Blog

  • Shiva Baby: Review

    Shiva Baby: Review

    Shiva Baby Synopsis: Danielle (Rachel Sennott) attends a family shiva where she is accosted by her relatives, outshined by her ex-girlfriend Maya (Molly Gordon), and face-to-face with her sugar daddy (Danny Deferrari) and his family. Based on a short film of the same name.

    Returning home for family functions is never ideal, but rarely has this uncomfortably awkward rite of passage come to life like in writer/director Emma Seligman’s debut feature Shiva Baby. In her big-screen adaptation of a deeply personal short film, Seligman exhibits her immense abilities in one of the year’s most assured films to date.

    From the premise alone, one would not expect Shiva Baby to implement a visceral edge akin to sweaty thrillers like Uncut Gems, yet Seligman skillfully infuses her familiar premise with newfound vitality. Her intensely claustrophobic framing serves as a boisterous manifestation of Danielle’s bottled-up angst, with Seligman utilizing a melody of zooming quick pans and thundering score choices to depict the intense eyes of her judgemental family (the looming eyes of casual onlookers feels like a deafening Greek chorus).

    Shiva Baby should honestly be showcased in film classes. Seligman’s effort displays just how much a few thoughtful techniques can morph a familiar interaction into something with pulse-pounding intensity. The alluring style aids Seligman’s all-too-real depictions of familial/cultural pressures, placing audiences right in Danielle’s shoes as she combats a wave of critiques from cloying members of her church.

    It’s a sentiment that could feel very one-note in the wrong hands, but Seligman’s clever comedic flourishes give some much-needed sweetness to Danielle’s bitter experience. Seligman effortlessly draws laughs from her commonplace situations, often relaying the uncomfortable cat-and-mouse dialogue exchanges through the spectrum of her Jewish culture. Everything has a welcomed specificity to it, yet the whole experience still conveys a universalness that connects with audiences.

    Shiva Baby isn’t only a breakout effort for its talented writer/director. Star Rachel Sennott grabs the audience’s interest from the opening frames, with her deft balance between dry wit and vulnerable emotive beats imbuing dimension into her persona (her deadpan facial expressions often speak volumes). Molly Gordon makes for a bright onscreen partner as Danielle’s ex-lover while the enclave of talented character actors brightens their archetype roles (Fred Melamed steals the show as Danielle’s eager father).

    Shiva Baby is a true delight. Seligman’s film strikes a great balance between acerbic humor and revealing character beats, jumpstarting what should be the start of a wonderful career.

    Shiva Baby is now available on VOD platforms.

    EXCLUSIVELY ON MUBI FROM 11 JUNE 2021

  • Drought: Review

    Drought: Review

    Carl (Owen Scheid) and Sam (Hannah Black) are brother and sister. They both work at a local supermarket where Carl takes care of the shopping trolleys, making sure everything is in place. Carl is also obsessed with the weather, a passion that particularly comes in handy when during a drought he discovers that a storm is on the way. So, with Sam, their friend Lewis (Drew Scheid) and their designated babysitter, Lillian (Megan Petersen), they borrow their mum’s ice cream truck and set out to chase the storm while their parents are away.

    Drought is a charming comedy drama written and directed by Hannah Black and Megan Petersen in their feature directorial debut. Set in the early Nineties, Drought takes the audience back to a seemingly simpler time in a small town in America where nothing really important mattered.

    The cast are all great and the film goes along at a steady pace, making it just as light and breezy as their ice cream truck journey.

    Owen Scheid and Hannah Black also have great chemistry, making them really feel like brother and sister and the dialogue between them is funny and natural. Also, Owen Scheid’s performance as an autistic person is particularly good because – Owen Scheid is actually autistic himself.

    This brings a real authenticity to the role and of course never makes it feel like the audience is watching an actor doing a performance of someone so far removed from themselves.

    Carl’s character is also not a typical portrayal of an autistic person, although there are traits which audiences may recognise such as when he has a meltdown at work and his obsessive hobby. Although Carl is no savant, just an autistic boy with an interest and his character isn’t juvenilised either. Drought shows an autistic person in a loving family and with the same kind of sibling tensions that may fit any brother/sister relationship.

    Drought is a wonderful story, not just for one that shows an autistic actor in a major role, but just as a well told, directed and acted story which will appeal to a wide audience.

  • The Best Films About Physicists

    The Best Films About Physicists

    Good news for all current and future physicists –  there are lots of interesting films about physics and physicists, so you will have a lot to choose from. Watching films about one’s field of interest is advantageous for many reasons –  it can serve as some sort of physics homework help, be a source of inspiration or turn out to be a great distraction when one simply can’t deal with their physics homework assignment. No matter whether you are currently looking for physics homework help or simply want to take a break, here are the best films about physicists. 

    The Theory of Everything

    This movie tells the story of Stephen Hawking who needs no introduction not only in the world of physics, but also in the world of those who have nothing to do with physics. Stephen Hawking was an English theoretical physicist and cosmologist. The film is based on the memoirs of his wife, Jane Hawking. Even though the film is more focused on the life of Stephen Hawking rather than on the science of physics, it will still be interesting to watch for every physics major as it offers a glimpse into the life of one of the most renowned scientists in the world. What is more, it may come in handy if you are looking for physics homework help as you will most likely get a few unconventional ideas on how to solve the physics related problem you are currently dealing with. Seeing such an inspirational movie also helps students get better at dealing with their physics homeworks, as well as be more ambitious in terms of their own career in this field. Apart from that, this film shows how Stephen Hawking developed his groundbreaking theories, as well as explains to the general public what those theories are all about. 

    Infinity

    This film is focused on the life of a renowned physicist Richard Phillips Feynman and his marriage to Arlene Greenbaum. She suffered from tuberculosis and died while Richard Feynman was working on the Manhattan Project. If you want to find out more about the personality of Richard Feynman, this movie will be a perfect watch for you. The film is quite emotional, but it  is enjoyable as well. After watching it, you may even start looking for the best online physics degree as you’ll surely become more interested in the field of physics. Apart from that, you may also find answers you’ve been looking for, especially if you need urgent physic homework help. Even though there are a few flaws in portraying Feyman’s dynamic character, you will not regret watching this movie. 

    Interstellar

    While a lot of physicists and physics fans consider this film to be quite controversial, it is vital to mention that physicist Kip Thorne was a science advisor which is why it is worth mentioning. In addition, the science behind the explanation of the black hole is presented in a realistic way in the movie. However, some of the story elements make no scientific sense which is the reason why physicists are divided in their opinions regarding this movie. However, the film deals with many physics concepts, so it will be interesting to watch for those who are interested in this field. If you have already figured out where you can get help with physics assignments, watching this movie will be a great idea of how to spend your free time in a fun and educational way. 

    The Abyss

    The Abyss is a science fiction film. The plot revolves around the American submarine that sank in the Carribean. The US search and recovery team is sent to work on an oil platform crew to recover the submarine. The movie has often been praised for the realistic portrayal of deep sea exploration. That is the reason why it will be interesting to watch for all physics fans. Even though watching it may not do much in terms of physics homework help (in case you are looking for inspiration or clues on how to deal with your assignment), it’s a perfect movie to watch in your free time. There is no doubt that you will get even more fascinated with the world of science after watching it. 

    Apollo 13

    This film is a masterpiece. So, Apollo 13 was a routine mission to the Moon commanded by the astronaut Jim Lovell until the crew encountered a series of problems. Thus, it becomes a story of survival in space. While scientists and engineers on the ground do their best to bring the damaged spacecraft back to Earth, three astronauts are trying to survive in space. What is also vital to mention is that this film retains scientific integrity. This movie does justice to the whole world of science by offering a realistic portal of such a significant event in the history of space travel. 

  • The Forty Year Turf Rumble

    The Forty Year Turf Rumble

    Forty Year Turf Rumble: Street Gangs on Film-From the Dead Kids to the Warriors. By Steven G. Farrell.

    A long-enduring genre in Hollywood has been that of the street gangs on the mean-streets of the United States.  These motion pictures usually took place in the tenement districts of New York’s Manhattan or Brooklyn waterfront neighborhoods, and involved the rumbles between the ethnic, religious and racial divisions within those confines. From the gritty days of the Great Depression during the Thirties to the dancing disco days of the Seventies, Irish, Italian, Jewish, Black and Puerto Rican bullyboys have been heading into battle with baseball bats, switchblade knifes, and handcrafted zip guns, making a wasteland out of the already urban decay and squalor within the radius of their domains.  The United States has always billed itself as the land of the freedom and the pursuit of happiness.  However, that freedom and happiness has always come with a price: courage, warfare and savage justice. Success goes to the survival of the fittest; and in Hell’s Kitchen, Brownsville or Red Hook, the fittest were the tough goons who joined street gangs to promote their climb up the ladder. “From sperm to worm” as the Jets sang in West Side Story. One had to scrape to get into a gang and then the gang had to scrape together to keep every inch of their tiny kingdoms within their grasps.

    When Dead End was released in 1937, it was meant as a social message about how the dismal economical times had resulted in the city’s youngsters joining gangs to find a purpose in a bleak time. The hardscrabble nature of the times drifted to 1948 with The City Across the River, to 1959 with West Side Story and up to The Wanderers and The Warriors in 1979. Apparently, the growing prosperity of the passing decades never penetrated to reach the pavements of the big city. The intervention of well-meaning social workers, concerned parents and watchful police officers did nothing to stem the tide of gang membership over this forty-year period. Boys will be boys.

    Hollywood is certainly a reflection of American society. Motion pictures about street gangs have always reflected the stark realities of urban living amongst the poorer classes and how it alarmed the comfortable middle classes in the suburbs outside of the big cities. However, these movies were primarily produced because they were successful at the box office. Dead End, The City Across the Street, West Side Story, The Wanderers and Warriors were all big gross earners in their times.  All five films have continued to remain popular on television. 

    Samuel Goldwyn Studios took Sidney Kingsley’s hit Broadway play, Dead End, seriously enough to invest a $300,000 budget into the project. Director William Wyler had a sterling cast to work with: Humphrey Bogart (Hugh “Baby Face” Martin), Claire Trevor (Francey), Allen Jenkins (“Hunk”) and Joel McCrea (Dave Connell). The film also had enough room left over to squeeze in such stalwart character actors as Marjorie Main (Ma Martin) and Ward Bond (The Doorman). It may be needless to state that the real stars of the show were the Dead End Kids: Tommy (Billy Halop), Dippy (Huntz Hall), Angel, (Bobby Jordan), Spit (Leo Gorcey),   TB (Gabriel Dell, ) and Milty (Bernard Punsley).

    The dockside-swimming hole with the backdrop of the tenements on East 53rd Street also provided the locale that promoted the atmosphere of the movie. It was the slums in all of its picturesque glory: with underwear hanging from the clothe lines, peddlers hawking their wares, and coppers pushing their way through crowds of smelly poor people to collar the rascals who roomed the area’s streets and alleys. The premises were a sad and helpless place that symbolized a sad and hopeless country that had been ravaged by a decade-long financial downturn. The dockside was on the Lower East Side of New York City, but it could have been anywhere in the United States. The trashiness of the surrounding probably also could have been easily recognized across the globe from London to Tokyo. When the times get tough, people get tougher to survive. Staying alive could mean stealing something to eat, slashing a face with a knife, or paddling a pampered rich boy’s behind with a wooden board with nails sticking in it.

    The primary storyline revolves “Baby Face” Martin’s return to his old stomping grounds, where he hoped to reconnect with his long-lost girlfriend and his destitute mother. Both encounters turn sour: Francey is now a streetwalker and Ma slaps his face and calls him a “dirty dog.” Baby Face and Hulk decide to kidnap the pampered rick kid in order to salvage the aborted trip down memory lane. The infamous crook’s final caper falls to pieces and he is shot to pieces in his old haunting grounds.

    Of secondary important are the Dead End Kids, who never seem to have a gang name other than the 58th Street Gang. Milty, a newcomer to the neighborhood, receives a rough initiation before being accepted into the fold. After victimizing the new kid on the block, they turn to tormenting a rich kid who taunts them from the balcony of his ritzy penthouse apartment that borders the slums. The rich kid is lured into an abandoned building, where he receives a beating. His expensive clothes are torn to shreds and his fancy watch is ripped off.  Shortly afterward, Tommy, the leader, uses a knife to cut the hand of the boy’s father in order to escape. In between these violent interludes, the Dead End Kids agree to a rumble with street gang who live at the other edge of the block. Both gangs seem to be very small by the standards of most film gangs.

    As a crowd gathers around to gawk at Baby Face splattered faced down in the gutter, the doorman of the pent house (Ward Bond) is able to I.D Spit as a member of the gang who had tormented to wealthy boy. Spit commits the ultimate sin in gang life by ratting out Tommy as the one who had done the stabbing with the knife. Towards the end of the picture, Tommy is about ready to use the knife one last time by slashing Spit across the face with “the mark of the squealer.” Leo Gorcey wrote in his self-published autobiography that the gang represented the main ethics groups of the East Side: “Now if I were to write a joke about the Dead End Kids it would have to start something like this: Once upon a time there were two Jews, a garrulous Guinea, a dumb Dutchman, a hysterical Irishman and me.”

    Graham Greene, the British novelist and man of letters, wrote that Dead End “was “one of the best pictures of the year.”  Besides being an outstanding picture, Dead End was an indictment of the growing problem of juvenile delinquency.  Other critics apparently agreed with Greene, for the film received nominations for four academy awards, as well as paved the way for an additional seven Dead End Kids movies. Leo Gorcey and Huntz Hall starred in a slew of The East Side Kids and The Bowery Boys feature-length films over the next twenty years that were spin-offs from the 1937 film.

    Irving Shulman’s novel, The Amboy Dukes, made the bestseller list before it was transformed into a movie in 1949 and renamed The City Across the River.  The gang featured in the film took their name from Amboy Street in their Brooklyn neighborhood of Brownsville. This section of the borough was heavily Jewish until 1960 when white flight transformed it into a Puerto Rican neighborhood.

    Shulman’s opening paragraph gives the reader a descriptive account of the gangs and the neighborhood: “The Bunches stood on the corners. The Bristol Friends, the Herzl Street Boys, the Amboy Dukes. Each bunch idled on its own corner, although members from Sutter Avenue bunches, East New York cliques, and the Williamsburg gangs might be visiting and strengthening alliances. Off Pitkin Avenue were the unobtrusive but sinister poolrooms, barbershops, and fly-speckled candy stores that served as hangouts and depositories for brass knuckles, knives and an occasional gun.”

    The film is notable in that it was the first movie of Tony Curtis’ long reign as a Hollywood star. It was also the launching of Richard Jaeckel very distinguished career as a character actor in film and on television. Tony (Mitch) and Richard (Bull) were second fiddles to Peter Fernandez Johnny Cusack (Peter Fernandez) , Crazy (Joshua Shelley),   and  Benny (Al Ramsen) in the storyline. The gang also became less identifiable as a Jewish gang, with the name Cusack being Irish. The film, which was hard-hitting enough with one of the characters being thrown off a building and another young girl being rape, couldn’t hold a candle to the original novel for stark realism and savage violence. The book also included a scene where the gang waylaid two Puerto Rican boys, leading to a war council in order to setup a rumble between the Jewish and Puerto Rican teenagers. Any mentioning of race was sponged out of the movie, leaving behind only the brief mentioning of a war council with another neighborhood gang. The deletion of the racial conflict in the book was left out of the movie to avoid trouble with censorship or the outcry of concerned citizen groups.

    The members of the Amboy Dukes are high school kids who are left to their own devises as their hard-working parents try to make-up for lost wages during the depression by working overtime and weekends during World War 2. Johnny’s parents, played by Thelma Ritter and Luis Van Rotten are working to payoff old debts, as well as saving for a small grocery store that will enable to put the ghetto behind them. Crazy is perhaps the only gangbanger in film history to hold a full-time job: he worked on a delivery truck for a meat market. Johnny and his fellow Dukes help a neighborhood gangster collect protection money from a storekeeper, hassle girls on the streets and sass back at their high school shop teacher. Things start to snowball when the unforgiving teacher is killed by Johnny and Bennie in an altercation. To compound their troubles, the Dukes begin to steal one another’s girlfriends and to rat out one another to the police. By the end of the movie the gang has fragmented beyond repair.  Crazy is arrested for rape. Bennie takes a fall off a tenement roof. Johnny is stuffed into a patrol car by the cops. A narrator warns the viewing audience that Johnny’s story is the nation’s problem.

    Oddly enough, at the end of the movie the fourth wall is broken, and the Dukes are introduced to the audience. The pavement rats are now revealed to the audience as really being handsome young actors dressed in suits and ties. Like Dead End, The City Across the River isa warning of the rise of juvenile delinquency across the United States. Even post-war prosperity was adding to the crisis with parents too busy to guide their children on the correct paths to becoming model citizens.

    By the late Fifties anybody who was living in an American big city was keenly aware of the migration of whites to the suburbia as African Americans migrated northward from the rural south. At the same point in time, Puerto Ricans were making the short flight from San Juan to New York City. New faces belonging to other races were moving in large numbers in search of work and better lives.  Entire neighborhoods transformed in a blink of an eyelash. Whereas the Jews, Irish, Italians, Polish and Germans once battled one another for the allotment of urban space, they now found themselves joining forces as they were being rapidly becoming outnumbered by the invasion of outsiders.  Other major cities in the United States found the same racial drama unfolding within their own city limits. The United States is a country were things are constantly shifting and its population must shift with the demographical upheavals.

    West Side Story was a big budget production that went on to rake-in big box office ticket sales. Six million dollars invested led to a forty-five million dollars profit. The movie, which had originally been a Broadway sensation, was most definitely a collaborative effort: Leonard Bernstein composed the musical score while Stephen Sondheim penned the lyrics. The book was authored by Arthur Laurents. Jerome Robbins orchestrated much of the difficult choreography, as well as directed part of the film before being dismissed and replaced by Robert Wise.

    The original concept of the story of course was lifted from William Shakespeare’s Elizabethan drama, Romeo and Juliet, a timeless tale of a doomed romance between two lovers caught in the middle of a bloody feud between two warring families. In the new version, Romeo and Juliet were swapped out for Tony and Maria. The Capulets and the Montagues were replaced with the Jets and the Sharks. The family vendettas of Renaissance Italy disappeared in favor of the racial strife taking place in post-war modern America, namely the mean streets of a decayed Hell’s Kitchen.

    The shooting of the film took place in the San Juan Hill area of New York’s West Side amongst a condemned neighborhood ready to be demolished for the new Lincoln Center. Many scenes were also shot inside of Hollywood sound stages and Los Angeles back alleys. The famous snapping of fingers scene featuring the white Jets at the beginning of the movie was actually filmed in a playground on the East Side of Manhattan.

    One of the chief redeeming qualities of West Side Story is that it tells both sides of the story. Both sides had been victims and aggressors. The mutual feeling was that the crumbling streets belonged exclusively to them, along with their women, candy store sand basketball courts “Why don’t you go back to where you come from?”  “Why don’t you?” “Mick! “Spic!” “Wop!” The only solution is to have a rumble to settle the dispute with fists…switchblades if necessary. If blood was spilt that was the law of the pavements. No quarter to the opposition. The rumble was actually filmed beneath a highway in Los angles.

    The awkwardness of watching the white Natalie Wood darkening herself up to pass as the Puerto Rican Maria and George Chakiris, the son of Greek immigrant, being transformed in a Latin macho man, Bernardo, is somewhat off-putting sixty years later.  The biggest shame was having Rita Moreno, a native of Puerto Rico, forced to apply the same make-up. I suppose one could argue that having native Californians like Richard Beymer (via Iowa) and Russ Tamblyn play New York street punks Tony and Riff were also errors in miscasting. The cast made it up for its shortcomings by heartfelt acting, as well as zesty singing and dancing. The end result is an amazing classic movie: flaws and all!

    Perhaps the finished film of West Side Story was so superlative that Hollywood lost any inclination to go back to the street gang motif until the late Seventies when The Warriors and The Wanderers reinvented the genre. The Sixties appears to be devoid of having any major street gang movies. It could be that motorcycle gangs and hippies seemed to have stepped into the void left vacant by the street gangs.

    The Wanderers was directed Philip Kaufman and released by Warner Brothers in 1979 to mixed reviews and modest box office success. The popularity of the film has grown over the years, attaining a cult-like status among younger people.  Richard Price, a New York author, wrote the original novel and it was published in 1974. The Wanderers were a minor gang of Italian American teens hanging out near Fordham Road in the Norwood neighborhood of the Bronx. Price was looking backwards to the epoch he grew up during the early Sixties before the Beatles, the Viet Nam conflict and the Civil Rights movement changed the American scene forever. At the end of the movie, the audience hears Bob Dylan singing The Times They Are a Changing somewhere in Greenwich Village. The book was a retrospective look backwards at the gangs of Price’s youth in the early Sixties. The Wanderers was also part of the crest of the wave of nostalgia ushered in by the success of throwback movies like American Graffiti (1973) and television programs like Happy Days (1974-1984). 

    Richie (Ken Wahl), Joey (John Friedrich), Buddy (Jim Young) and Turkey (Alan Rosenberg) contend with an abusive father, a pregnant girlfriend and a bowling tournament while dealing with the Bel Bombers (Puerto Ricans) and the Wongs (Chinese) at their high school. In their own neighborhood, they are outnumbered by the Baldies (Italians) on Fordham Road to the south and the Ducky Boys (Irish) further to the north around the Bronx Zoo and the Botanical Gardens.

    The Wanderers try to settle their differences with the Del Bombers with a Saturday morning football game in the park with the Wong clan in attendance in the grandstands. The football match was an open invitation for a horde of Ducky Boys to invade from both sides of the gridiron with baseball bats, tire irons and switchblades. The three high school gangs unite to fend off the attack.

    The Wanderers is interesting in that it featured two actual legendary gangs of the Bronx: the Baldies and the Ducky Boys, who were many times more lethal and interesting then the gang mentioned in the title. The Baldies in the movies were skinheads but in actuality they took their name form the American bald eagle. The Ducky Boys took their name from their gang’s duck call that mimicked the ducks in the park’s pond. Price described the Ducky Boys as “stunted Irish madmen” and “stone killers” that always attacked in droves to compensate for the fact that few of them were over five feet tall.

    Besides the massive gang rumble at the conclusion of the story, two other encounters with the Ducky Boys are films other highlights.  The Wanderers drive into a fogbound neighborhood that is inhabited by silent zombie-like boys and slutty-looking girls who emerged from the alleyways to attack the boys inside of their car. Later on, the unlucky Turkey ends up outside a Catholic Church, where the Ducky Boys have just received Holy Communion with fanged teeth land gobbled like famished cannibals before going outside to commit murder: Turkey’s murder. In all three scenes with the Ducky Boys, not one of them ever utters a single word. None of the Ducky Boys even had names, although actors Alan Braunstein and Mark Lesly played two of their leaders.

    The Warriors (1979) is generally considered the movie that regenerated interest in gangs and gang memberships. Upon its release there were reports of gang fights amongst the audience members.  The Warriors, like City Across the River (The Amboy Dukes) and The Wanderers, was based upon a novel. The Warriors by Sol Yurickwas published in 1965: more than a decade before the release of the movie. Yurick had received first person experience with street gangs from his years as a social worker. However, like William Shakespeare’s play influencing West Side Story, the concept of The Warriors was borrowed from an ancient text from classical Greece: Xenophon’s Anabasis. The Dominators, who became The Warriors, in the film, journey from their turf in Coney Island, Brooklyn, to Van Cortland Park in the Bronx, obeying the summons from Ismael Rivera, leader of the Delancey Thrones. A shooting goes down and the blame falls upon the shoulders of Papa Arnold” and he is surrounded by members of other gangs at the war council. Hector, second-in-command of the Dominators, assumes the title of “Papa” and it is his duty to herd Lunkface, Bimbo, Hinton, Dewey and the Junior back to their fiefdom… many subway stations away. The Dominators are no boy scouts; raping and mugging their way home through a nightmarish New York. It a landscape that is full of uncharted territories, harboring unknown gangs (also known as “warriors”). Three of the members engage in a vicious sexual assault and robbery upon a drunken nurse in Riverside Park, where they arrested by the police. The rest of the gang manages to get back home and find Papa Arnold had somehow survived the attack in Van Cortland Park and reached home and was tucked away in bed. One of the members hangs around a Times Square full of midnight freaks as he munches hotdogs.

    The motion picture was released during the winter of 1979. The four million dollars budget was earned back within two weeks after release. Directed by Walter Hill the movie has now earned cult status across the globe. The Dominators led by Papa Arnold were replaced War Chief Cleon (Dorsey Wright) who leads Swan (Michael Beck), Ajax (James Remar), Snow (Brian Tyler), Cochise (David Harris), Cowboy (Tom McKitterick), Rembrandt (Marcelino Sanchez) and Vermin (Terry Michos) Hollywood’s Warrior were the most thoroughly diverse street gang ever presented in American films. Whites, blacks and Puerto Ricans took on whites, blacks and Puerto Ricans in a movie that not once brought up the issue of skin color.  The Warriors, as in the book, traveled to Van Cortland Park upon the summons of Cyrus (Roger Hill), leader of the mighty Gramercy Riffs. The agenda is to unify all of the gangs to cease control of New York City. Cyrus is gunned down by Luther (David Patrick Kelly,) the insane leader of the Irish Rogues from Hell’s Kitchen. Luther pins the rap on Cleon who, in turn. swarmed by angry gang members.

    Swan, the second in command, becomes the war chief and it is obligation to see to the safe return of the gang to the tenements of Coney Island. The Warriors must undertake an epic journey on the longest subway ride ever recorded that covered three of New York’s five boroughs. They also have to elude the police, as well as the colorful array of street gangs like the Furies, The Orphans and The Punks. Along the way, they pick up Mercy (Deborah Van Valkenburgh), a groupie of toughies who are cocky enough to wear their colors as they boldly paraded through combat zone after combat zone. The climax of the movie occurs on the sandy shores of the Atlantic Ocean where there is a final showdown between Swan and the Warriors against Luther and the Rogues.  The Gramercy Riffs, armed to the teeth, arrive just in a nick of time to finish off the job started by the Warriors.

    Five movies based upon street gangs of New York were selected to be discussed in this article: Dead End (1937), The City Across the River (1948), West Side Story (1959), The Wanderers (1979) and The Warriors (1979). The movies covered the rumbles on the pavements of Manhattan, the Bronx and Brooklyn from the Great Depression of the Thirties to the dancing disco days of the Seventies. The members of these gangs were white (Irish, Jewish, Italian, German, Polish), black and Puerto Rican; and they were led by young men who felt that the only way to hold onto the scant yards of their turf was through the art of war: the street rumble. Fists, knives, bats, hockey sticks and guns all came in handy when it came to the protection of the home boys’ fiefdom.  These movies may go a long ways in helping us to understand the racial, religious and cultural conflict in our own times: the gangs are still rumbling to protect their turf!

  • Godzilla vs. Kong: Another Review

    Godzilla vs. Kong: Another Review

    The time is finally here. Godzilla vs. Kong, One Will Fall! Spoiler Free Review. 

    Directed by Adam Wingard and starring a star-studded cast that includes the likes of Millie Bobby Brown, Julian Dennison, Alexander Skarsgård, Kyle Chandler, Rebecca Hall and Brian Tyree Henry, Godzilla vs. Kong is the fourth film in Legendary Pictures’ “MonsterVerse”, and delivers exactly what it says on the poster as Godzilla and Kong, the two most powerful forces of nature, clash on the big screen in a spectacular battle for the ages.

    Delivering impeccably on its title, Godzilla vs. Kong swats away character development and reduces the human drama significantly to deliver all the spectacle and wonder you’d expect from two giant monsters slugging it out on screen. Of course, it’s outlandish and sometimes very dumb, but it more than delivers what it promises. If you’re watching this kind of thing, you’re watching it for the noise, the chaos, the concussive battles, and mindless destruction that follows, but most importantly, you’re watching it for the two raging beasts at its core. That, I’m pleased to say, is exactly what you shall receive, with the film spending the majority of its runtime focused on the two’s rivalry. There’s something so mindlessly satisfying in seeing two giant monsters beating the hell out of each other while leaving heavy destruction in their wake. I guess it’s all just part of the entertainment value we can take away knowing it’s all in good fun and that we can be thankful such colossal creatures don’t exist in real life.

    Yet, that’s exactly what Godzilla vs. Kong is all about. That keyword, entertainment value. No one is going into this film expecting some high-class art. If you are, what the hell are you doing? Despite holding some beautiful shots and another great score by Junkie XL, Godzilla vs. Kong is all about entertainment and for that, it hits the mark stupendously with frequent action and great special effects that’ll leave you cheering throughout. It’s mind-numbingly simplistic with the vast majority of the film focusing on Kong, but I wouldn’t expect anything less. This is more Kong’s movie than anything else and while Godzilla still delivers some incredible moments and the other villain is surprisingly great in the final act, if fighting monsters and gratuitous demolition of skyscrapers is what you crave, then this certainly delivers the punch you’re looking for. 

    Nevertheless, if you are expecting to be treated to anything else beyond this, you will be greatly disappointed. The MonsterVerse has long suffered with human characters, not exactly knowing how to work them into the story and leaving their development on the cutting room floor. Despite Millie Bobby Brown and Kyle Chandler’s best efforts, Godzilla: King of the Monsters was worse off because of their screen dominance. Once again, this is sadly the case with Godzilla vs. Kong, yet thankfully not to the same extent. While Millie Bobby Brown, Julian Dennison and Brian Tyree Henry create a great trio, their scenes just don’t entirely work given they’re only used for explanatory detail about the other villain’s origin. However, as the film follows two different human teams, the Kong team and the Godzilla team if you will, the scenes between Alexander Skarsgård, Rebecca Hall and the impeccable Kaylee Hottle, worked like an utter treat for me. Offering up a storyline centred around Kong that I found interesting and worthwhile, despite it’s obvious flaws. 

    For me, that’s what gave Godzilla vs. Kong the edge. While the acting is good all-round, and it’s nice to see Kyle Chandler again (even if it’s only for a short period of time), Godzilla vs, Kong managed to do what Godzilla: King of the Monsters couldn’t, create a side story that’s not the main focus but is still interesting. They are only there to help move the small remnants of the plot along and despite most of them being either generic military personnel marked for death or scientific minds trying to make sense of all this madness, the scenes that we spent with either group never truly bored me, which was a great surprise. 

    Ultimately, Godzilla vs. Kong is a film that DESERVES to be seen on the big screen. You simply won’t get the same experience watching it for the first time on a small laptop or television screen and it’s a sad fact that many will end up torrenting this movie due to cinemas not being open or HBO Max not being available to them. It’s a cinematic experience and for preexisting fans of the franchise, Godzilla vs. Kong is the monster movie we’ve all been waiting for. Is it a perfect film? Absolutely not. But it’s the most fun I’ve had with a movie this year!