Fun City Editions: Alphabet City (1984) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Fun City Editions

Israeli born New York based writer-director Amos Poe is regarded alongside Penelope Spheeris and Alex Cox as being among the first true punk filmmakers with his 1976 punk rocker epic The Blank Generation before pioneering what became known as the No Wave Cinema movement focused on shooting films in the lower East Side of New York City.  Going on to make No Wave classics such as The Foreigner from 1978 with Debbie Harry and Subway Riders with Robbie Coltrane in 1981, the quasi documentary-punk filmmaker would invariably make his way towards fictional features in 1984 with his neon-drenched New York based crime thriller Alphabet City picked up and restored in 2K by Vinegar Syndrome sublabel Fun City Editions. 

 
A film that seems to forecast such neon-noir fare as Drive through the docudrama lens flared nightscape somewhere between Liquid Sky and Deadbeat at Dawn, Alphabet City stars then-unknown Over the Edge actor Vincent Spano as Johnny, a thug enforcing New York based titular rough hooded Alphabet City’s drug trade.  However, a new task assigned to the leather jacketed gang member involving torching his family’s childhood apartment building puts him at an impasse between himself and his ruthless bosses.  In a race against time beset by gorgeously lensed neon-lit visuals by Oliver Wood of Miami Vice and Face/Off and aided by Chic founder/dance music guru Nile Rodgers’ synthetic keyboard score, our hero must do everything to protect his loved ones from falling under the deadly bullets of his employers.

 
Something of a time capsule capturing the air and flavor of the seedier portions of New York ala Mondo New York or Martin Scorsese’s gritty Mean Streets with the eyes and ears of Dario Argento or Nicolas Winding Refn, Alphabet City reportedly shot over twenty nights in poor neighborhoods is a slick piece of pure 80s neon drenched dripping style.  From Johnny’s 1983 black and white Pontiac Firebird driven throughout the film against lip glossed cursive credits onscreen as Rodgers’ electric sonics sizzle on the soundtrack, the film is a literal realization on film of Kavinsky’s Outrun album replete with Drive opening track Nightcall blasting through a car’s loudspeakers.  While a couple of spots involving the protagonist’s family interactions featuring a then-unknown Jami Gertz echo the family squabbles of Saturday Night Fever by way of Scarface, Alphabet City nevertheless comes across as a distinct (possibly tail end) example of the No Wave Cinema. 

 
Performance wise, the ensemble cast is mostly fine with Vincent Spano giving a kind of Jason Patric performance in his thug with a heart of gold.  Michael Winslow from the Police Academy movies shows up in it as Johnny’s adrift partner in crime while girlfriend Angie (Kate Vernon) turns over a mostly fine performance as a bystander trapped in the middle of an unfolding turf war.  Fans who are really looking will spot Let’s Scare Jessica to Death actress Zohra Lampert as Johnny’s mother more or less riffing on Tony Montana’s mom from Scarface.  All things said, the film’s truest main character, however, is the titular Alphabet City itself bathed in purple, green and red nighttime lights that illuminate buildings and sometimes people.  One hundred percent a nightlife film, the city glimpsed in a form it has long since jettisoned while threatening and dangerous is also oddly picturesque in its dismal glory.

 
A modestly successful underground hit that flew under the radar of many cinephiles only to be rediscovered and reappraised years later thanks to the efforts of Fun City Editions, Alphabet City stands and radiates glowingly today as a time capsule of a bygone but still faintly familiar era.  A movie that all but forecasted the eventual marriage of Walter Hill oriented modestly sized actioners with the phantasmagoria of say a Mario Bava film, Alphabet City is an underrated night time pressure cooking thriller with a breakneck energy reminiscent of The Warriors with a distinctly urban New York based patina that’s almost like an expensive dessert at a hole in the wall family restaurant, cheap, rough and tough but also highly flavorful.  A film with a tangible, almost physical vibe, it represents a snapshot of New York rarely seen on film before or since.

--Andrew Kotwicki