Agreed. I believe Lalo Schifrin (I probably spelled that wrong) scored these movies. He also scored the tv show "Mission Impossible". He was a musical genius in the ways of modern jazz beats.
The Enforcer is the second best Dirty Harry film as far as I'm concerned but the original beats all the sequels because the original was movie making perfection. It is one of the greatest films ever made.
Hard to imagine it been almost fifty years since the original came out. The briefcase looks like one a neighbor has. He is a retired college professor and it is the type used.
The original Dirty Harry was the first R-rated movie I saw (at 16 years old.). My dad took me…watched it 50 times over the years. One weekend, we drove 90 miles over to San Francisco and visited all the places they filmed the movie. What a memory!
I always preferred Magnum Force. The Enforcer is enjoyable but the villains feel stock and it sorta rushes to the end. MF felt like a true companion piece to the original, humanising Harry and reinforcing his sense of justice.
Not really. Not today. Wasn't even those times. Specifically that jazzfunkbigband noise...whoooaaaah. Why they put music everywhere, just let guns singing... Clint is the Greatest!!!
Eastwood is a big fan of jazz. He produced and narrated a wonderful documentary about Dave Brubeck about two years before Dave's passing. Of course he also produced and directed the film bio "Parker" about great jazz saxaphonist Charlie Parker.
Hypothetical situation huh okay I am standing on a street corner and Ms. Gray comes up and propositions me, telling me that if I give her 5 dollars she will come home with me and give me the ol shuttle and pony.
Lalo Schifrin really mastered the art of jazzy action. Jazz music or this kind of non-orchestral or synth was often used in movies for comedic moments or even comedic chases. Still to this day even kids shows like Brum use jazz for comedy. But Lalo Schifrin’s Mission Impossible, Dirty Harry and Bullit score rlly set itself apart by still keeping you very much engaged in the action.
Possibly one of the greatest film chase scenes of the 70's. BTW, I visited Coit Tower last year while on a work trip in SF. It is indeed 'vaguely phallic'.
You got it, baby! Thats some 1st class orchestral jazz-funk. I'll have to look into who actually did the music for this film, but it sounds just like something quincy jones' orchestra would perform
*@Anthony* Considering how jazzy he is its easy to understand you thinking its him. Spanish is as close as you can get, but he's Argentenian. My generation & our boomer parents generation know him for _Mission Impossible,_ although he scored ALOT of 60's & 70's TV Anyway, I just got through looking it up. Jerry Fielding scored _The Enforcer._ I put him in league with Morton Stevens, Dave Grusin, even Syd Lawrence & John Barry They could write ANY style of music, any melody. And their musicians are world class. Turns out Jerry died in 1980 at age 58. Too young. I cant recall specific titles, but his name used to come up in the credits often in 70's movies
If the scene continued, a PC Liberation Theology priest comes upon Callahan arresting this black guy in the church and gets on him for the social injustice of it all.
First Dirty Harry movie I watched all the way through. I expected to hate it but in fact loved it. The 2 inspectors worked really well together as characters. Sad ending...
I'm elated that someone finally isolated this scene, and posted it.. thanks!!! the scene itself is great, a classic, but the music is absolutely fantastic, fits the scene perfectly..!! stands up pretty well on its own, too
Should have included when Tyne Daly found out what was in the suitcase, lol. Great lady. Loved her in Cagney and Lacey. Still somewhat naive characters. A very courageous lady for having an interracial marriage in the 60s and lasting many years. The music, oh wow. So 70s.
Great movie and Clint Eastwood is a movie icon and it was hilarious when his partner found out she was carrying around a bomb 💣 and had to spend some time in the can because of it 🚽
JAY LOVE Actually Jay, the running sequences make no sense to anyone who grew up in San Francisco. Not even close, they're all over the city. First starting off at the Hall of Justice at 850 Bryant Street (back parking lot, now a Sheriff's County Jail Complex). Continuing running up and around in North Beach, and then suddenly they're back completely across town (in another complete direction) winding up finally at 23rd and Capp Streets (with the bad guy breaking into the pastor's office) at my old church (where I was actually baptized back in the early 60's) Trinity Presbyterian Church (now possibly known as Mission United Church). Either way, for sheer enthusiasm, and entertainment it's fun to look at, but for a person who is actually from The City by the Bay, it can leave a smile (not humanly possible to do that) on one's face. 😃😄😃
@@robertwallace6492 ... Movies aren't known for accurately depicting city streets. In the Gauntlet, Clint drives his bus into Phoenix on the freeway passing the Adams St exit and the Mesa Dr exit sequentially, or nearly so as best as I can remember. The Adams St exit was I-17 and Mesa Dr was on the St Rte 360 at the time, now the US highway 60. The exits are about 17 miles and three cities apart. Of course, the whole movie is a ridiculous farce. Its purpose was to put Sondra Locke on screen as she was Clint's squeeze at the time.
JAY LOVE in ConAir they totally screw up Las Vegas, putting that giant guitar on The Strip (at least two blocks from where it really is) put Fremont Street in line with and at the end of the strip (instead of perpendicular as is reality), and all of the casinos are shown out of order in between.... Most movies totally screw up locations as either the director is trying to make a statement with building appearances, or the producer is getting funding from business owners and so allows them say as to where they appear in the movie; or some odd mixture of those two reasons.....
Yeah, there are also scenes in "Dirty Harry" that don't make a lick of sense if you're at all familiar with San Francisco geography, such as a resident.
The TV series "Streets of San Francisco" does the same, too. Lt. Stone will get a code 3 call while in Bayview/Hunters Point area for an incident taking place at China Basin. The string of cutaway shots in the film has him driving through Pacific Heights to get to China Basin.
1:52 I saw this film decades ago, only once, so I didn't remember too much about it, but I'm pretty sure that there's a bomb in the satchel she just banged against the wall...
Nothing like 70s and 80s cinema. A long, gone era
Clint was 46 yo in the movie and he was in pretty good shape doing all that running 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼👍
46 is young you should be in max shape
your whole family needs you
That's literally what I was thinking, damn this guy could move back in the day.
Poor lil Tyne Daily was trying to prove herself to Harry. She was adorable in this movie
A chase scene to Jazz music. EPIC EASTWOOD!!!
It was always jazz all the way back to the movie Play Misty For Me.
I love the Jazzy musical scores of the 60s and 70s movies.
3.00 NOOKIE SCENE! CALAHANS INVITED TO THE 11PM SHOW
Agreed. I believe Lalo Schifrin (I probably spelled that wrong) scored these movies. He also scored the tv show "Mission Impossible". He was a musical genius in the ways of modern jazz beats.
You cant beat these old DH movies 👍
The Enforcer is the second best Dirty Harry film as far as I'm concerned but the original beats all the sequels because the original was movie making perfection. It is one of the greatest films ever made.
Hard to imagine it been almost fifty years since the original came out.
The briefcase looks like one a neighbor has. He is a retired college professor and it is the type used.
The original Dirty Harry was the first R-rated movie I saw (at 16 years old.). My dad took me…watched it 50 times over the years. One weekend, we drove 90 miles over to San Francisco and visited all the places they filmed the movie. What a memory!
@@jeffs6809 That’s a cool story. Clint is one of the best!
@@jeffs6809 Damn. What a treat. It's a sh1th013 Callahan wouldn't recognize now. What a mess.
I always preferred Magnum Force. The Enforcer is enjoyable but the villains feel stock and it sorta rushes to the end. MF felt like a true companion piece to the original, humanising Harry and reinforcing his sense of justice.
putting jazz to this was genius
I love it.
DEFINITELY! It gave some great footage even more greatness! Gotta admit-that was some super-cool Jazz! Dig it!
It's d '70s baby! ^_^
Not really. Not today. Wasn't even those times. Specifically that jazzfunkbigband noise...whoooaaaah. Why they put music everywhere, just let guns singing... Clint is the Greatest!!!
@@perrtivrtsu6602 Yeah but jazz was kinda comedy
Eastwood is a big fan of jazz. He produced and narrated a wonderful documentary about Dave Brubeck about two years before Dave's passing. Of course he also produced and directed the film bio "Parker" about great jazz saxaphonist Charlie Parker.
R.I.P. Albert Popwell, DeVeren Bookwalter, and the rest of the cast from the Dirty Harry films. :(
I gots to know.
"How fast can you run the 100 ?"
doctorxring come on callahan you know how this board works!
doctorxring I
Hypothetical situation huh okay I am standing on a street corner and Ms. Gray comes up and propositions me, telling me that if I give her 5 dollars she will come home with me and give me the ol shuttle and pony.
doctorxring ...OBVIOUSLY Relevant
@Stephen Anthony 🤣🤣 like one of those dudes on national geographic
1:17 it's that 70's "i'm gonna get your ass" funk
Lalo Schifrin really mastered the art of jazzy action. Jazz music or this kind of non-orchestral or synth was often used in movies for comedic moments or even comedic chases. Still to this day even kids shows like Brum use jazz for comedy. But Lalo Schifrin’s Mission Impossible, Dirty Harry and Bullit score rlly set itself apart by still keeping you very much engaged in the action.
The Enforcer soundtrack was composed by Jerry Fielding, not Lalo.
And the Death Wish franchise.
I love this jazz and I love they're playing it where the action is in San Francisco.
Harry always gets his man 🔫
In these times, we need more cops like that.
The music makes the scene...
Porn score at it's best
@@drunkenlahey These kids today can't fathom the overlapping between porn music and those old Quinn Martin shows. 😂
Yes that old Hammond Organ and scat Jazz Saxophone.
Hell yeah!
joo ne ishim
Possibly one of the greatest film chase scenes of the 70's.
BTW, I visited Coit Tower last year while on a work trip in SF. It is indeed 'vaguely phallic'.
Pretty much every tower in the world is vaguely phallic.
You got it, baby! Thats some 1st class orchestral jazz-funk. I'll have to look into who actually did the music for this film, but it sounds just like something quincy jones' orchestra would perform
@@magnificentmuttley154 I believe it was Lalo Schifrin (sp?) who did the music for this movie
*@Anthony* Considering how jazzy he is its easy to understand you thinking its him. Spanish is as close as you can get, but he's Argentenian. My generation & our boomer parents generation know him for _Mission Impossible,_ although he scored ALOT of 60's & 70's TV
Anyway, I just got through looking it up. Jerry Fielding scored _The Enforcer._ I put him in league with Morton Stevens, Dave Grusin, even Syd Lawrence & John Barry
They could write ANY style of music, any melody. And their musicians are world class. Turns out Jerry died in 1980 at age 58. Too young. I cant recall specific titles, but his name used to come up in the credits often in 70's movies
The music matches the scene perfectly.
If the scene continued, a PC Liberation Theology priest comes upon Callahan arresting this black guy in the church and gets on him for the social injustice of it all.
Love the first shot taking out the aerial LOL
Aaaahhh...That nostalgic '70s music background action scene. B-)
You’d have to be in damn good shape to run that far, that long, up and down stairs.
Richard Wyant
I'll let you into a secret about the movie making business. They don't film scenes continuously/uninterrupted.
I fucking love everything about this scene. Especially the music! I wanna make something like this someday.
The music suggests soft porm. Or maybe that's just me?
It's a shame that the music has been cut short and edited. The jazz piece is almost a carbon copy of Maynard Ferguson's Primal Scream.
Old America. Where people had a degree of athleticism and didn't live on carbs
First Dirty Harry movie I watched all the way through. I expected to hate it but in fact loved it. The 2 inspectors worked really well together as characters. Sad ending...
Yeah, I renember watching the film years ago and the ending was very heartbreaking, specially because I didn't expect her to... you know
I'm elated that someone finally isolated this scene, and posted it.. thanks!!!
the scene itself is great, a classic,
but the music is absolutely fantastic, fits the scene
perfectly..!!
stands up pretty well on its own, too
Absolutely agree. The music was fabulous. It made me forget I was just watching a clip !
Except that it's edited...this scene's even better when not all chopped up.
After I watched this film recently it rlly stuck in my mind that I wanted to rewatch it, especially the great music
Great scene, even better music.
I’m guessing the music was Clint’s idea,but it is so perfect.
It likely was he loves jazz
It's hilarious how fast the bad guy is, and slow he makes Harry look. Obvious he'd have got away in a minute. Still love the scene though.
This and the chase scene from Point Break are two awesome scenes.
Jerry Fielding music to the rescue. RIP 🎶🎺🎬🎥
Should have included when Tyne Daly found out what was in the suitcase, lol. Great lady. Loved her in Cagney and Lacey. Still somewhat naive characters. A very courageous lady for having an interracial marriage in the 60s and lasting many years. The music, oh wow. So 70s.
Great movie and Clint Eastwood is a movie icon and it was hilarious when his partner found out she was carrying around a bomb 💣 and had to spend some time in the can because of it 🚽
I like what that priest said to Clint Eastwood's character Callahan and then he knocks that suspect out and said something to the priest
My favorite of all the Dirty Harry films.
They went from a little alley near Broadway and Sansome, to a building near Fishermans Warf area and ended up on around 25th and Shotwell street.
JAY LOVE
Actually Jay, the running sequences make no sense to anyone who grew up in San Francisco.
Not even close, they're all over the city.
First starting off at the Hall of Justice at 850 Bryant Street (back parking lot, now a Sheriff's County Jail Complex).
Continuing running up and around in North Beach, and then suddenly they're back completely across town (in another complete direction) winding up finally at 23rd and Capp Streets (with the bad guy breaking into the pastor's office) at my old church (where I was actually baptized back in the early 60's) Trinity Presbyterian Church (now possibly known as Mission United Church).
Either way, for sheer enthusiasm, and entertainment it's fun to look at, but for a person who is actually from The City by the Bay, it can leave a smile (not humanly possible to do that) on one's face. 😃😄😃
@@robertwallace6492 ... Movies aren't known for accurately depicting city streets. In the Gauntlet, Clint drives his bus into Phoenix on the freeway passing the Adams St exit and the Mesa Dr exit sequentially, or nearly so as best as I can remember. The Adams St exit was I-17 and Mesa Dr was on the St Rte 360 at the time, now the US highway 60. The exits are about 17 miles and three cities apart.
Of course, the whole movie is a ridiculous farce. Its purpose was to put Sondra Locke on screen as she was Clint's squeeze at the time.
That's like the chase scene from Bullitt. But hey they make for great movies!
JAY LOVE in ConAir they totally screw up Las Vegas, putting that giant guitar on The Strip (at least two blocks from where it really is) put Fremont Street in line with and at the end of the strip (instead of perpendicular as is reality), and all of the casinos are shown out of order in between....
Most movies totally screw up locations as either the director is trying to make a statement with building appearances, or the producer is getting funding from business owners and so allows them say as to where they appear in the movie; or some odd mixture of those two reasons.....
Crashing through a skylight window onto the set of a seedy porn movie. Wasn't life terrific in 70s Frisco.
Yea, lets go back to the seventies now we're older and non the wiser
Amen to that bro. Get the time machine ready!
Ok. just topped up the crystal reactor. How does the summer of 1976 sound?
pete wright Perfect.
Just too bad it was censored.
Great music in that clip and oh what an ending!
Clint was upto something in those times and days
Tyne Dale Was a very beautiful woman back then.
I remember her from Cagney & Lacy.
I love this scene
What the hell's going on here? What're you doing here? Who are you? Great dialogue :-)
There was a lot of nudity in that scene so I guess the uploader edited it out and that's why the dialogue sounds odd
And that's how to catch a criminal. Good work Harry. ❤👍👏👌
You know it's on... When the flute music kicks in 😎
Tyne - the bag lady!! She got all the good jobs.
The Lalo Schifrin soundtrack is class. This piece is surprisingly called 'rooftop chase'.
Lalo didn't compose the soundtrack for the Enforcer. Jerry Fielding did
Damn, a foot chase from the Hall of Justice on Bryant to a rooftop in Pac Heights/Marina, and then it's suddenly the Mission.
Yeah, I caught that too...
Yeah, there are also scenes in "Dirty Harry" that don't make a lick of sense if you're at all familiar with San Francisco geography, such as a resident.
The TV series "Streets of San Francisco" does the same, too. Lt. Stone will get a code 3 call while in Bayview/Hunters Point area for an incident taking place at China Basin. The string of cutaway shots in the film has him driving through Pacific Heights to get to China Basin.
Cool as anything music and a hilarious chase, can't beat it.
Man, I’m getting winded just watching this.
Some good music
just saying , knowing how fast she couldve run the 100 would have been helpful
At 1 minute, that looks like Meathead.
JENDALL714 Who ???
@@oddities-whatnot Rob Reiner from All in the Family.
JENDALL714 It is, actually.
Make more such movies , man
2:27 I was half expecting tommy wiseau to come out that door.
"oh, hi mark". lol
Parkour back in our parents' days.
Who has been messing with my TV antenna again ????
When Clint draws that .44 Magnum at 0:44...#HandCannon
Clint's thoughts on television... 2:29
Antenna wasn't so lucky as it got blown clean off.
Make my day...
Looks like Meathead (Rob Reiner) had a short cameo in this...
Hall of justice!
Sixth floor, I think is the men's jail.
DADDY❤ playing with his babys
Le PHANTOM de la Opéra😂😂😂👻
Art Pepper alto solo,great
"Talk about Ms. Cheekbones: the Asian lady."
Love him
He doesn’t shoot the bad guy, but shoots the antenna mast.
Riiiiiiight...
What a great Jazz score. Sounds a little like Issac Hayes.
0:59 - Meathead!
Wow! That does look like Michael
I think that is Rob Reiner
Going up to Braodway, turn left, half a block, "On Braodway" punk placce.
Clint was young here , great movie the jazz was awsome like Tyne Daly the blck man can run for sure but got tired in the end
He just ran into meat head.
Likening the funky groove.
Yeah.!! yes,. its like Funky Jazz
Inspector Moore never had the makings of a varsity athlete.
Right at the 1:44 mark you can see Miss Grey and a Shetland Pony.
LMAO
Looks like Meathead at 60 seconds.
I thought so.
Exactly! LOL!
yeup
"But he was black so I let it go". "Oh that was nice of you...." "He was built like Mohammed Ally!"
I wonder if this is when him and Gloria were going through a rough patch in their relationship.
When you let your Pandora hat fly off your head u need to get caught lol
One minute they're South of Market, then the next minute they're above North Beach. Now that's covering a lot of ground!...
Only one guy in the street, and dude runs into him 😀
Great scene.David Silber
Using jungle drums when the black gentleman is on screen!
Tutt tutt tutt Clint 😂
That card was played ages ago. You're late, missed the boat and the train and bus and ..what ever. Sorry about that. Have a nice day anyway.
What are jungle drums?
I’ve walked San Francisco. You can’t run up those hilly streets.
Can You?
UA-cam is out of control with commercials
The music makes it feel like I’m watching an episode of Cowboy Bebop…
POOR PEOPLE LOST THEIR RECEPTION 2.30
NO NEWS TONIGHT! AT 6PM!
where can I find the clip where harrys partner (tyne daly ) gets shot?
Nice Fender-Rhodes solo.
Don't u know the criminals have more rights than honest citizens? Once society wakes up this will continue indefinitely.
Sounds like Chic Correa. Love that progressive jazz rock.
Lalo Schifrin..he's a legend..Mission Impossible and countless others.
Very 70s music but I like it
Hey its the chick from Gag-Me & Lacey
harry chasing trouble
and does his own stunts
Pmsl watching this scene 😀😁😂😃
1:52 I saw this film decades ago, only once, so I didn't remember too much about it, but I'm pretty sure that there's a bomb in the satchel she just banged against the wall...
Nope, that's magnum force.
@@BegsToDiffer She wasn't in Magnum Force.
you are correct,but I don't think it's ever explained whether it would have exploded or not.
Yeah LOL she had a bomb ......prolly why she was in the can when she found out what it was.
Marvelous
"Rocky is science fiction."
Chris Rock
0:59 was that Meatball from All In The Family? If not its a perfect double?
Meathead not Meatball
I always wondered why Tyne Daly’s character wore the shoes she wore. Must’ve been terrible to try and run in.
She was just being stylish.
90 years young. Eh...
Still going strong 💪
It was the seventies Clint Eastwood kicked ass not like the punks today.
That[s a very young Clint