Peter Yates Movies
British director
Peter Yates graduated from his early-'60s low-budget feature debut, the musical comedy
Summer Holiday (1963), starring
Cliff Richard and the Shadows, to the superb thriller
Robbery (1967) with
Stanley Baker. It was a short jump to the American thriller
Bullitt (1968), starring
Steve McQueen, the definitive cop thriller of its decade with the first car chase that anyone remembers in movies, through the streets of San Francisco.
John and Mary (1969), starring
Dustin Hoffman and
Mia Farrow, was a big date movie at the end of the 1960s, and
The Hot Rock (1972) was a groundbreaking comedy/thriller of its era, while
The Friends of Eddie Coyle (1973) was a crime drama with one of
Robert Mitchum's best performances. Since then, Yates has moved easily between genres, from the black comedy of
Mother, Jugs, and Speed (1976) to the comic book-style action of
Krull (1983), pausing along the way for the sensitive period drama
The Dresser (1983) and the suspense of
Eyewitness (1981). ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide