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Who's That Knocking at My Door

  • 1967
  • R
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Who's That Knocking at My Door (1967)
Drama

A young man can't accept the girl he likes because of her bitter past.A young man can't accept the girl he likes because of her bitter past.A young man can't accept the girl he likes because of her bitter past.

  • Director
    • Martin Scorsese
  • Writers
    • Martin Scorsese
    • Betzi Manoogian
  • Stars
    • Harvey Keitel
    • Zina Bethune
    • Anne Collette
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Martin Scorsese
    • Writers
      • Martin Scorsese
      • Betzi Manoogian
    • Stars
      • Harvey Keitel
      • Zina Bethune
      • Anne Collette
    • 56User reviews
    • 54Critic reviews
    • 63Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos77

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    Top cast20

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    Harvey Keitel
    Harvey Keitel
    • J.R.
    Zina Bethune
    Zina Bethune
    • Girl
    Anne Collette
    Anne Collette
    • Girl in Dream
    • (as Ann Collette)
    Lennard Kuras
    • Joey
    Michael Scala
    • Sally Gaga
    Harry Northup
    Harry Northup
    • Harry
    Tsuai Yu-Lan
    • Girl in Dream
    Saskia Holleman
    • Girl in Dream
    Bill Minkin
    • Iggy at Party
    Philip Carlson
    • Boy in Copake
    • (as Phil Carlson)
    Wendy Russell
    • Gaga's Girl
    Robert Uricola
    • Boy with Gun
    Susan Wood
    • Girl at Party
    Marrissa Joffre
    • Girl at Party
    • (as Marrisa Joffrey)
    Catherine Scorsese
    Catherine Scorsese
    • Mother
    Victor Magnotta
    • Boy in Fight
    • (as Vic Magnotta)
    Paul DeBonde
    • Boy in Fight
    Thomas Aiello
    • Minor Role
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Martin Scorsese
    • Writers
      • Martin Scorsese
      • Betzi Manoogian
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews56

    6.510.6K
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    Featured reviews

    5shepardjessica-1

    Decent early Scorsese!

    Filmed over years apparently, this early M. Scorsese New York tale involving young dudes being typically out of it is interesting in the scenes with Keitel and the girl (Z. Bethune), but the buddy scenes tend to drag on and semi-bore. A 5 out of 10. Best performance = Zena Bethune.

    Harvey Keitel has always been interesting and believable and it's great to see him in a lead (pre-MEAN STREETS) and Ms. Bethune is very touching and human. All Scorsese fans should track this down even though it's not that great. The DVD has a semi-commentary from Marty which is unusual! It comes in the recent DVD set of Martin Scorsese and worth a look! Harry Northrup has a small role (MEAN STREETS, TAXI DRIVER).
    6moonspinner55

    The momentary turn-on of casual conversation...

    A well-dressed but feckless young man (Harvey Keitel, in his acting debut) on the streets of New York meets a lovely single girl reading a foreign magazine and strikes up a conversation about movies; soon after, they begin dating, however she volunteers more about her past than he is able to handle. Striking if aimless debut from writer-director Martin Scorsese, alternately titled "I Call First", began life as a short feature from the young film student. His sexual montage, featuring Keitel and his 'broads' (and set to "The End" by the Doors), is a fabulous example of cinematic sound and fury: the perfect marriage between silvery black-and-white cinematography, kinetic editing, great music and lusty bodies. Unfortunately, Scorsese as a writer had not developed a true ear for canny dialogue, and the characters fail to emerge as a result. Still, an almost-dynamic first try, and a must-see for film historians. Keitel, marvelously youthful and muscular, is more callow than expressive, though he gives the picture its pulse; the cinematography from Richard Coll and Michael Wadley is a major asset as well. **1/2 from ****
    8KnightsofNi11

    A must see for Scorsese fans

    Martin Scorsese is undoubtedly one of my all time favorite directors. He has a consistently great string of movies that span his entire career and Who's That Knocking at My Door is the very first one of them all. The movie itself is very good, but looking at it in relation to the career and development of Scorsese's aesthetically unique style of directing makes it even better. When you break it down it is sort of a movie about nothing, and it focuses more on aesthetics and visual nuances to give it a very unique feel that fits right in with Scorsese's body of work. But if you have to assign a storyline to the film it is about J.R., an Italian American living in New York, who meets a girl and falls in love with her. They have their ups and downs and the movie essentially just follows J.R. through his life as a city slicker, hanging out with his foul mouthed buddies at bars and trying to balance that with his love life. The story more or less takes a back seat to the unique visual exploration that is way ahead of its time.

    If you're familiar with Scorsese, then this film would be what you would expect from his directorial debut. It is very raw, unpolished, and experimental. Thankfully, a lot of what Scorsese plays with in this film would actually carry through to his later films that were obviously much bigger successes. This film is essentially a gigantic lens into what would later develop into Scorsese's very specific style of directing. It mixes up a little bit of everything and almost feels like a rough mixing of all of Scorsese's unique visual elements that he has trademarked since then. Who's Knocking at My Door employs all kinds of techniques that we've grown to love from Scorsese. It deals out some long static shots, long tracking shots, and its fair share of strangely quick cuts. The dialouge has a very unpolished Scorsese-esquire cadence to it. It can't even compare to some of the dialouge of his later films, but you can definitely see the early formations of Scorsese's vulgar and quick paced dialouge.

    You also have to give a lot of credit to Scorsese and the people who signed on to help him produce this film because of just how experimental the film was for a directorial debut. The film is far ahead of its time in content and style, and for Scorsese to take this risk with his very first film is something that is very respectable in any filmmaker. He didn't try to do anything on a large and flashy scale. Instead he creates a very small scale story with small scale characters and he does a surprising lot artistically with the little he has to work with. And it's also incredible that, to me at least, it works. Trying something so bizarre and different from conventional filmmaking styles of the time could easily crash and burn. But Scorsese pulls it off with his first film and makes something that is actually watchable.

    Who's Knocking at My Door is a really good movie by itself, but it becomes so much more interesting when you put it in the context of Scorsese's body of work. When you do this, the film becomes a fascinating study of the beginnings of Scorsese, and for that I absolutely loved it. Being such a small scale movie without a lot of purely escapist entertainment value it's hard to recommend this film to just anybody, but if you are a Scorsese fan then it is a must see.
    6rainking_es

    For Scorsese's maniacs...

    "Who's that knocking at my door" is along with "Boxcar Bertha" the most unknown picture of the Italian-American genius Scorsese. Make no mistakes: it's nothing like a masterpiece and it's no surprise that almost no one know about this movie, but here we got some of the constants in Marty's cinema: the street talking, the violence, the outsiders... Those things that "mean streets" dealt about... This was Martin Scorsese's debut and so it was for his friend Harvey Keytel who plays a chauvinist-bad tempered young man.

    So, this is a movie that I recommend to those who really love Scorsese's work and wanna know about his origins.

    *My rate: 6/10
    failedscreenwriter

    "Love Story" Meets "Heart of Darkness"

    I am an unabashed admirer of Martin Scorsese's work, and his first feature did not disappoint. Filmed on practically no budget, this movie uses a nonlinear approach to storytelling that predates "Pulp Fiction" by some 25 years. One can also see a precursor of Scorsese's later cinematic technique, and just a hint of his nightmare-world view of New York that is so apparent in his later works "Taxi Driver," "After Hours" and "Bringing Out the Dead." Scorsese's trademark—finding the perfect piece of contemporary music for each scene—is also quite apparent here.

    As the traditionally-minded J.R., the young Keitel turns in a riveting performance in his first film appearance, as a working-class New Yorker torn between his cultural norms and his love for an intelligent, independent woman. Bethune is today better known as a dancer and humanitarian, but as "The Girl" she is utterly convincing and nothing short of ravishing, with a presence both ethereal and self-assuredly erotic. The meeting of the two characters is really a meeting of the traditional with the modern--something much on people's minds in 1968 when this film was made. It's interesting that in some places this movie was retitled "I Call First"—the gist of the conflict between the lovers. J.R. receives a piece of information about The Girl's past, one that he cannot put into perspective given his macho set of social norms. Scorsese throws in a dash of the Catholic morality and male-centeredness current at the time, and we have a memorable exploration of the place of culture and religion in determining who and how much we love.

    If you're a Scorsese fan, this film is a must-rent. If you're uninitiated, see a couple of his later films first, then go back to this one for a look at two future giants—Scorsese and Keitel—on their first project, as well as an excellent performance by Bethune, who should certainly have had more featured roles following this one.

    What Scorsese Film Ranks Highest on IMDb?

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In order to get distribution for his film, Martin Scorsese was told to add nude scenes so it could be promoted as a "sexploitation" movie. He thus shot the fantasy scene showing J.R. imagining encounters with prostitutes.
    • Goofs
      Martin Scorsese utilizes the black and white nature of film to hide the lack of time and day continuity in some scenes.
    • Quotes

      J.R.: Everybody should like westerns.

    • Crazy credits
      There is a big "Thanks to the County and City of New York" in the end credits.
    • Alternate versions
      Early versions of this film were screened without the erotic fantasy scene.
    • Connections
      Featured in A Decade Under the Influence (2003)
    • Soundtracks
      Jenny Take a Ride
      (uncredited)

      Written by Bob Crewe, Enotris Johnson, and Little Richard

      Performed by Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels

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    FAQ18

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    • Was the Film remade into a modern Film?

    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 13, 1968 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Amazon
      • Amazon Buy Now
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Bring on the Dancing Girls
    • Filming locations
      • Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands(as New York, only interior, scenes with nudity)
    • Production companies
      • New York University, Tisch School of the Arts
      • Tisch School of the Arts (NYU)
      • Trimod Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $75,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $16,085
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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