7/10
Raw, stripped-off and deeply affecting on The Big Apple's drug addicts scene of the '70s.
22 November 2009
Another early 1970s classic off my list that was quite well worth waiting for: Raw, stripped-off and deeply affecting account of young girl (Winn) in NYC who falls in love with a street hustler & drug user (a pre-Godfather Pacino), and slowly falls into addiction herself. With prostitution, theft and a steady descent into low-life misery as consequences, the everyday struggle of The Big Apple's drug addicts cliques, is indeed no light affair to witness...

It's refreshing to see an anti-drug message without too much simplistic morality preaching as here, where not even the narc police utter a word of "how bad it is to take drugs" - that is clearly seen on its main characters' demise as it is. No music score, naturalistic dialog and fragmental, jumpy storytelling technique do their bit for an almost documentary-, low-key feel. Alas, that latter also becomes the films' one weakness, as the connection with its characters gets cut off a few times too many... Understandably hailed and daring, however and one can clearly see its impact on "Requiem for a dream" e.g, with smashing performances from its two leads. The ending is wide open for interpretation, too...

7 out of 10 from Ozjeppe
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed