New York Movies
By Mark Asch and Little White Lies
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About this ebook
The indispensable, illustrated pocket guide to New York movies, from Martin Scorsese and Woody Allen to Lena Dunham and Noah Baumbach.
ALSO AVAILABLE:
Close-Ups: Wes Anderson
Close-Ups: Vampire Movies
New York has always been one of the world’s most filmed cities, with its apartments housing tenants like Rosemary's baby and the Royal Tenenbaums, its skyscrapers scaled by the likes of King Kong and graffiti artists and its rubble-strewn streets prowled by everyone from Travis Bickle to Carrie Bradshaw.
In this illustrated pocket guide to New York and its movies, Mark Asch explores the Big Apple block by block and neighbourhood by neighbourhood, jogging past the iconic bench from Manhattan, eating at Katz’s Deli from When Harry Met Sally and mooching around the Coney Island boardwalk like one of The Warriors. Retracing the steps of countless iconic actors, cinematographers and directors, he draws up a unique cinematic map of The City That Never Sleeps.
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New York Movies - Mark Asch
INTRODUCTION
The Warriors (Walter Hill, 1979)
In The Warriors, a teenage gang fight their way from one end of the subway to the other. They return to their home turf of Coney Island after an all-night odyssey shot in Riverside Park and Evergreen Cemetery, on the streets of Hell’s Kitchen and Long Island City, the elevated tracks in Borough Park and Cypress Hills and the underground stations at Hoyt-Schermerhorn and Union Square, and in innumerable gray subway cars covered in scrabbled Sharpie graffiti tags. Each gang has their own tribal uniform: the Baseball Furies in their fright makeup and bats; the Punks in their rollerskates and overalls; the Gramercy Riffs in their orange martial arts robes.
The Warriors is accurate in its broad contours about the necessity of improvised itineraries when dealing with New York’s late-night train service, as well as in its depiction of a city that can feel intimidatingly territorial. Each gang is its own subculture, with its own aesthetic, hierarchy and history, and woe betide anyone who disrespects their priority. It’s their home—you’re just visiting.
The city, E. B. White wrote, carries on its lapel the unexpungeable odor of the long past, so that no matter where you sit in New York you feel the vibrations of great times and tall deeds, of queer people and events and undertakings.
So too with the city’s cinema. When the Warriors finally make it back to Stillwell Avenue, they walk under overcast off-season skies past shuttered amusements and stilled rides, including the same Cyclone roller coaster where Diana Ross’s Dorothy had found her Tin Man in The Wiz the year before.
In this book, I follow the New York street grid (though without the leatherette Warriors vest). It’s a guidebook, mapping out the scenes, communities, artists and powers-that-be that have staked their claim to this block or that neighborhood, in this moment in time or that one. Chapters are organized chronologically, though some double-feature pairings that communicate from different eras. I’ve restricted my selections here to films shot significantly on location (with the caveat that significant
is a flexible word), and to one film per director, in a nevertheless failed attempt to cast a net as wide as the city. I’ve stuck to fiction features, rather than compete with the direct views of documentaries.
I’m indebted in the writing of this book to my editor, David Jenkins; to the Hekemian family for a place to write and my parents for the lifelong conviction that I had something to say; and to all the past and present citizens of my New York, the film critics, programmers and cinephiles whose advocacy and insight has enriched me as an editor, reader and audience member. My life in New York, at the movies, as a writer, and in so many other ways, would be unimaginable to me without Larissa Kyzer, to whom this book is dedicated.
Image MissingImage MissingThe Window (Ted Tetzlaff, 1949) / Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (Chris Columbus, 1992)
A window peeper knows his neighbor has committed a murder, but no one else believes him—except the killer. When Alfred Hitchcock filmed Cornell Woolrich’s pulp story It Had to Be Murder
as Rear Window (1954), he built his Greenwich Village panopticon on a massive Paramount set with a dozen fully furnished apartments, all of city life opened up in a dollhouse-like cross-section promising savvy familiarity with the lives of others, and whiff of stranger danger. But The Boy Cried Murder,
another Woolrich story with the same premise, had already been filmed as The Window—on location, in the East 100s.
Sleeping on his fire escape on a sweltering summer night, young Tommy Woodry sees the couple upstairs murder a man, but gets lectured about telling tales by his proud parents. Director Ted Tetzlaff, Hitchcock’s Director of Photography on Notorious (1946), sets the noirish scene with the rumbling tracks and chiaroscuro shadows cast by the Third Avenue elevated train, and shoots the surrounding cross streets through fire escapes and jungle canopies of backyard clotheslines. With Mom visiting her sick sister and Pop on the night shift, Tommy is as trapped as Rear Window’s wheelchair-bound Jimmy Stewart when the neighbors call.
Image MissingBobby Driscoll, who plays Tommy, starred in Disney’s live-action Boomer-baby swashbuckler Treasure Island (1950), but fell out of favor with the Mouse House when puberty hit; he got into drugs, and had been in and out of prison before his body was found in 1968 by two children playing in an abandoned tenement on East 10th Street. Around the time Driscoll’s body was buried in an unmarked grave on Hart Island, photographer Bruce Davidson was taking pictures of The Window’s old neighborhood, by then known as Spanish Harlem. In his collection East 100th Street, kids Tommy’s age and younger pose on a stained mattress in the middle of an alley piled high with rubbish and rubble, or in dark rooms with linoleum curling over rotting floorboards, ceilings cracked or swelling. It’s a complementary view to the film, which captures an East Side where kids play stickball on the street, or race across sticky-tar rooftops with the towers of midtown remote in the distance. Within years, postwar suburbanization—white flight
hastened by the integration of neighborhoods—and the wasting-away of the urban tax base would see the decline of The Window’s working-class neighborhood into the kind of modern-day ghetto made legendary by representations less sensitive than Davidson’s.
Out the other side of this chapter in New York history, another too-precocious child star stops a criminal plot. Through Home Alone 2: Lost in New York’s Kevin McCallister (Macaulay Culkin), potential tourists get an eyeful of the Big Apple’s landmarks – and a jolt of the fear that may have kept them away. In a template-perfect welcome-to-New York montage, Kevin sticks his head out the window of a Checker Cab to take in the skyline on the way over the Queensboro Bridge; he gazes wide-eyed at Radio City Music Hall, the Statue of Liberty, the World Trade Center … But when he’s outside of his hotel after dark, on West 95th Street and Central Park West, winos yell at him and streetwalkers proposition him. We see the broken windows
that would be the focus of soon-to-be Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Police Commissioner William Bratton’s quality-of-life policing strategy, which cleaned up the visible street-level signifiers of vice in time for the corporate investment then returning to the American urban core. And we see what, precisely, would be meant by quality of life,
as Kevin flashes plastic at Duncan’s Toy Chest, standing in for toy superstore F.A.O. Schwarz, and at the Plaza Hotel, the gilded palace at the southeastern corner of the Park.
Kevin, who tips the white-glove service staff in sticks of gum, is a smartass Eloise, the six-year-old Plaza-dweller and cute, prodigious mess-maker of Kay Thompson and Hilary Knight’s 1950s picture books. Impulsively indulging in a child’s fantasy of luxury, gorging himself on room service junk food and unlimited TV time, Kevin may also remind contemporary viewers of the man who owned the Plaza in 1992. Donald Trump cameos here (he insisted as a condition of the Plaza shoot), directing Kevin to the lobby and then backing away from the camera so his face remains centered in the frame. We see the dual self-promotional strategies of pushy media availability and splashy overleveraged real estate deals that made Trump an avatar of NYC’s return to prosperity, shortly before he signed over the Plaza to his debtors to wriggle out of bankruptcy.
Image MissingTrump’s