It's pretty empty, and by that I mean it's `pretty' empty... | New York, New York (30th Anniversary Edition) | Liza Minnelli, Robert De Niro
DVDs:
•
New York, New York (30th Anniversary Edition)
Liza Minnelli
,
Robert De Niro
MGM (Video & DVD), 2007
average customer review:
based on 57 reviews
view larger image
for more information click here
You Can't Make a Silk Purse From a Sow's Ear
Oh my. Where do I begin? If I had been Martin Scorsese's assistant during pre-production of "
New
York
, New York", I might have said something like "Marty, you know I love your movies. I suspect you walk on water in your spare time, and can film just about any film genre known to humanity, but you gotta pass on this screenplay, because you can't make a silk purse from a sow's ear."
There's a lot to like and a lot not to like in "New York, New York", but the unlikeable parts boil down to: bad screenplay.
The basic premise of the film is simple. Jimmy (Robert DeNiro), a saxophone player just out of the military in 1945 meets and falls in love with Francine (Liza Minnelli), a small-time singer with a touring big band. Francine becomes much more famous than Jimmy, things don't work out between Francine and Jimmy. So far, so good. More about what's good and what's bad about the movie.
What's good: The music is great. Big band and jazz from the 1940s, excellent musicianship. The singing by Liza Minnelli is also superb. A musical medley taking up the last half-hour of the film is also sensational. Set design is perfect for re-creating the mood of some of the lavish musicals from the 1940s and 1950s.
What's bad: The biggest problem with the film is that Jimmy's character is completely unlikeable. He spends the first part of the film at a VJ day (WW II end of war victory) celebration party where he's asking women for a date. Jimmy focuses on Francine and unrelentingly bothers her for a full fifteen minutes of screen time asking her out, trying out every line he can think of. Essentially, Jimmy comes across as a crazed stalker who will not take no for an answer. DeNiro's performance is really creepy, but I'm not sure if he intended it to be. He appears to be channeling the Travis Bickle character from Taxi Driver. The Bickle character is believable because we know he's a psychopath, but we also know he wants to "clean up the city" from all the bad elements. The Jimmy character comes across as just a manipulative, self-centered egomaniac who only thinks of himself.
Eventually, Jimmy and Francine marry, but that doesn't mean Jimmy becomes a better person. A few thoughts came to my mind when I watched their relationship develop: Jimmy is a chauvinist pig, arrogant, controlling, and despicable. Francine allows herself to be treated like a doormat by Jimmy. She's emotionally abused constantly, yet maintains a strange acceptance of her mistreatment, wearing a bemused, detached expression like she's the Buddha who has been reincarnated as a dancing girl. I wanted to warn Francine, "Stand up for yourself, you don't have to take this from him. Read "Women Who Love Too Much", can't you see that you have a toxic relationship with this man?" (Oh, where's Oprah or Dr. Phil when you need them?)
DeNiro's performance in New York, New York is similar to his previous film with Scorsese, Taxi Driver. What works for a mentally unstable loner in Taxi Driver simply does not translate to a married saxophone player in a respected band. I for one, did not accept that the Jimmy character should have been given a single second of respect. Minnelli's performance, as previously noted, is a little strange; extremely calm and quiet, and almost under-acted. It's like she was afraid to let the Francine character ever let her emotions show. I suspect she was told to play the part like a woman with battered wife syndrome - very shut down emotionally.
I believe that the main reason this film did not do well is because American audiences were not willing to embrace the two main characters of the film; the man is emotionally abusive, and the woman is meekly accepting of her abuse. The story isn't even really a tragedy, it's a pathetic reminder that some people should never meet and fall in love. I suspect also that American audiences craved a stronger female lead who wouldn't take any guff from anybody - hence the great success of two films with very strong female characters made shortly after New York, New York; namely, Karen Allen in Raiders of the Lost Ark, and Sigourney Weaver in Alien.
Although Scorsese went on to make the brilliant Raging Bull, again with DeNiro as an abusive man, at least in that film, his character's relationship with his wife Vicky is easier to accept because Vicky is one tough broad who can stand up for herself, who gives as good as she gets, dishing it right back out. The Minnelli character is just a sad, pathetic character. One of Scorsese's weakest efforts, recommend you skip this film.
for more information click here
Art, but the world goes `round
I really wanted to love "
New
York
, New York", but, I guess I am not an intellectual movie watcher. Gritty "real life-like" stories do not entertain me. BUT, the music, costumes and sets tip the balance to "like". I understand what Scorsese wanted to accomplish and he succeeded. DeNiro's character is so very unlikeable; it is difficult to root for his success. Minnelli's character is such a doormat, I just want to shake her and say "Snap out of it!" I guess the movie's point is there are no real "happy endings", they are reserved for the MGM musicals of the 1950s. This realism might be artistic but not entertaining. If I want "real", I would stay home and watch real people doing real things for free. Liza's musical numbers brought the movie up a star. The special features told me some things I never knew about the film, but the Scorsese commentary would be better served in a separate interview, NOT running through the film. He was so intent on convincing us he was an "artist", it got boring.
Granted, the characters should never be together and I do not want a "sappy ending", but after several hours, I really wanted to like someone in the movie.
for more information click here
It's pretty empty, and by that I mean it's `pretty' empty...
I have mixed feelings about this movie. The performances are stellar but the characters are very hard to love. The direction is sharp yet the plot if rather flimsy. The set pieces and costumes are delicious to the eye, but the film overstays its welcome by about forty minutes. The music is jazz at its finest yet the musical numbers themselves seem to be lacking for me.
It is a big plate of good and bad with no real proper balance of the two.
The film stars Liza Minnelli and Robert De Niro as a struggling couple trying to make it big in `Big Band Era'
New
York
. Francine Evans is a dynamite singer, and Jimmy Doyle is a stubborn yet savvy sax player. Together they make one sensational act that draws quite a crowd, but when you mix personal life with business things start to grow sour. When Francine gets pregnant and leaves the tour, Jimmy finds his band diminishing under the strain of a new singer (who just can't hold a candle to Francine) and his fizzling career sends a shock of distain through his body. When Francine, while pregnant and in New York, starts striking up conversations of record deals, Jimmy finds that jealously can corrupt and even kill a relationship.
The films plot (rocky relationship inside a jazz group) is far too hollow to sustain the films near three-hour running time. If the film had been maybe a third shorter it wouldn't have led way to the films flaws so much. By giving us a whole lot of nothing so-to-speak you give us time to realize that `New York, New York' doesn't have a lot to offer.
What `New York, New York' doesn't have in substance it makes up for in charisma. The two stars are sensational here, both of them working off the other with ferocity. We all know that De Niro is a brilliant actor, but for me at least, I was only aware of one performance by the mighty Minnelli; `Cabaret'. I consider her dynamic performance one of the best in the history of cinema; but even I knew that one brilliant performance does not equal brilliant actress. As good as De Niro is, this movie is all about Liza. She is phenomenal here, completely sinking into her character's spunk and drive; delivering chilling dramatic tension while never losing Francine's bubbly persona and unforgettable heart. De Niro is cheeky, funny and keeps up with Minnelli rather well, but she is clearly best-in-show here.
I can't say that either character is really all that likable, despite that fact that they are both played very well. Jimmy is a creep; a self absorbed user who fails to garner any of the audiences respect; and Francine is far too forgiving. As one already said, you just want to smack some sense into her. But this is a testament to Minnelli's marvelous performance, for Francine is a character written in a way that almost forces her to come across as weak, yet she never does. She comes off as foolish and blinded by what she considers to be love, but Minnelli conveys the right amount of understanding to make keep her from looking weak.
There is no denying that Minnelli's voice is impeccable, and if you like jazz then you will swoon over the countless jazz songs littering this film; but, if you love musicals you may not be too impressed with the actual musical numbers. They lack a certain spark that comes with the territory, which shocked me a bit. I absolutely ADORED the `Happy Endings' number, but aside from that I found myself expecting more out of each smoky club routine. I found more heart and fire in the musical numbers in `The Fabulous Baker Boys' than I found here.
So, in the end I have to say that `New York, New York' is a real mixed bag. The acting is great (thanks to undeniable chemistry), the look and feel of the film is flawless, but these two components can't really save the film from the weak plot and overlong running time. Going back to my review title (and for a little more clarity), this film is a very glitzy `pretty' film, but that pretty is only here to mask over the films overall emptiness. I'd give it a C+, possibly a B- (but a B seems almost too forgiving for a film that offers little more than some great acting).
I wouldn't avoid it, but I wouldn't seek it out either.
for more information click here
for more information click here
Scorsese's Serenade of his Beloved New York City!
This film probably would have been better received and honored if it had been edited down a bit. It's over 2 hours and 43 minutes long. While I love the musical numbers, the weaknesses lie in the script development of the main characters. Liza Minnelli played Francine Evans, a USO singer, and Robert DeNiro played Jimmy Doyle who is both a con-man and a musician. He plays the saxophone. They have tumultous relationship that they only pull off and the ending needs to better explained.
I watched it without the commentary by the film director, Martin Scorsese.
I didn't even check the deleted scenes because the film is already so long and slow moving that I just wanted to see it once and donate it. It's an okay movie with the period costumes, art direction, and big band sound. The problem was the lack of storylines behind Francine and Jimmy. They never seem to develop and there is little interaction with other characters except on the stage.
There is no doubt that Liza can belt
New
York
, New York and I am puzzled as to why it lost the Oscar and was never nominated for original song. It became the song for New York City. Of course, the film was also overshadowed by blockbusters. Still, this is a satisfactory film from Martin Scorsese which is truly his love affair with his native city.
for more information click here
Acclaimed director Martin Scorsese teams with Academy AwardÂ(r) winners* Liza Minnelli and Robert De Niro in this splashy, flashy musical spectacle celebrating the glorious days of the Big Band Era in the Big Apple! Jimmy is a joint-jumpin saxophonist on his way to stardom. Francine is a wannabe starlet who dreams of singing in the spotlight. When they meet, sparks flyand when he plays and she sings, they set
New
York
on fire! It's the beginning of a stormy relationship, asthe two struggle to balance their passions for music and each other under the pressures of big-timeshow biz.
for more information click here
reviews
:
page 1
,
2
,
3
,
4
,
5
,
6
,
7
,
8
,
9
,
10
hot
or
not?
What's your opinion?
Write a review and share your thoughts!
recommendations
The Essential Liza Minnelli (in chronological order)
Robert De Niro dominates cinema (from 1970 to 1992)
Robert De Niro's Essential Filmography
Ashley's Must-see Musicals
The Scorsese Universe
anniversary
Annie (Special Anniversary Edition)
LeapFrog: Letter Factory
Jurassic Park (3D Blu-ray + Blu-ray + DVD + Digital Copy + ...
Skyfall (Blu-ray/ DVD + Digital Copy)
Bond 50: The Complete 22 Film Collection [Blu-ray]
edition
Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (Extended Edition)
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 - Extended Edition
Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring - Extended Edition
I Am Legend (Ultimate Collector's Edition) [Blu-ray]
The Secret (Extended Edition)
30th
E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial Anniversary Edition (Combo Pack: Blu-ray + ...
Blade Runner (30th Anniversary Collector's Edition) [Blu-ray]
E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial Anniversary Edition
Alfred Hitchcock: The Masterpiece Collection (Limited Edition) ...
Alice in Wonderland (Two-Disc Special Un-Anniversary Edition)
search for DVDs
new york, new
,
30th
,
anniversary
,
edition
,
new
,
york
DVDs:
randomly chosen
HARDSHIP POSTING Volume 1
home
impressum - about us