Fort_Apache,_The_Bronx

<i>Fort Apache, The Bronx</i>

Fort Apache, The Bronx

1981 film by Daniel Petrie


Fort Apache, The Bronx is a 1981 American crime drama film directed by Daniel Petrie. The film stars Paul Newman as Murphy, a hard-drinking, lonely veteran cop, and Ken Wahl as his young partner, Corelli, both of whom work in a crime-ridden precinct in the Bronx. Although Murphy's life takes a good turn when he falls in love with young nurse Isabella (Rachel Ticotin), the arrival of police captain Connoly (Ed Asner) threatens to tip the neighborhood's delicate balance into anarchy. Danny Aiello, Kathleen Beller and Pam Grier play supporting roles. The film was written by Heywood Gould and produced by Martin Richards and Thomas Fiorello, with David Susskind as executive producer.

Quick Facts Fort Apache: The Bronx, Directed by ...

It was filmed on location in the Bronx. Author Tom Walker sued Time-Life Television, alleging that the film infringed on his book, Fort Apache, but lost after a lengthy court battle. The film received mixed reviews; however, Newman's acting was noted as a strength of the film. In addition, the film was the main inspiration for the long-running police drama series Hill Street Blues.[3]

Plot

Police officers face many challenges in the decaying, impoverished, high-crime South Bronx region of New York City. Among these officers are NYPD officers Murphy and Corelli, who work from the 41st Precinct, nicknamed "Fort Apache" because, to those who work there, it feels like an army outpost in foreign territory. The streets are full of dangerous criminals, such as violent gangs and drug dealers. Unemployment is at an all-time high, and the neighborhood is full of garbage and wrecked buildings. While Murphy is a hard-drinking and lonely divorced father, he has a great camaraderie with Corelli. Murphy's life also improves when he meets a young nurse, Isabella, as they start a romantic relationship.

The precinct is one of the worst and most dilapidated in the entire department, approaching demolition and staffed mostly by officers who are unwanted by, and have been transferred out of, other precincts. Additionally, the precinct's officers do not represent the large Puerto Rican community, as only 4% of the officers are Hispanic in the largest non-English speaking section of the Bronx. Corelli and Murphy attempt to maintain law and order by catching pimps and robbers, but they have conflicts with a newly appointed police captain, Connolly, and corrupt fellow officers. There is rioting due to alleged police brutality, as well as issues related to the deaths of two rookie cops who were shot by drug-addicted Charlotte. During the riot, Murphy and Corelli witness two officers beating up a teenager who was watching the events from a roof with his girlfriend, and they watch in horror as one of the cops angrily picks up the kid and throws him to his death on the street below.

Murphy becomes more intimate with Isabella, and they begin a sexual relationship. While she is sleeping, Murphy notices "track marks" on her skin. She admits that she uses heroin as a way to relax from working in such a stressful environment. She tells him that other hospital employees also use heroin, even the doctors. Murphy and Corelli are being emotionally tormented with the knowledge that they cannot turn in the murderous cops who they witnessed earlier; Corelli says that he will not destroy his career by going against fellow cops, and Murphy laments that he does not have the guts to smash through the "blue wall" and turn in the cops for their vile actions.

Illustrating the futility of policing in the precinct, Charlotte, the killer of the two rookie cops, is never found, despite mass arrests and interrogations. She is killed by a dealer who she tried to kill, and her body is dumped with roadside trash. In turn, Charlotte's killers are killed in a shootout with Murphy when they take hostages in the hospital where Isabella works. Murphy is heartbroken when Isabella dies from a drug overdose, and he wrestles with the moral question of whether he should maintain the "blue wall" and not inform authorities about the officer who threw the teen off the roof. Murphy ultimately decides to resign and report the killing, a decision that will make other officers hate him and view him as a "stool pigeon". Murphy seems to be on the verge of quitting the force when he sees the purse-snatcher fleeing from a house that he burglarized. Murphy and Corelli chase the robber, and the image freezes as Murphy leaps to tackle him.

Cast

Reception

The film opened at number one at the US box office, with an opening weekend gross of $4,565,000 from 795 theaters.[4] After 12 days in 860 theaters, it had grossed $11,266,000.[5] The film would gross more than $65 million worldwide at its time of release.[2]

On release, reviews were mixed.[6] On Rotten Tomatoes, which collects both modern and contemporaneous reviews, the film has an 86% approval rating, based on 14 reviews; the average rating is 6.6/10.[7]

Richard Schickel in Time called it "more like a made-for-TV movie". He added, "The film is not quite up to its star", and is "somewhere between Barney Miller and the works of Joseph Wambaugh". Of the acting, he wrote, "But mainly it is Newman, now 56, who gives Fort Apache its modest distinction."[8]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun Times called it "the most complete collection of cop-movie clichés since John Wayne played a Chicago cop in McQ". He criticized the number of unnecessary scenes and "story threads that lead nowhere". Ebert said about Newman that he is "good in his role", but called the film more of a TV show.[9]

Variety labeled the film "a very patchy picture, strong on dialog and acting and exceedingly weak on story", and criticizes it for its lack of depth.[10]

Nick Sambides Jr. at AllMovie called it a "flinty but otherwise forgettable character study".[11]

Newman called the New York Post "a garbage can" after it published a photo of him on the set with a caption indicating that it portrayed a film crewperson "ward[ing] off a group of Hispanic youths protesting the film", which Newman claimed actually portrayed the crewmember warding off photographers.[12] Because of the dispute, the Post banned him from its pages, even removing his name from films in the TV listings.[12]

Local community groups threatened to file suit against the producers because of the way it depicted their neighborhood in the Bronx, and for the depiction of ethnic minorities (primarily Blacks and Puerto Ricans). Because of this pressure, some changes were made to the script and a note was added to the title card at the beginning of the film.[10][13]

In 1976, Tom Walker, a police officer who had been stationed at the 41st precinct, published Fort Apache,[14] a non-fiction book about his experiences there. After the release of the film, Walker filed a lawsuit against its producers and writers, alleging copyright infringement. Among other things, Walker argued, "Both the book and the film begin with the murder of a black and a white policeman with a handgun at close range; both depict cockfights, drunks, stripped cars, prostitutes and rats; both feature as central characters third- or fourth-generation Irish policemen who live in Queens and frequently drink; both show disgruntled, demoralized police officers and unsuccessful foot chases of fleeing criminals."

Walker lost in federal district court, and again on appeal.[15][16] The appeals court ruled that these are stereotypical ideas, so called "scènes à faire" (French for "scenes that must be done"), and that copyright law does not protect concepts or ideas. The court ruling stated: "The book Fort Apache and the film Fort Apache: The Bronx were not substantially similar beyond [the] level of generalized or otherwise nonprotectible ideas, and thus [the] latter did not infringe copyright of [the] former."[17][18]

Newman also filed a claim against Time-Life, claiming that they had undersold the TV rights (on which he was due 15%) by selling to HBO for $1.5 million and not offering it to others, as well as underreporting foreign-distribution receipts by more than $3.75 million, on which he was due 12.5%. An agreement was settled out of court.[19]

See also


References

  1. . – AFI Catalog
  2. Fort Apache, The Bronx. – The Numbers
  3. "Fred Silverman Interview". Retrieved August 25, 2015.
  4. "'Fort Apache' Bags $4.6 Mil". Daily Variety. February 10, 1981. p. 3.
  5. "'Bronx' B.O. Tops $11 Mil". Daily Variety. February 24, 1981. p. 13.
  6. Battaglio, Stephen (2010). David Susskind: A Televised Life. Macmillan Publishers. pp. 309–310. ISBN 9781429946148.
  7. Ebert, Roger (January 1, 1981). "Fort Apache, The Bronx". Chicago Sun Times.
  8. Sambides, Nick, Jr. – Review: "Fort Apache, the Bronx". – AllMovie. – Retrieved: June 10, 2008
  9. DiGiaomo, Frank (December 2004). "The Gossip Behind the Gossip". Vanity Fair. Archived from the original on September 29, 2011. Retrieved September 13, 2011.
  10. "'Apache' Film's Debut Protested". The New York Times. Cultural Desk. February 7, 1981.
  11. Walker, Tom (1976). Fort Apache. New York: Crowell. ISBN 978-0-690-01047-3.
  12. Walker v. Time Life Films, 784 F.2d 44 (United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit January 7, 1986).
  13. Margolick, David (August 25, 1985). "Legal Notes: Writer Told 'Ft. Apache' isn't Just His". The New York Times. p. 59. Retrieved June 28, 2020.
  14. Beeber, Jessie, and Maura Wogan. – "Is Scènes à Faire Really 'Necessary'?". – Entertainment, Arts and Sports Law Journal. – Spring 2004. – Vol. 15, No. 1
  15. Girard, Tom (February 23, 1984). "Newman, Time Inc., Agree On 'Apache' Compensation". Daily Variety. p. 8.

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