With its still-dashing
skyline and its rugged
facades, its mean
streets and its swanky
avenues New York is
probably the most filmed
city on earth, or at
least the one most
instantly recognizable
from the movies. It
would be fruitless to
enumerate them all;
we've just given a small
sampling below of films
that best capture the
city's atmosphere, its
pulse and its style and,
if nothing else, give
you a pretty good idea
of what you're going to
get before you get there.
Thirteen great New
York movies
Annie Hall (Woody
Allen, 1977). Oscar-winning
autobiographical comic
romance, which flits
from reminiscences of
Alvy Singer's childhood
living beneath the Coney
Island rollercoaster, to
life and love in uptown
Manhattan, is a
valentine both to then-lover
and co-star Diane Keaton
if not to the city.
Simultaneously clever,
bourgeois and very
winning. All of Allen's
movies are New York-centric;
also don't miss
Manhattan (1979),
which with its Gershwin
soundtrack and stunning
black-and-white
photography is probably
the greatest eulogy to
the city ever made.
Breakfast at
Tiffany's (Blake
Edwards, 1961). This
most charming and
cherished of New York
movie romances stars
Audrey Hepburn as party
girl Holly Golightly
flitting through the
glittering playground of
the Upper East Side.
Hepburn and George
Peppard run up and down
each other's fire-escapes
and skip down Fifth
Avenue taking in the New
York Public Library and
that jewelry store.
Do the Right Thing
(Spike Lee, 1989). Set
over 24 hours on the
hottest day of the year
in Brooklyn's
Bed-Stuyvesant section -
a day on which the
melting pot is reaching
boiling point - Spike
Lee's colorful, stylish
film moves from comedy
to tragedy to compose an
epic tale of New York.
The French
Connection (William
Friedkin, 1971). Plenty
of heady Brooklyn
atmosphere in this
sensational
Oscar-winning cop
thriller starring Gene
Hackman, whose classic
car-and-subway chase
takes place under the
Bensonhurst Elevated
Railroad.
The Godfather Part
II (Francis Ford
Coppola, 1974). Flashing
back to the early life
of Vito Corleone,
Coppola's great sequel
re-created the Italian
immigrant experience at
the turn of the century,
portraying Corleone
quarantined at Ellis
Island and growing up
tough on the
meticulously re-created
streets of Little Italy.
Midnight Cowboy
(John Schlesinger, 1969)
The odd love story
between Jon Voight's
bumpkin hustler and
Dustin Hoffman's
touching urban creep
Ratso Rizzo plays out
against both the
seediest and swankiest
of New York locations.
On the Town
(Gene Kelly, Stanley
Donen, 1949). Three
sailors get 24-hours'
shore leave in NYC and
fight over whether to do
the sights or chase the
girls. This
exhilarating, landmark
musical with Gene Kelly,
Frank Sinatra, and Ann
Miller flashing her gams
in the American Museum
of Natural History was
the first to take the
musical out of the
studios and onto the
streets.
On the Waterfront
(Elia Kazan, 1954). Few
images of New York are
as indelible as Marlon
Brando's rooftop pigeon
coop at dawn and those
misty views of New York
Harbor (actually shot
just over the river in
Hoboken), in this
unforgettable story of
long-suffering
longshoremen and union
racketeering.
Rosemary's Baby
(Roman Polanski, 1968).
Mia Farrow and John
Cassavettes move into
their dream New York
apartment in the Dakota
Building (72nd and
Central Park West) and
think their problems
stop with nosy neighbors
and thin walls until
Farrow gets pregnant and
hell, literally, breaks
loose. Arguably the most
terrifying film ever set
in the city.
The Sweet Smell of
Success (Alexander
Mackendrick, 1957).
Broadway as a nest of
vipers. Gossip columnist
Burt Lancaster and
sleazy press agent Tony
Curtis eat each other's
tails in this jazzy,
cynical study of showbiz
corruption. Shot on
location, and mostly at
night, in steely black
and white, Times Square
and the Great White Way
never looked so
alluring.
Taxi Driver
(Martin Scorsese, 1976).
A long night's journey
into day by the great
chronicler of the dark
side of the city - and
New York's greatest
filmmaker. Scorsese's
New York is
hallucinatorily
seductive and thoroughly
repellent in this
superbly unsettling
study of obsessive
outsider Travis Bickle
(Robert De Niro).
West Side Story
(Robert Wise, Jerome
Robbins, 1961). Sex,
singing and Shakespeare
in a hyper-cinematic
Oscar-winning musical
(via Broadway) about
rival street gangs.
Lincoln Center now
stands where the Sharks
and the Jets once
rumbled and interracial
romance ended in
tragedy.