Events

"Original Gangsters" at the Brooklyn Public Library

By January 21, 2013No Comments

Beastofthecity

Starting tomor­row even­ing, at the main branch of the Brooklyn Public Library, I’ll be host­ing a six-week series of screen­ings called “Original Gangsters” with which I attempt to encap­su­late the his­tory of the gang­ster film with a mere six films. A futile effort but hope­fully an enter­tain­ing and not unil­lu­min­at­ing one. The first on the dock­et is The Beast of the City, a tem­plate of sorts and NOT a Vitaphone pro­duc­tion, inter­est­ingly enough. The films are dis­played via DVD, because that’s how it’s done in this ven­ue. I’ll intro­duce and lead a dis­cus­sion after­wards. Check it out if you’re around; more info is here

No Comments

  • Very cool! So glad you’re show­ing “Touchez Pas Au Grisbi”

  • lipranzer says:

    I will def­in­itely try to stop by at least for SCARFACE and THE OUTFIT.

  • lazarus says:

    I rarely wish I was in New York.
    This is one of those times.

  • The Siren says:

    Oh, I’d love to go to at least a couple. Balancing kids will be tricky but maybe they’d like Little Caesar. (Not really kid­ding either.)
    This is a beau­ti­ful re-design Glenn. Much easi­er to read and the white makes your screen caps stand out as well. Also, I am so pleased you have the same epi­graph, which looks even more jaunty and defi­ant in the new and improved foo-foo font. Great job.

  • jwarthen says:

    Hooray for those last two selec­tions, giv­ing play to a French genre-adjunct and, in “The Outfit”, a scrappy clos­ing entry that among oth­er vir­tues is a work­ing love let­ter to the tra­di­tion of Hollywood char­ac­ter act­ors, almost too many to name, in their weathered, scler­ot­ic late-career glory. In mak­ing sure your series included a Stark adapt­a­tion, you also show­case Robert Ryan’s final iter­a­tion of hard-core American bastardry.

  • atk says:

    SOUNDS LIKE A GREAT TIME, ORIGINAL GANGSTERS!! WISHED I LIVED IN BROOKLYN. LOVE THE NEW LOOK OF YOUR BLOG

  • mw says:

    I enjoyed the series. Never cared par­tic­u­larly for gang­ster movies, still don’t, but those were excel­lent intro­duct­ory selec­tions and the little talks that bookended them were enlight­en­ing. At first, I was a little dis­ap­poin­ted from an artsy per­spect­ive. Stars such as James Cagney, Walter Huston, Edward G. Robinson, Paul Muni, Jean Gabin and Robert Duvall, along with tightly scrip­ted plot pro­gres­sions mostly car­ried the films. I for­get exactly how you phrased it? “Filled up the screen,” “soaked up all the air in the room.” Something like that. Only “Scarface” with its inter­est­ing cam­era move­ments and hid­den X’s res­on­ated with a more mod­ern sens­ib­il­ity. But I came to appre­ci­ate the oth­er films for not just what they are but also for the bits of cul­tur­al his­tory they illus­trated. That’s the kind of thing that made the series so valu­able, and why I like cri­ti­cism in gen­er­al. It’s all about story and good cri­ti­cism finds fas­cin­at­ing stor­ies with­in and about the basic plot and exe­cu­tion of the nom­in­al story. Hopefully, you’ll do some­thing like that again. The BPL is a great insti­tu­tion. Thanks, again.