
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Bullitt is most-remembered for its central car chase scene through the streets of downtown San Francisco, one of the earliest and most influential car chase sequences in movies. The scene had Bullitt in a dark highland green 1968 Ford Mustang GT-390, chasing two hit-men in a black Dodge Charger. In 2001, Ford unvailed a limited edition Ford Mustang GT Badged "Bullitt" and took styling cues from the '68 movie car and even mimicked the legendary sound. The movie as a whole, including the car chase, makes extensive use of the San Francisco Bay Area.
Related Topics:
San Francisco - 1968 - Ford Mustang - Hit-men - Dodge Charger - San Francisco Bay Area
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113 mins.; Technicolor
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An ambitious politician, Walter Chalmers (played by Vaughn), is holding a Senate subcommittee hearing in San Francisco on Organized Crime in America and has a key witness that he hopes will further his national aspirations as he brings down a powerful Mafia syndicate.
Related Topics:
Organized Crime - America - Mafia
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The witness scheduled to testify, Johnny Ross, worked with his brother, Chicago mobster Pete Ross (played by Tayback). Johnny stole $2,000,000 dollars from his Mafia cronies and two attempts were made on his life before he left for San Francisco. Chalmers has the Police Department place Johnny Ross (played by Orlandi) in protective custody and requests that the unit headed by Detective Lieutenant Frank Bullitt (played by McQueen) be assigned to guard him.
Related Topics:
Chicago - Police Department
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Bullitt and his men, Detectives Delgetti (played by Gordon) and Stanton (played by Reindel), will take turns giving Ross around the clock protection at an undisclosed cheap hotel near an overhead freeway. Before Ross enters the hotel, he makes several phone calls. Later, while Stanton is guarding him, the desk clerk calls and says Chalmers and a friend are there and want to come to the room. Stanton calls and tells Bullitt, who tells him no, that Chalmers would not be there at one in the morning. In the meantime, Ross walks over to the door and unlocks it. A pair of hit-men, Mike (played by Genge) and Phil (played by Hickman), then burst into the room and Mike shoots Detective Stanton. He then turns and shoots Ross.
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Stanton and Ross are both in the hospital. Bullitt wants to get to the bottom of the case and catch who shot them, as well as the Mafia boss who ordered the hit. Chalmers is angered and blames Bullitt, threatening to ruin his career if Ross dies. He is not interested in the injured policeman or the hit-men, only in the hearings that will launch his national political career, and wants to shut down Bullitt's investigation.
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Stanton survives his wounds, but Ross dies during surgery. Bullitt suppresses the news and keeps the death secret, having the doctor misplace the chart and the body placed in the morgue as an unidentified John Doe. He then investigates the phone calls Ross made. He finds that one was to a hotel in San Mateo; to a woman registered under the name Dorothy Simmons.
Related Topics:
Morgue - John Doe - San Mateo
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With the hearing the next day, Bullitt begins to realize that this dead mobster may not be who he seems. The gunman, Mike, then appears at the hospital to finish Ross off, but gets away. The scene is set for the legendary and exciting high-speed car chase through San Francisco, with the other thug, Phil, driving.
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They are following Bullitt to set him up for an ambush, but lose him. Though he seems unaware they are after him, he turns the tables on the criminals when he backtracks and comes up behind their car, surprising
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them. Phil and Bullitt then slam down the gas pedal to the metal and have a flat out race between two bellowing muscle cars as they tear up the roads. The chase comes to an end after Mike shoots at Bullitt's car with a 12 gauge shotgun and Phil loses control of the car. They crash into a gas station and both are killed in the fiery explosion.
Related Topics:
Gas pedal - Shotgun
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But the spectacular car chase and action is not the engine that drives the movie to its culmination. Back at the police station, Bullitt begins to check out Dorothy Simmons, the woman Johnny Ross called in San Mateo. He needs a car, but one is not available at the station. His trophy architect girlfriend, Cathy (played by Bisset), drives him to the swanky hotel, where he discovers the woman has been murdered. Cathy gets out of the car and wanders in on the crime scene, where she sees the murder victim.
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She is upset as they leave. After a while, she gets out of the car. He comes to her. She has trouble accepting his job, and the true nature of police work. "You're living in a sewer, Frank!" she says.
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Bullitt and Delgetti check the luggage of the victim, which has arrived at the police station. He finds out her true identity was Dorothy Renick (played by Carroll), and that she was scheduled on a flight from San Francisco International Airport to Rome, Italy, with her husband, Albert E. Renick. He also finds a lot of money.
Related Topics:
San Francisco International Airport - Rome - Italy
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He then tells Delgetti to call immigration in Chicago and have them send Ross's passport application while he gets a finger print check. When he gets a copy of the passport photo, Bullitt realizes Chalmers has been conned. The man who was murdered was not mobster Johnny Ross, he was actually Dorothy's husband, Albert Renick, a used car salesman from Chicago with no Mafia connections.
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The real Johnny Ross must have paid Renick to impersonate him, while letting Ross use his passport and identity to leave the country. Ross must have also set Renick up to get the heat off him, then killed his wife to shut her up.
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Bullitt has to stop him before he can make his getaway on the flight to Rome as Albert Renick. He arrives at the airport just as the plane is about to take off, but phones the plane and the pilot returns to the terminal. Bullitt enters the plane as the passengers are coming off and sees the real Johnny Ross (played by Renella). Ross jumps from the back door of the plane. There ensues a foot chase across the runway and field, with Ross shooting at Bullitt. Inside the terminal, Bullitt finally corners Ross at the door and fires two shots from his gun, the only time he uses it in the movie. With Ross dead, the case is finally closed.
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The movie ends with Bullitt returning home to find Cathy asleep. He enters the bathroom and looks into the mirror, quietly contemplating.
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~ Table of Content ~
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| ► | Trivia |
| ► | Quotes |
| ► | External links |
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Gallery: The 10 Coolest James Bond Cars Ever
: Sweet cars and amazing, if improbable, car chases have been essential elements of James Bond movies since the series began in 1962. The tradition continues in Quantum of Solace, which finds our favorite superspy behind the wheel of a hot Aston Martin DBS and — in a nod to these eco-conscious times — a Ford Edge that runs on hydrogen (in the film, if not in real life). But it takes more than a fuel cell to make the list of the 10 coolest Bond cars ever. Left: Aston Martin DB5 The quintessential Bond car appeared in Goldfinger, and it is both the most famous Bond car and one of the most iconic vehicles in the history of film. In addition to gorgeous lines and stunning speed, Bond's DB5 featured machine guns, a bulletproof shield, radar and that über-cool ejector seat that could villains flying at the push of a button. : This one's tricky because Bentley never produced a car called the Mark IV. Ian Fleming made that up. Bond drove a 1933 Bentley convertible with an Amherst-Villiers supercharger in the novel Casino Royale. Various Bentleys have appeared in Bond films, including From Russia With Love, in which our hero seduces Miss Sylvia Trench behind the wheel of a 1930 Bentley Derby similar to the one in this photo by Flicker user starpitti. : The Lotus Esprit from The Spy Who Loved Me is almost as famous as the DB5, if only because it could turn into a submarine at the flick of a switch. The car featured surface-to-air missiles, torpedoes and depth charges, all of which we find amazing given the shaky reliability of the electrical systems in British cars. : Strictly speaking, this wasn't Bond's car. It was driven by his assistant, Aki, in You Only Live Twice. But it makes the list because it was chock-full of cool gadgets ? including a television, a cordless phone and a voice-activated stereo ? that are commonplace today but the stuff of science fiction in 1967. Toyota built a GT without a roof because Sean Connery was too tall for the coupe. : Aston Martin returned to Bond's fleet in 2002 after the spy's brief dalliance with BMW in the late 1990s. The Vanquish that appeared in Die Another Day came with an ejector seat and a cloaking device that rendered the car invisible. We prefer the more muscular and understated DBS in Casino Royale because it's a better match for Daniel Craig's darker, more brooding Bond. : Yes, Bond drove a Mustang, albeit briefly, in Diamonds are Forever, and he looked almost as cool as Steve McQueen did driving his 'stang in Bullitt. Connery took the Mach 1 on a wild ride through Vegas, getting up on two wheels to squeeze through an alley. The film editors weren't so skilled: The car is shown entering the alley on one set of wheels and emerging on the other. : Pierce Brosnan drove the convertible Beemer in The World Is Not Enough, but it was a BMW in name only. The Z8 was still a prototype when filming started, so the film featured a Cobra kit car wearing BMW skin. We're still not sure where Q found room for the surface-to-air missiles, let alone the six cup holders, but now we know where they put the movie camera.: Bond stole this car from a dealership showroom to make an escape in The Man With the Golden Gun, making a spectacular corkscrew jump over a canal to elude his pursuers. The stunt was planned with help from a supercomputer at Cornell University, and it is the only time in history an AMC Hornet has ever looked cool.: This Whyte Industries jobby appeared in Diamonds Are Forever. It's a moon buggy. 'Nuff said.: Another Bond car that wasn't what it appeared to be. The 2CV couldn't outrun its own belching plume of exhaust, so the car in For Your Eyes Only was tricked out with a hotter engine, a modified transmission and a reworked frame. It still had trouble outrunning the humble Peugeots ? Peugeots ? pursuing it, so Bond had to resort to skilled driving and good luck to make his escape.
Re-enact Bullitt With GPS Maps
So you've driven to San Francisco in your 2008 Bullitt Edition Mustang. You have the Garmin plugged into the cigarette lighter, an iPod full of Lalo Schifrin and you're not leaving until you've blown out your shocks on that street where Steve McQueen caught air again and again. You know, the really hilly one? Wait, there's more than one really hilly street in San Francisco? Since the SF Convention and Visitors Bureau is highly unlikely to provide a map of historical sites where you can burn out your tires and terrify pedestrians, the kind folks at Seero.com have a solution: a GPS overlay of the entire chase, mapping out every fender-smashing second. Seero calls it "geo-broadcasting," and the same technology can be used with live or pre-recorded videos. For example, in your Bullitt reenactment, you can send out a live geo-broadcast to let the folks back home see where you bottomed out your Mustang, the very streets you marked with a trail of oil and the exact spot you were taken into police custody.Seero is the brainchild of Justin Cutillo, David Rothschild, and Dan Rummel who started the site to let us poor slobs stuck behind computer screens see the world through someone else's eyes -- or at least through someone else's Flip. Rothschild said technology has "just gotten up to speed within the past year or so" to enable such live GPS-linked video shenanigans as Alex Roy's insane Cannonball Run record. Unlike other video sites, Seero uploads the exact coordinates of where a video took place from a GPX file collected by a GPS device, and lets the user pair the GPS data with the video file. "If you knew you were taking a turn, you could pause the video and line it up. It's as simple as that," Cutillo said. According to Rothschild, interest in the site grew from fans of geocaching expeditions and "outdoorsy adventures" to a dedicated "niche market of gearheads and bikers" who want to record their travels and remember exactly where that awesome pie stand was, or to chronicle just how lost they got in the far reaches of Quebec. One user hooked up a video camera to a remote-control plane and showed off films of the French countryside, while another walked across the Pacific Crest Trail. Needless to say, Cutillo and Rothschild admit they're jealous of some of the trips Seero users submit to the site. For those of us who thought GPX was a company who makes those boomboxes they sell in drugstores, the Seero interface is also cool for creating mashups like the McQueen video, to show exactly where a chase scene took place or even to overlay GPS coordinates to an old family road trip Super 8 movie. Home users will even be able to follow along the exact route of car chases, as Seero is planning to link up local news choppers with GPS and video technology that will be broadcast live. We're anxiously awaiting the O.J. Simpson white Bronco mashup. By the way, the jump shown above was filmed on Filbert Street. Photo courtesy Seero. Which famous chase scene would like to see get the GPS "geo-broadcasting" treatment? Use the Reddit widget to let us know. Show suggestions that are: hot | new | top-rated or submit your own suggestion Submit a Prediction While you can submit as many suggestions as you want, you can only submit one every 30 minutes. No HTML allowed. Back to top
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