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Martin
Scorsese's gritty Mean Streets is an unlikely buddy
film, chronicling the day-to-day lives of a small group of
first-generation Italian Americans. Mean Streets invites
the viewer to take part in the day-to-day rather than letting
them in a one single large event. The result is a modern masterpiece
where the setting is the star, even among a cast that is highlighted
by Robert De Niro and Harvey Keitel.
Keitel
plays Charlie, a young ladder-climber in the mob. Much of
the film is spent with Charlie and his small group of friends,
who include Johnny Boy (De Niro), Tony (David Proval) and
Michael (Richard Romanus). They drink together, go to the
movies together, laugh together and rip off kids from the
rich side of looking for firecrackers together. Organized
crime ties aside, they're a gang unto themselves.
The
plot is really quite loose, with the majority of it centering
around Charlie playing the middleman between Johnny and Michael.
Johnny's got himself into a little too much debt and Michael
wants his money back with a little added respect for good
measure. On the streets, respect is everything. There's other
loose bits and pieces, but - as the title suggests - the streets
are what Mean Streets is about.
Much
of the film takes place in the nooks and crannies of New York's
Little Italy. There's low-lit bars, hot apartments, stairwells,
rooftops - all of which work together to paint a deep portrait
of growing up in an ethnic neighborhood. Charlie and company
are all finding their way in a new world, one that mixes the
traditions of the homeland with the modernity of America.
There's influences for Charlie to see him grow up properly,
such as his uncle and the rest of the local mob, as well as
the Catholic Church. However his real influences are his friends.
Mean
Streets
is a film about friendship. It would have been easy for Scorsese
to focus on the organized crime elements of the film, but
instead they're largely overlooked parts of the backdrop.
Scorsese has openly spoken about the movie being semi-autobiographical,
a retelling of his own growing up. As a result, the film's
best moments are the small, intimate moments, the ones that
couldn't have been made up because they have so many details
that make the scenes feel authentic.
Scorsese's
third feature, Mean Streets showcases him going from
emerging filmmaker to trailblazing voice. His camera continues
to be creative and his use of infusing popular music into
the soundtrack only helps to enhance the film's setting.
Mean
Streets
remains one of my favourite Scorsese films. Its focus on friendship
and place are timeless to any generation anywhere in the world.
However, it's the specifics of Scorsese's own experiences
that gives Mean Streets that feeling of a true masterwork.
©Movie
Views; August 1, 2006
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