The Panic in the Needle Park (1971)

The Panic in the Needle Park (1971)

Taglines: In the dark corner of the city, they found light.

The Panic in the Needle Park movie storyline. It’s the upper west side of Manhattan in the area around Sherman Square, which is euphemistically called Needle Park for the propensity of intravenous drug use there. Bobby is a smaller time drug dealer and deludes himself that his own use is not an addiction. Helen is Marco’s girlfriend, he one of Bobby’s customers. It is through this connection that Bobby and Helen become friends, then more than just friends.

Bobby exposes Helen to that drug use. Despite their continual declarations of love to each other and the want to get married, Bobby and Helen, by their actions, are more in love with heroin and the need to get the continual fix. Not having the temperament to keep a steady “traditional” job, Helen does whatever she needs to get the money for what has become her $80 per day fix. This fixation on the drugs for both Bobby and Helen may lead to an incompatible set of priorities, especially when the police get involved.

The Panic in the Needle Park (1971)

Film Review for The Panic in the Needle Park

The answer to the question “which films you think of Al Pacino The is?” The Godfather Scarface Scent of a Woman and Devil’s Advocate”. But the first film, Pac The Panic in Needle Park, starring Al Pacino, doesn’t come to mind for most people. A year before he appeared as Don Michael Corleone, we knew Alfred James Pacino for his role as a drug addict. This acquaintance gave him an important career, of course. With his acting in this film, he entered the series “The Godfather”.

The film isn’t just about Al Pacino, of course, but it wouldn’t be a good idea not to start an article with such an important film for his career. The film takes place in Needle Park (Needle Park) with a period of lack of drugs and a drug addicted young person affected by the crisis. Al Pacino, who we see as Bobby, is not the best performer of his career, of course, but he is very successful for his first lead. He has an acting and charisma that makes us realize him. Every movement, from gum in his mouth, to the stupor when he was heroin-free, suits his role, not exaggeration.

But as I said, it’s not just the movie. Kitty Winn’s role as Helen, Bobby’s lover, is as prominent as Al Pacino, and maybe even more. Winn’s first lead role, though, is a challenge. The film m The Panic in Needle Park başarılı is not as depressing as Requiem for a Dream. It tells the most difficult aspects of addiction and its consequences, but when we talk about it, we come across a love story. The important thing is that love story finally. We’re not obsessed with Bobby’s or Helen’s addiction. We are deeply impressed by the story of the two lovers.

Another film that has done a great job in James Mills’ novel Pan The Panic in Needle Park, uyar based on the novel of the same name, has opened up the world of cinema for director Jerry Schatzberg. He later made a name for himself with the film Scarecrow. However, the most successful period was the period of these productions. After that, he didn’t make his name very often.

One of the most beautiful aspects of the 1971 film is that it is not only a production of its time. The film could be shot in 2012 with the same screenplay and had a good impression on the audience. Of course, we would be deprived of the pleasure of watching two great actors like Al Pacino and Kitty Winn, but the script was never questioned in terms of periodicity. This is one of the great features of successful films. Beyond the present time, they can influence the audience no matter what period they are monitored.

The Panic in the Needle Park Movie Poster (1971)

The Panic in the Needle Park (1971)

Directed by: Jerry Schatzberg
Starring: Al Pacino, Kitty Winn, Alan Vint, Richard Bright, Kiel Martin, Marcia Jean Kurtz, Warren Finnerty, Angie Ortega, Larry Marshall, Nancy MacKay, Joe Santos, Gil Rogers
Screenplay by: Joan Didion
Cinematography by: Adam Holender
Film Editing by: Evan A. Lottman
Costume Design by: Jo Ynocencio
Set Decoration by: Philip Smith
Art Direction by: Murray P. Stern
MPAA Rating: PG.
Distributed by: 20th Century Fox
Release Date: July 30, 1971

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