Mean Streets

Mean Streets by Demetrios Matheou, published by Bloomsbury Academic on October 5, 2023, is a detailed exploration of Martin Scorsese’s pivotal third feature film. This edition, comprising 112 pages, delves into the film’s production history within the New Hollywood era, highlighting its significance in American cinema. Matheou examines the narrative centered around friends and small-time crooks in Manhattan’s Little Italy, emphasizing how Scorsese’s upbringing influenced the film’s themes and characters.
Readers will find an insightful analysis of Scorsese’s filmmaking process and his impact on the crime genre, along with discussions on the contributions of notable figures like John Cassavetes and Roger Corman. The study also addresses the film’s legacy and its role in shaping future crime narratives, particularly in relation to Scorsese’s later works. Through this examination, Matheou presents Mean Streets as a foundational work that not only defined a new style of crime storytelling but also inspired a generation of filmmakers.
Official synopsis Publisher
Mean Streets was Martin Scorsese’s third feature film, and the one that confirmed him as a major new talent. On its premiere at the New York Film Festival in 1973, the critic Pauline Kael hailed the film as ‘a true original of our period, a triumph of personal film-making’. The tale of combative friends and small-time crooks is set amid the bars, pool halls, tenements and streets of Manhattan’s Little Italy. Scorsese has said of his childhood neighbourhood, ‘its very texture was interwoven with organised crime’, and this quality would dramatically inform the tone and restless energy of his seminal film.
Demetrios Matheou’s insightful study considers Mean Streets‘ production history in the context of the New Hollywood period of American cinema, noting also the key roles played by John Cassavetes and Roger Corman. He analyses the importance of Scorsese’s background to the film’s characters and themes, including preoccupations with guilt, redemption and criminal subcultures; the development of the director’s film-making process and signature style; the way in which he both drew upon and invigorated the crime genre; his relationship with emerging stars Robert De Niro and Harvey Keitel, and the film’s reception and legacy.
Matheou argues that while Taxi Driver (1976) and Raging Bull (1980) are regarded as Scorsese’s greatest films of the period, Mean Streets is the more influential achievement. With it, Scorsese not only paved the way for a new kind of crime movie, not least his own GoodFellas (1990), but also inspired generations of independently-minded film-makers.
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