|
David Proval | Tony DeVienazo | |
Cesare Danova | Giovanni Cappa | |
Richard Romanus | Michael Longo | |
Amy Robinson | Teresa Ronchelli | |
Robert De Niro | John 'Johnny Boy' Civello | |
Harvey Keitel | Charlie Cappa | |
Victor Argo | Mario | |
George Memmoli | Joey 'Clams' Scala | |
Lenny Scaletta | Jimmy | |
Jeannie Bell | Diane | |
Murray Moston | Oscar | |
David Carradine | Drunk | |
Robert Carradine | Drunk's Killer | |
Lois Walden | Jewish Girl | |
Harry Northup | Jerry the Soldier | |
Dino Seragusa | Old Man | |
D'Mitch Davis | Officer Davis | |
Peter Fain | George | |
Julie Andleman | ||
Robert DeNiro |
Director |
|
||
Producer | Jonathan T. Taplin
E. Lee Perry Martin Scorsese |
||
Writer | Martin Scorsese
Mardik Martin |
||
Cinematography | Kent L. Wakeford
|
|
"Exquisite, savage, compassionate and brilliant."-Joseph Gelmiz, Newsday "A true original and triumph of personal filmmaking." (-Pauline Kael, The New Yorker) Mean Streets announced Martin Scorsese's arrival as a new filmmaking force - and marked his first historic teaming with Robert De Niro. It's a story Scorsese lived, a semi-autobiographical tale of the first-generation sons and daughters of New York's Little Italy. Harvey Keitel plays Charlie, working his way up the ranks of a local mob. Amy Robinson is Teresa, the girlfriend his family deems unsuitable because of her epilepsy. And in the star making role that won Best Supporting Actor Awards from New York and National Society of Film Critics, De Niro is Johnny Boy, a small-time gambler in big-time debt to loan sharks. |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Features
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||