I recently saw 'Mean Streets' again after many years. It still stays fresh and powerful, despite its flaws. I remember seeing it in a movie theatre, so many years ago. What an experience - for that time!
Now, when I watched it again, on DVD, there was the director's commentary. Martin Scorses refers to some things that he did - using rock music (his own vinyl, it turns out) - and mentioning that some other director did it before him. Thing is, that director was no one whose films I had seen. It was some 'artsy' director whose film didn't come to my local theatre. This makes 'Mean Streets' all the more important to me. I didn't watch Kenneth Anger films, but here was a Martin Scorsese film and it was terrific.
Now, all this other stuff has followed, all the other Scorsese films I've enjoyed, but I have to remember: this was the first. And it still holds up very, very well.
My favorite scene in the movie is Harvey Keitel moving through the crowd in the night club, with the camera following behind him, seeing past his shoulders. I believe the strippers onstage are dancing to a Rolling Stones song, and Keitel goes onstage to dance with them. Before that, you see a panorama pass by, beyond him, as drunk patrons laugh and everyone is sloppily having fun. He's 'digging it,' too!
Maybe that kind of shot was done before, but it was the first extended view like that in a film - for me - and I still remember it and still love it.
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