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The Taking of New York City

Crime on the Screen and in the Streets of the Big Apple in the 1970s

by

Type
Studies
Subject
Genre
Keywords
crime films, New York, 1970s
Publishing date
Publisher
Applause Books
Language
English
Size of a pocketbookRelative size of this bookSize of a large book
Relative size
Physical desc.
Hardcover280 pages
6 ¼ x 9 ¼ inches (16 x 23.5 cm)
ISBN
978-1-4930-7871-4
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Book Presentation:
For a time in the 1970s, New York City seemed to many to be genuinely on the cusp of collapse. Plagued by rampant crime, graft, catastrophic finances, and crumbling infrastructure, it served as a symbol for the plight of American cities after the convulsions of the 1960s. This tale of urban blight was reinforced wherever one looked—whether in the news media (memorably captured in the infamous New York Daily News headline “Ford to City: Drop Dead”) or the countless movies that evoked the era’s uniquely gritty sense of dread.

The Taking of New York City is a history of both New York and some of the decade’s most definitive films, including The French Connection (1971), the first two Godfather movies (1972 & 1974), Taxi Driver (1976), Serpico (1973), Dog Day Afternoon (1975), and many more. It was also an era in which the city wrestled with the racial tensions still threatening the tear the nation apart, never more so than in “Blaxploitation” classics such as Shaft (1971) and Super Fly (1972). These films depicted the city that never sleeps as a grim, violent place overridden with muggers, pimps, and killers. Projected at drive-ins and inside their local movie houses, rural America saw New York as a nightmare: a vile dystopia where the innocent couldn't rely on the local law enforcement, who were seemingly all on the take. If one took Hollywood's word for it, the only way a person was able to find justice in 1970s New York City was by grabbing a gun and meting it out themselves.

Author Andrew Rausch meticulously separates fact and fiction in this illuminating book. Attentive to the ways that New York’s problems were exaggerated or misrepresented, it also gives an unvarnished look at just how bad things could get in the “Rotten Apple”—and how movies told that story to the country and the world.

About the Author:
Andrew J. Rausch is a film journalist, celebrity interviewer, and the author of many books about cinema and popular culture. Representative titles include Making Movies with Orson Welles: A Memoir (with Gary Graver, 2011), The Cinematic Misadventures of Ed Wood (with Charles Pratt, 2015), and My Best Friend's Birthday: The Making of a Quentin Tarantino Film (2019). Rausch is also an editor at Diabolique, regular contributor to Shock Cinema, columnist for Screem.

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