Showing posts with label The Wanderers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Wanderers. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

New York-Style

In memory of Erland Van Lidth  de Jeude, immortalized as Terror, leader of the Baldies, and owner of the most impressive onscreen display of rapid pizza ingestion.
I spent a few years in Chicago and there's probably nothing I missed more about the New York Tri-State Area than (good, easily obtainable) thin crust, New York-style pizza.


If you know of other similar moments (i.e. people chowing on slices) in NY-set movies of the era, please send 'em my way so that I may add them to this video.

I've a feeling Lenny's wasn't selling that Philly Cheesesteak when Travolta was prowling 86th St.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Director's Cut?

Prompted by the publication of a new monograph on Philip Kaufman by Annette Insdorf, the Film Society of Lincoln Center recently presented a 35mm print of Kaufman's The Wanderers.  FSLC dubbed the screening a "Director's Cut," and the print, indeed, came from Kaufman's private collection, but after watching it, it seemed to me to be a pre-release version of the film, perhaps shown to test audiences or exhibitors before the actual release date and before final editing tweaks took place.  This "director's cut" contains numerous scene extensions and 1 or 2 other entirely new scenes.  While they were fascinating to see, especially for someone like me who knows the film backwards and forwards, none of them improved the film to any appreciable degree.  On the contrary, most of these bits highlighted either some shaky acting or over-writing or a little bit of both.  The release version, which is perhaps 5 minutes shorter, is tighter, obviously, and more effective, a case of the old "less is more" school of thought.  All that said, it would be wonderful to see this extra material as a supplement on a future Blu-ray release (we can dream, can't we?).


As an example of what I'm talking about, in the theatrical release version, Turkey (Alan Rosenberg) is slashed by a Ducky Boy after he puts his hand on the gang member's shoulder and propositions him with an invitation to a go somewhere like a park.  A frightened, bleeding Turkey then runs and climbs from an ever-expanding phalanx of Ducky Boys before falling to his death. 

The "director's cut," has Turkey explicitly ask the Ducky Boy if he wants a "blow job," to which the Ducky Boy responds with "Blow job?" and then viciously knifes Turkey.  Turkey is then surrounded by a group of angry Ducky Boys to whom he pleads that he is "not a faggot!" and, in fact, a Marine (this coming after Turkey and a group of Fordham Baldies drunkenly sign up for Marine service).  After this, the film transitions to what we see in the "regular" version of the film as Turkey is chased and terrorized to his death. 

One of the most effective aspects of the release version of The Wanderers was that the utterly frightening Ducky Boys remain silent throughout; having the Ducky Boy verbally respond to Turkey's blow job offer, however, weakens the overall cinematic presentation of the Ducky Boys.  Further, having Turkey more explicitly express his sexual desires and then loudly proclaim his heterosexuality is unnecessary; the writing is too on the nose.


There is another example later, in the "director's cut," of a character (John Friedrich's Joey) telling another (Tony Ganios' Perry) that he is, in fact, straight, not a "fag."  If it was, in fact, truly Kaufman's desire to have this dialogue be as direct as it is in this alternate version of the film, I'd be curious to know what the motivation was and why it was cut.  It may have been deemed to risque for 1979 audiences by the studio, but as the film stands now, in its shorter theatrical release length, the handling of this homoerotic material (which appears throughout the film and Richard Price novel) is more deft, more sophisticated, and smarter than what I saw the other night at the Walter Reade.  Where the "director's cut" spells things out for the audience, the theatrical release version, shows us all we need to see.

Even with all of this additional material, one scene I've always been curious about remained m.i.a.  It is illustrated in this lobby card and German still depicting a post-coital Ken Wahl and Karen Allen. The banjo Nina (Allen) strums is a tantalizing link to the later scene in which an out-of-place Richie (Wahl) spots her entering Folk City to see a young Bob Dylan perform "The Times They Are A- Changin'":

ADDENDUM: Michael Sragow confirms in this New Yorker piece that what screened at FSLC the other night was, indeed, a true "Director's Cut." Even with that knowledge, I must remain partial to the theatrical release.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

"Just whistle loud and we'll be there."




These things were just bound to be reproduced ever since the Telluride Film Festival started holding special screenings of The Wanderers many years ago.  It seems that the organizers of the fest were big fans of the film and made it a regular part of the festivities, so much so that many had their own Wanderers jackets made up.  I can't find the article right now, but I recall reading an interview where director Philip Kaufman recalled his shock at seeing a bunch of people walking around in Wanderers jackets at Telluride and turning out in big numbers to see the film.  The irony being, of course, that the film was not a box-office success during its initial run largely due to the violence that broke out at theaters in early 1979 following screenings of The Warriors and Boulevard Nights, and the skittishness these incidents provoked in exhibitors. The film's audience grew exponentially, however, through cable screenings, home video, and the rise of novelist and screenwriter Richard Price, whose first novel formed the basis of the film. 

Kaufman, perhaps around the time of the shooting of The Wanderers

On the strength of its following at Telluride, Warner Bros. was inspired to re-release the film on a test basis, in the mid-1990s, in Kaufman's adopted home base of San Francisco.  As far as I can tell, the re-release did not go beyond S.F., unfortunately.

Kaufman tells a story in print, and on his audio commentary on laserdisc and DVD, about reuniting with his Wanderers--Ken Wahl, Jim Youngs, and Tony Ganios (John Friedrich was absent)--on the streets of San Francisco, following a re-release screening.  Even then, over fifteen years after its initial release, the cast members were recognized by motorcycle riders who cheered the gang as they drove by.  I can't find that article right now either, but here is a very interesting Times article from the same period, which details the film's continuing popularity on cable.