Mean Streets


 

Mean Streets (1973) is an early Martin Scorsese film starring Harvey Keitel and Robert De Niro. Charlie (Keitel) is a man who is trying to move up in the crime world and who is hampered by his responsibility towards his childish friend Johnny Boy (De Niro). Charlie works for his uncle collecting debts and is in love with Johnny Boy's cousin, who has epilepsy; his uncle disapproves of his girlfriend explicitly because of her epilepsy. Charlie, who has a strict Catholic upbringing, is probably too forgiving in general to get far in the mafia.

Related Topics:
1973 - Martin Scorsese - Harvey Keitel - Robert De Niro - Catholic - Mafia

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Aside from his student film project Who's That Knocking at My Door? and Boxcar Bertha, a directing project given him by early independent maverick Roger Corman, this was Scorsese's first feature film of his own design. Director John Cassavetes told him after he completed Boxcar Bertha, to make films he wanted to make, about things he knew. Mean Streets was based on events Scorsese saw while growing up in Little Italy. The movie features a memorable 60s soundtrack including two songs by the Rolling Stones but complemented, as in many of his subsequent films, by operatic arias and music from varying genre. De Niro won the National Society of Film Critics award for Best Actor for his role as Johnny Boy Civello. The film has been deemed "culturally significant" by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry.

Related Topics:
Who's That Knocking at My Door? - Boxcar Bertha - Roger Corman - John Cassavetes - Little Italy - The Rolling Stones - National Society of Film Critics - Culturally significant - Library of Congress - National Film Registry

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Tagline: You don't make up for your sins in church. You do it on the streets...

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Latest news on mean streets

Where in the World Is Charlie Sandiego?

I'm currently sitting in a hotel room in Pennsylvania. I think. Last night, the missus and I drove from Boston to New Jersey, most of the way in a steady wet snow. That sounds pretty awful, but it's one of the easier trips on me. When we're setting out for uncharted destinations -- like, say, New Jersey -- she drives and I navigate. That's the only way it can possibly work. She describes herself as a 'nervous passenger', and I drive on the mean streets of near-Boston every workday. So there are a few of my methods -- and gestures, and certain choices of language -- of which she doesn't especially approve. At the same time -- and by her own admission, so I'm allowed to say it, too -- she's sort of easily distracted when she's supposed to be reading a map. I've never quite understood how this works, to be honest. At work, she's as focused as a laser. When she's onto some task or other at home, she's a bulldog -- relentless, unyielding and unmercifully persistent until it's finished. I should know. Usually, that task is getting me to do something I was supposed to have done days or weeks before. Trust me -- she doesn't give up. "Lord only knows where this hotel actually is -- my money's on Nebraska, but that's just a hunch." But stick her in the car, without a steering wheel in front of her? It's over. Shiny objects, pretty trees, some kind of -- ooh, look! We have a radio! Let's play with that! Heater on. Heater off. Look, a squirrel. Hey, what's in the back seat? An ice scraper! Coooooooool. Okay, it's not quite that bad. Probably. It only seems that bad when you're driving in unfamiliar territory in the dead of night, low on gas, and your lovely, brilliant, beautiful wife holding the map says: 'Okay, you should turn...um, RIGHT THERE! Oh. Sorry. Didn't see it in time. Well, that's okay. It says the next exit is only twenty-two miles. We'll be fine.' To be fair, we always have been 'fine'. All except for that throbbing vein in my temple that I can't seem to control, and the fingernail troughs she digs into the passenger side armrest when I actually attempt to perform one of the blink-of-an-eyelash ninety-six degree tire-screeching turns that she suggests. So now, she drives. And I read the map. Plus, my sweet-ass new phone has a GPS hooked to Google Maps, so I'm firmly rooted in the passenger seat on exploratory trips for the foreseeable future. Maybe someday -- like if she gets a temporary-ADD treatment drip installed in the glove compartment and a heads-up Mapquest display implanted in her frontal lobe -- we'll be able to switch. For now, she drives. I navigate. And we stay married. Of course, that means that a trip like yesterday's is very different for the two of us. Her job is keeping the car on the road, so she's white-knuckling it on any sharp turns, trying to stay in other cars' wheelpaths, constantly scanning for a lane less snowy. Meanwhile, I got us to the turnpike already. We're traveling at twelve miles an hour. And she doesn't want to hear any of my damned fool advice on how to drive. So I get a few free hours to kill, with periodic stops for pee breaks, caffeine restocks and to clean the salty crap off the windshield. Beats a day at the office, frankly. Once we hit Jersey, of course, I had work to do. More than usual, thanks to some pretty cryptic directions we copied down. But we got where we were going, and made it in safely for the night. Had some food, drank some champagne with our friends, got some shuteye and drove here. To the hotel. In Pennsylvania. I think. See, we're in one of those confusing parts of the country where at any given moment, you could cross over from one state to the next. And then, if you're not careful, to another. We got here by driving most of the way on the Jersey Turnpike. Ten minutes later, and we were in Pennsylvania. The wedding we're attending tomorrow is in Delaware. The bride is Ukrainian. The groom is Canadian. Lord only knows where this hotel actually is -- my money's on Nebraska, but that's just a hunch. You'd think I'd be accustomed to this sort of thing. I grew up in a 'Tri-State Area' myself, after all. The difference there, though, is that there was nothing nearby in any of the three states that people would bother traveling back and forth for. Sure, further in I'm sure there were tourist attractions and rest areas and the World's Largest Somethings of Something. But in our little region -- not so much. I lived in the single city-sized spot in the one of the three states that sported one, and that bought me a passable Mexican restaurant and a decent public library to visit. Which was a few tacos and a Dewey Decimal system more than you'd find close by in the other two states. So it was a 'Tri-State Area' to me in name only; there was very little confusion about which state I was in, because I was rarely in any other than my own. Here, it's a whole new ballgame. Wilmington, Delaware is just down the street. Philly, PA is a half-hour away. And in New Jersey, there's... well... I don't know. The Turnpike was pretty nice, as these things go, I guess. We're really not seeing Jersey's good side from this angle, though, from what I can tell. Assuming Jersey has a 'good side' to start with. I just checked the map to see if I was missing anything. And in Jersey, I wasn't. Nothing big close by that I'm familiar with, anyway, which doesn't mean a whole lot. Once you get past Jersey City and Atlantic City, I think the next thing I know about Jersey is that they made some film about a girl there once. Or made it somewhere else and said it was in Jersey. Or kidnapped a girl from Jersey and put her in a movie. Something. What am I, Gene Shalit over here? I did, however, see that Maryland is also a short jaunt to the west. Making this now a quad-state area. I don't see how the hell people get around here without a compass, a GPS and a road sign every quarter-mile with big red letters reading: 'YOU ARE CURRENTLY IN THIS STATE: ______________' And I'm the one who's navigating. Just imagine if my wife and I switched places for the drive back. We just might end up in a hotel in Nebraska. Yeeks.

Rap music originated in medieval Scottish pubs claims American professor

Rap music originated in the medieval taverns of Scotland rather than the mean streets of the Bronx and Brooklyn an American academic has claimed.