The Seven Ups
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Philip D'antoni
Robert Burr
Lou Polan
Tony Lobianco
Joe Spinall
Matt Russo
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Synopsis
Buddy Manucci is an NYPD investigator who runs a task force that targets criminals whose offenses will result in minimum sentences of seven years if convicted. Manucci's best informant, Vito Lucia, has double-crossed him by using his secret list of loan sharks to kidnap these men and hold them for ransom. When this plan results in the death of one of Manucci's men, he and his task force go to war with the city's criminal population, bending the law along the way to track down Lucia.
Director
Philip D'antoni
Cast
Robert Burr
Lou Polan
Tony Lobianco
Joe Spinall
Matt Russo
Bill Hickman
Ken Kercheval
Victor Arnold
Jerry Leon
Roy Scheider
Rex Everhart
Richard Lynch
Larry Haines
Crew
Don Bassman
Philip D'antoni
Don Ellis
Urs Furrer
John Godfrey
Jerry Greenberg
Sonny Grosso
Sonny Grosso
Bill Hickman
John C Horger
Alexander Jacobs
Les Lazarowitz
Stephen Rotter
Albert Ruben
Theodore Soderberg
Ed Wittstein
Ted Zachary
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The Seven Ups
What those two films had in common was the same producer, Philip D'Antoni, as well as stunt coordinator Bill Hickman. Both men reunited for a third film, The Seven-Ups (1973), which remains more of a cult film than its better-known predecessors; in fact, its lineage is a somewhat tangled one. The credited source is a story by Sonny Grosso, the real-life New York police detective turned producer who was portrayed (with some fictional embellishments) by Roy Scheider in The French Connection (renamed as Buddy Russo, nicknamed "Cloudy"). An official sequel, French Connection II, was released in 1975 without the Grosso/Russo character and with John Frankenheimer taking up the directorial reins, but for many The Seven-Ups is an equally valid follow up.
Apart from being based on another Grosso story, the film brings back Scheider as Buddy Manucci, essentially the same character he played in the previous film with a slightly more crooked morality. Here he runs the title organization, a group of cops who use underhanded tactics to nab culprits whose offenses garner seven years or up in prison. After a counterfeiting bust, Buddy and his men become involved in an increasingly dangerous crime network involving the mob, inside informants, and kidnapping.
For the first and only time, D'Antoni actually moved into the director's chair for this film, which necessitated a car chase worthy of his two previous main credits as producer. The end result, a ten-minute spectacular tearing through the streets of New York with real vehicles violating a countless number of safety codes, is often cited by devotees as perhaps the greatest of all time with Hickman devising a string of gasp-inducing vehicular stunts.
Another French Connection alumnus returning here was late jazz composer Don Ellis, whose work on that film earned him a Grammy. However, he wasn't the initial choice; the original score was written by Johnny Mandel, who had scored hits with his soundtracks to films like M*A*S*H (1970) and The Sandpiper (1965). However, his work was rejected and Ellis was brought in to write a replacement score. Both of these iterations received their debut soundtrack releases in 2007 (on a CD paired up with Mandel's score for 1982's The Verdict), offering a fascinating contrast between the film we know and the one that might have been.
By Nathaniel Thompson
The Seven Ups
Quotes
Trivia
The vehicle that Roy Scheider is seen driving is a 1973 Pontiac Ventura Sprint coupe.
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1973
Released in United States 1973
Remake of "The Seven Ups" (USA/1973) directed by Philip D'Antoni and starring Roy Scheider and Victor Arnold.