Wild 90 (1968)
A Film by Norman Mailer
DVDRip | MKV | 1h 21min | 706x532 | AVC @ 1800Kbps | AAC @ 160Kbps
Lang: English | Subs: None | 1.12 GB
Genre: Crime | Drama
IMDB Info
IMDB Rating: 3.7/10
Directed by: Norman Mailer
Starring: Norman Mailer, Buzz Farber, Mickey Knox
Storyline: This improvisational film is the first effort by author Norman Mailer. Wild 90 refers to the length of this talkative exposé wherein three mobsters are the only remnants of a once-powerful gang of crooks. The Prince (Mailer) and his two cohorts Cameo (Buzz Farber) and 20 Years (Mickey Knox) are holed up in a Brooklyn warehouse hiding out from the police. They are visited by Kid Cha Cha (ex-prize fighter Jose Torres) and a police Lieutenant (magazine publisher Dick Adler). Mailer does an excellent job of acting, adding non-acting friends from real life to give the film an art-house flavor. In between the inactivity are some genuinely comedic passages and dialogue. Mailer, as do many independent filmmakers, owes a debt of gratitude to John Cassavetes who pioneered this style of film. Mailer, Farber and Knox would often spend time in local New York coffee shops where they would pretend to be gangsters, hence the idea for the story and film.
Screenshots:
A Film by Norman Mailer
DVDRip | MKV | 1h 21min | 706x532 | AVC @ 1800Kbps | AAC @ 160Kbps
Lang: English | Subs: None | 1.12 GB
Genre: Crime | Drama
IMDB Info
IMDB Rating: 3.7/10
Directed by: Norman Mailer
Starring: Norman Mailer, Buzz Farber, Mickey Knox
Storyline: This improvisational film is the first effort by author Norman Mailer. Wild 90 refers to the length of this talkative exposé wherein three mobsters are the only remnants of a once-powerful gang of crooks. The Prince (Mailer) and his two cohorts Cameo (Buzz Farber) and 20 Years (Mickey Knox) are holed up in a Brooklyn warehouse hiding out from the police. They are visited by Kid Cha Cha (ex-prize fighter Jose Torres) and a police Lieutenant (magazine publisher Dick Adler). Mailer does an excellent job of acting, adding non-acting friends from real life to give the film an art-house flavor. In between the inactivity are some genuinely comedic passages and dialogue. Mailer, as do many independent filmmakers, owes a debt of gratitude to John Cassavetes who pioneered this style of film. Mailer, Farber and Knox would often spend time in local New York coffee shops where they would pretend to be gangsters, hence the idea for the story and film.
Screenshots: