
Last night I watched
The Friends of Eddie Coyle (1973) on the new
DVD from the
Criterion Collection. I watched it once straight through and then again with the commentary track from director
Peter Yates. Yates explains that the whole film was shot on location in and around Boston with no studio scenes whatsoever. It is one of his three favorite films of all the pictures he's made (and
Bullitt is not one of the other two). Yates says it was Robert Mitchum's favorite role. He says that everything said on the screen was already in
George V. Higgins' wonderful novel. What Yates
doesn't say is that Higgins once worked for the U.S. Attorney's office in Massachusetts, worked organized crime cases, and was a journalist for the
Boston Globe and
Boston Herald-American. This would be about the time that
Whitey Bulger and the
Winter Hill Gang were busy in Boston. And Bulger was hijacking trucks and whacking guys on Friday nights and serving as an informant to FBI Special Agent
John Connolly on Mondays, a lot like
Peter Boyle's character, Dillon, does in
The Friends of Eddie Coyle. You might remember that Whitey Bulger (who is
still a fugitive, incidentally) was the model for Jack Nicholson's character, Frank Costello, in Martin Scorsese's 2006 film
The Departed.
So, anyway, author George V. Higgins is dead now, but he knew whereof the phuck he spake. And he wrote great dialogue. And
The Friends of Eddie Coyle is filled with it.
"This life is hard, but it's harder if you're stupid."