The Seven-ups (1973) [SIMPLE]
You cannot discuss The Seven-Ups without its centerpiece: the ten-minute high-speed chase through the streets of Upper Manhattan and the Bronx. Produced and directed by D'Antoni (the producer of Bullitt and The French Connection ), it is widely considered one of the greatest chases in cinema history.
The film centers on Buddy Manucci (Roy Scheider), who leads an elite, semi-autonomous NYPD unit known as the "Seven-Ups." Their name stems from their target: criminals whose offenses carry sentences of seven years or more. Unlike the stylized detectives of later decades, Scheider’s crew looks and acts like blue-collar workers—wearing drab suits, driving nondescript cars, and operating in a legal "gray zone" that would be unthinkable today. The Seven-Ups (1973)
Featuring stunt driver Bill Hickman (who also drove in Bullitt ), the sequence is notable for its lack of music. The "soundtrack" consists entirely of roaring V8 engines, screeching tires, and the terrifying thud of suspensions bottoming out on New York’s uneven streets. It culminates in a shocking, visceral tribute to the real-life death of Mansfield-style crashes, grounding the spectacle in a jarring moment of reality. Visual Style and Atmosphere You cannot discuss The Seven-Ups without its centerpiece:

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