King of New York
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King of New York | |
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"King of New York" special edition DVD cover. |
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Directed by | Abel Ferrara |
Produced by | Augusto Caminito Mary Kane |
Written by | Nicholas St. John |
Starring | Christopher Walken Laurence Fishburne David Caruso |
Music by | Joe Delia |
Distributed by | Artisan Entertainment/Seven Arts |
Release date(s) | September 22, 1979 (limited) |
Running time | 106 min. |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
King of New York is a 1990 film.
The film stars Christopher Walken, Laurence "Larry" Fishburne, David Caruso, Wesley Snipes, Victor Argo, Steve Buscemi, and Giancarlo Esposito. It was directed by legendary independent filmmaker Abel Ferrara and written by his long-time partner and close friend Nicholas St. John.
The production and costs of the film was financed through mainly Italian interests, including Silvio Berlusconi. Reteitalia SpA produced the feature.
Contents |
[edit] Synopsis
The film opens with Frank White (Christopher Walken), a wealthy and powerful crime boss, riding by private limousine into New York over the Queensboro Bridge after being released on parole from Sing Sing after serving five years on drug-related charges. Emilio El Zapa (Freddy Howard), a Colombian drug dealer, enters a telephone booth, where he is almost immediately gunned-down by three assailants. As the hit men leave, one of them drops a newspaper headline onto Zapa's lap, the headline of which announces Frank White's release.
Across town, Zapa's partner, King Tito (Ernest Abuba), sits in a hotel room with Jimmy Jump (Fishburne) and Test Tube (Buscemi), a pair of gangsters who are negotiating the purchase of several kilograms of cocaine. Finally, the two agree to pay Tito $100,000 up front, plus 10% of the street value (transportation costs, Tito quips). When Tito opens the suitcase ostensibly containing the money, however, he discovers that it is full of tampons ("They're for the bullet holes, puta!"). Jump and Test Tube then draw pistols, shoot Tito and his bodyguards to death, and steal the cocaine.
A few hours later, in the presidential suite at the Plaza Hotel, Frank White steps out of the shower to discover that Jump, Test Tube, and the three phone booth killers are waiting for him. They are revealed to be the core members of his gang, and they welcome him home with a gift of champagne and Zapa's briefcase full of money. After an exchange of pleasantries, Frank leaves to meet two of his many lawyers, Joey Dalesio (Paul Calderon) and Jennifer (Janet Julian), for dinner.
After the dinner, during which Frank proclaims himself "reformed," expresses his desire to be elected mayor, and asks Dalesio to set up a meeting with Mafia boss Arty Clay (Frank Gio), he and Jennifer leave to take a ride on the subway, where it is revealed that she is one of his many mistresses. Upon being confronted by three muggers, Frank first brandishes his gun, then gives them a wad of money, telling them to ask for him at the Plaza Hotel if they want work.
In Little Italy, Dalesio attempts to set up Frank's meeting with Arty Clay, but the crime lord refuses to accept. Referring to Frank as a "nigger-lover" in front of Dalesio, Clay proceeds to urinate on the messenger. Upon hearing of this, Frank, Jump, and several other members of the gang arrive at Clay's social club, where Frank tells Clay that he wants a percentage of all Clay's profits. When Clay refuses and insults him to his face, Frank draws his gun and empties it into the mafioso. As he makes his way out, Frank announces to Clay's henchmen that they can all find employment at the Plaza.
The next night, after watching an avant-garde play, Frank confronts a city councilman about the city's failure to continue the funding of a hospital in a poverty-stricken area of the South Bronx. When the councilman explains that there wasn't enough money in the budget, Frank vows to fund the facility himself. Moments later, he is confronted by Detective Roy Bishop (Victor Argo) and his right-hand men, Dennis Gilley (David Caruso) and Thomas Flanigan (Wesley Snipes), three members of the NYPD's narcotics squad, who tell him that they are taking him to police headquarters for questioning. Instead, the three drive him to an abandoned lot, where they show him the body of Emilio El Zapa in the trunk of their car. When Frank refuses to confess to the crime, Gilley and Flanigan beat him. The cops then drive off, leaving Frank to find his own way home.
Apparently unfazed by Bishop's warnings, Frank sends Dalesio to Chinatown to make contact with Larry Wong (Joey Chin), a local Triad gang leader who possesses 220 pounds of cocaine worth over $15 million on the street. Larry, however, is leery of dealing with Frank, especially after the killing of Arty Clay. He demands that Frank meet him alone on neutral ground to discuss the deal. As the meeting is being scheduled, however, Jimmy Jump and several of Frank's top lieutenants are arrested by Gilley and Flanigan, who reveal that one of King Tito's bodyguards is still alive and willing to testify against them.
Meeting at the very hospital he is intent on saving, Frank attempts to hammer out a deal with Larry. The Triad demands $3 million up front and another $500,000 after the drugs are sold, but Frank counters that, since the drugs are worth over five times that amount on the street, the two team up, with Larry providing the drugs and Frank providing the dealers, then split the profits evenly. When Frank insists that part of the profits be directed into funding the hospital, however, Larry turns him down and demands that Frank decide immediately whether he want to buy the drugs for $3.5 million or not at all. Frank declines and the two part ways.
Returning to the Plaza, Frank learns of Jump's arrest and orders his lawyers to arrange their release, a process that eventually entails paying $1 million in bail for each man. Frank sends his limousine to the police station to pick up Jump and his men, and they head directly to Chinatown, where they use massacre Larry Wong and his entire gang with machine guns in a quick battle. They then find that the stockpiles of Larry Wong's cocaine in large barrels marked for MSG in a basement storage after killing his gang.
With the money gained from selling the Triad's cocaine, Frank sets up a fundraiser, hosted by singer Freddie Jackson, to raise even more money for the hospital. Witnessing this latest outrage on TV, Gilley, Flanigan, and several like-minded officers resolve to use extrajudicial means to get rid of Frank, despite Bishop's objections. Posing as drug dealers, they bribe Joey Dalesio into leading them to the nightclub where Frank and most of his men are partying. Catching the criminals unaware, the hit squad bursts in with guns blazing, succeeding in slaying all of Frank's girlfriends and most of his gang.
Fleeing in their limousine in a long chase over the Queensboro Bridge, Frank and Jump trade shots with the police, killing all of them except Gilley and Flanigan. After momentarily giving their pursuers the slip, the two men split up, with the nearly-maniacal Jump staying behind to deal with the two cops. Sneaking up on Flanigan, Jump shoots him five times in the chest, puncturing his bulletproof vest. Seeing this, Gilley shoots Jump several times in the chest and abdomen and, after pausing to attempt CPR on his ill-fated partner, kills his assailant with a single shot to the head. Reeling from the unexpected assault and the loss of his friend, Frank responds with narcoterrorism. A few days after the murders, as Gilley is leaving Flanigan's funeral, Frank kills him personally with a single shotgun blast to the head.
That night, after watching his surviving henchmen kill Dalesio, Frank shows up at Roy Bishop's apartment, telling him that he has placed a $250,000 bounty on every detective involved on the case, including Bishop. Still holding Bishop at gunpoint, Frank explains that he killed Tito, Larry, Arty Clay, Zapa and their affliates simply because he disapproved of their business practices, which included the exploitation of immigrants and child prostitution. When Bishop asks, "Did you really think you could get away with killing all these people?" Frank replies with the most often-quoted line of the film: "I never killed anyone who didn't deserve it."
His business seemingly concluded, Frank forces Bishop to handcuff himself to a chair before taking his leave. As Frank escapes down to the subway, Bishop uses a gun from a nearby drawer to free himself and gives chase. Following Frank into a subway car, Bishop corners him, causing Frank to take a woman hostage. During the ensuing standoff, Frank fires on Bishop, killing him, but not before the policeman is able to fire off one last shot himself. Escaping from the train and into a nearby taxi in Times Square, Frank looks down to see that he has been hit. As police officers surround the car, Frank closes his eyes and dies. The last image of the film is his gun falling limply to his side.
[edit] Controversy and popularity
Upon its release, the film proved to be extremely polarizing, with many critics (including Roger Ebert) enjoying it, and others despising it. During its premiere at the New York Film Festival, for example, many members of the audience (including Ferrara's own wife) walked out of the theatre. At the question-and-answer session that Ferrara held after the screening, the first question asked was, "This film is an abomination. Why aren't you giving the proceeds to some drug rehab program?" The next day, Larry Fishburne and Nicholas St. John were actually booed off the stage. The film, which originally ran for 118 minutes, had to be edited down to 106 minutes to receive an R rating (it originally was Rated X). It made only $2 million (US) in its very narrow theatrical release and was soon pulled from theaters.
Since then, however, the film has achieved cult film status and is extremely popular among fans of gangsta rap. This may be because its title song, and much of its soundtrack, was provided by Schoolly D, a famous rapper often called the "Godfather of Gangsta Rap." It has also become popular with fans of Christopher Walken, many of whom rate the Frank White character as one of his best performances. The Notorious B.I.G. referred to himself as "the black Frank White" on his album Ready to Die as an homage. Another Rapper, Jadakiss (of The Lox fame) alludes to the famous scene in the movie where Frank White says, "Come by the Plaza Hotel. I got work for you. Ask for Frank White" in his song We Gonna Make It when he says, "But come and see me at the Plaza Hotel I might give you a job." On Dan the Automator's A Better Tomorrow, Kool Keith quips that he is the "King of New York, patrolling Alphabet City" On April 20, 2004, Artisan Entertainment re-released the film on a two-disc "special edition" DVD with new commentary by Abel Ferrara, a documentary, trailers and a Schoolly D music video.
In 2006 a New Jersey gangster named Zack Sullivan was called the "King of New Jersey" and the "real Frank White" by "Real Nigga Magazine."
[edit] Prequel
Director Ferrara has recently announced that he is planning on making a prequel to the film called "The Last Crew", following Frank White's rise to the top before his arrest. [citation needed]
[edit] Cast
- Christopher Walken-Frank White
- Larry Fishburne-Jimmy Jump
- David Caruso-Dennis Gilley
- Victor Argo-Roy Bishop
- Wesley Snipes-Thomas Flanigan
- Janet Julian-Jennifer
- Joey Chin-Larry
- Giancarlo Esposito-Lance
- Paul Calderon-Joey Dalesio
- Steve Buscemi-Test Tube
- Theresa Randle-Raye
- Carrie Nygren-Melanie
- Ernest Abuba-King Tito
- Frank Gio-Arty Clay
[edit] Trivia
- The film was shot in 40 days without the crew having to spend more than a day on each location.
- The script took over five years to be written.
- James Russo was originally cast to play Jimmy Jump and then left the film. Laurence Fishburne, who had already been cast as Thomas Flanagan, persistently begged director Abel Ferrara for an audition for the part, got the part after coming in looking exactly as he does in the film.
- The film's opening sequence, featuring Frank White emerging from prison, was shot partially at Sing Sing Prison, the first time the infamous prison had ever been used as a filming location.
- Abel Ferrara claims Wesley Snipes was living in his car during production of this film.
- During the film's premiere at the New York Film Festival, many members of the audience including Ferrara's wife walked out of the theater. At the question-and-answer session that Ferrara held after the screening, the first question asked was, "This film is an abomination. Why aren't you giving the proceeds to some drug rehab program?" At a second showing of the film the next day, Laurence Fishburne and Nicholas St. John were booed off the stage.
- The first cut of the film originally ran for almost two hours and had to be edited down to 106 minutes to avoid an X rating.
- The word "fuck" is used 90 times in the film.