Dans un avenir proche, un leader charismatique convoque les gangs de rue de New York. Quand il est tué, les guerriers sont accusés à tort et doivent maintenant se battre pour rentrer chez eu... Tout lireDans un avenir proche, un leader charismatique convoque les gangs de rue de New York. Quand il est tué, les guerriers sont accusés à tort et doivent maintenant se battre pour rentrer chez eux poursuivis par les autres gangs.Dans un avenir proche, un leader charismatique convoque les gangs de rue de New York. Quand il est tué, les guerriers sont accusés à tort et doivent maintenant se battre pour rentrer chez eux poursuivis par les autres gangs.
Marcelino Sánchez
- Rembrandt
- (as Marcelino Sanchez)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesSol Yurick wrote the original book as a rebuttal to the romanticized view of street gangs presented in West Side Story (1961) based on his experience as a New York City welfare department worker.
- GaffesFox is thrown onto the tracks and presumably killed when the train comes at him in the 96th Street station. When Swan and Mercy come back together, they go down to the tracks at the 96th Street station. There would be police and other crews all over the station had someone been killed on the tracks just a short while ago, but the station is empty except for one lone passenger.
- Générique farfeluIn the original version, the end credits are followed by 3 minutes of black screen as the Joe Walsh song "In the City" plays.
- Autres versionsThe Ultimate Director's Cut runs around one minute longer, adding a voiceover introduction from director Walter Hill describing a legendary Greek army's attempt to fight its way home, and comic-book freeze frame shots bridging various scenes in the film.
Commentaire en vedette
I was working in a movie theater when The Warriors first came out, and remember well the flick and the hype surrounding it. Here's a few notes to clear up some misconceptions that many other commentors seem to have.
The flick was NOT ever intended to be an accurate portrayal of New York gang life, although there were some realistic elements. At the time it was generally accepted that it took place in the future, although nothing in the movie supports this. At best it can be considered an urban fable that takes place in a sort-of-imaginary world. You know, like Pulp Fiction (you think 90s LA gangsters dressed like that??).
Second, the film itself was not accused of inciting violence. Problem was, it was a VERY popular film with gang members, who would show up in force. Two rival gangs would show up at the same theater, and... you can figure the rest out yourself. One guy was killed on the first weekend the movie was playing in New York; after that, the distributor hired off-duty police for security at every theater across the country that showed the flick. In the small-town Midwest where I lived, this served more as advertising hype than anything else.
Finally, it was widely known back in the day that The Warriors was based on the ancient Greek nonfiction tale Anabasis, written around 370 BC by the Spartan general Xenophon (it's also published under the title The Persian Expedition). In this classic tale, a battalion of 10,000 Spartan mercenaries join the Persian emperor Cyrus for a war in Asia Minor (i.e. Turkey). Cyrus's army is defeated, the Spartan leaders are captured, and the remaining force must make their way across country, fighting various hostile tribes along the way, experiencing their own internal power struggles, until they reach the safety of the sea. I'm shocked that only one reviewer seemed to be familiar with this; in the 70s almost nobody talked about the movie without mentioning it.
Great flick, by the way, and it holds up extremely well over time. I'm sure the remake will suck.
The flick was NOT ever intended to be an accurate portrayal of New York gang life, although there were some realistic elements. At the time it was generally accepted that it took place in the future, although nothing in the movie supports this. At best it can be considered an urban fable that takes place in a sort-of-imaginary world. You know, like Pulp Fiction (you think 90s LA gangsters dressed like that??).
Second, the film itself was not accused of inciting violence. Problem was, it was a VERY popular film with gang members, who would show up in force. Two rival gangs would show up at the same theater, and... you can figure the rest out yourself. One guy was killed on the first weekend the movie was playing in New York; after that, the distributor hired off-duty police for security at every theater across the country that showed the flick. In the small-town Midwest where I lived, this served more as advertising hype than anything else.
Finally, it was widely known back in the day that The Warriors was based on the ancient Greek nonfiction tale Anabasis, written around 370 BC by the Spartan general Xenophon (it's also published under the title The Persian Expedition). In this classic tale, a battalion of 10,000 Spartan mercenaries join the Persian emperor Cyrus for a war in Asia Minor (i.e. Turkey). Cyrus's army is defeated, the Spartan leaders are captured, and the remaining force must make their way across country, fighting various hostile tribes along the way, experiencing their own internal power struggles, until they reach the safety of the sea. I'm shocked that only one reviewer seemed to be familiar with this; in the 70s almost nobody talked about the movie without mentioning it.
Great flick, by the way, and it holds up extremely well over time. I'm sure the remake will suck.
- PantherMonterey
- 5 nov. 2004
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 4 000 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 22 490 039 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 3 529 675 $ US
- 11 févr. 1979
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 22 495 288 $ US
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What is the Japanese language plot outline for Les guerriers de la nuit (1979)?
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