IMDb RATING
6.0/10
3.7K
YOUR RATING
Shaft is back to find the murderer of an old friend on the cold hard city streets with a little help from his new friends.Shaft is back to find the murderer of an old friend on the cold hard city streets with a little help from his new friends.Shaft is back to find the murderer of an old friend on the cold hard city streets with a little help from his new friends.
Julius Harris
- Capt. Bollin
- (as Julius W. Harris)
Angelo Gnazzo
- Al
- (as Angelo Nazzo)
Featured review
My Take: Fine Harlem-set thriller with a thrilling climax.
Richard Roundtree returns as the black foul-mouthed private eye John Shaft, reprising the role he made famous in the previous film SHAFT. Made in 1972, SHAFT'S BIG SCORE clearly shows its age as an old star vehicle. Almost everything, from clothing, quips and concept, have been outdated by today's bigger standards. Still, there's much to enjoy in Roundtree's iconic portrayal as the private eye Shaft as he gets tangled up with the mob, led by gangster Gus Mascola (Joseph Mascolo).
So much of the film is devoted to a lot of mob meetings and Shaft at his private eye work, and less comes the action. Up until the finale, a terrific long helicopter chase, the film is devoted to Ernest Tidyman's (THE FRENCH CONNECTION) well-written if often tedious screenplay. Long out-dated and outdone by better anti-Bond cop movies as DIRTY HARRY and THE FRENCH CONNECTION which still stood the test of time. Still, SHAFT'S BIG SCORE! is an enjoyable caper, Roundtree and the action finale delights.
Rating: *** out of 5.
Richard Roundtree returns as the black foul-mouthed private eye John Shaft, reprising the role he made famous in the previous film SHAFT. Made in 1972, SHAFT'S BIG SCORE clearly shows its age as an old star vehicle. Almost everything, from clothing, quips and concept, have been outdated by today's bigger standards. Still, there's much to enjoy in Roundtree's iconic portrayal as the private eye Shaft as he gets tangled up with the mob, led by gangster Gus Mascola (Joseph Mascolo).
So much of the film is devoted to a lot of mob meetings and Shaft at his private eye work, and less comes the action. Up until the finale, a terrific long helicopter chase, the film is devoted to Ernest Tidyman's (THE FRENCH CONNECTION) well-written if often tedious screenplay. Long out-dated and outdone by better anti-Bond cop movies as DIRTY HARRY and THE FRENCH CONNECTION which still stood the test of time. Still, SHAFT'S BIG SCORE! is an enjoyable caper, Roundtree and the action finale delights.
Rating: *** out of 5.
- vip_ebriega
- Jun 22, 2008
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis would be the final Shaft film starring Richard Roundtree to be shot primarily in New York City because MGM wanted to turn the character into more of a James Bond like character, starting with "Shaft In Africa" which, despite positive reviews, was a disappointment financially. The 2000 update would return the franchise back to its New York City roots.
- GoofsObvious fake helicopter that Shaft shoots and it explodes. Its rotors were not spinning before the explosion and it was hanging from the overhead steel framework of the abandoned shipyard before being dropped in flames. Additionally, a fiery explosion happens on the ground underneath the helicopter even before it hits the ground.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Macked, Hammered, Slaughtered and Shafted (2004)
- How long is Shaft's Big Score!?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Big Bamboo
- Filming locations
- 833 Jamaica Avenue, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA(Cypress Hills cemetery - Cal Asby's funeral)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $1,978,000 (estimated)
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