Billy Bathgate

November 1st, 1991







Advertisments





Billy Bathgate

No valid json found

Plot
In the 1935, fifteen year old street hustler Billy Bathgate becomes the protege of fledgling gangster Dutch Schultz and begins a love affair with a flighty moll.

Release Year: 1991

Rating: 5.8/10 (6,408 voted)

Director: Robert Benton

Stars: Dustin Hoffman, Nicole Kidman, Loren Dean

Storyline
Based loosely on the organized crime syndicates of the 20's and 30's, Billy Bathgate is the story of a young man's rise from gopher to right hand man in Dutch Schultz' gang. Having been impressed by the youth, Schultz takes him under his wing so to speak. Billy soon finds himself in a world where wealth and fortune live next door to danger and death.

Writers: E.L. Doctorow, Tom Stoppard

Cast:
Dustin Hoffman - Dutch Schultz
Nicole Kidman - Drew Preston
Loren Dean - Billy Bathgate
Bruce Willis - Bo Weinberg
Steven Hill - Otto Berman
Steve Buscemi - Irving
Billy Jaye - Mickey
John Costelloe - Lulu
Timothy Jerome - Dixie Davis (as Tim Jerome)
Stanley Tucci - Lucky Luciano
Mike Starr - Julie Martin
Robert F. Colesberry - Jack Kelly
Stephen Joyce - Mr. Hines
Frances Conroy - Mary Behan
Moira Kelly - Becky

Taglines: In 1935, a New York kid was looking for a hero. He found Dutch Schultz.

Release Date: 1 November 1991

Filming Locations: Durham, North Carolina, USA

Box Office Details

Budget: $45,000,000 (estimated)

Opening Weekend: $4,051,590 (USA) (3 November 1991) (912 Screens)

Gross: $15,965,919 (USA)



Technical Specs

Runtime:



Did You Know?

Trivia:
Final film for cinematographer Néstor Almendros.

Goofs:
Continuity: When Billy and Becky are first seen on the roof in long shot she is exhaling smoke; in the close-up immediately after, she doesn't have a cigarette.

Quotes:
[first lines]
Bo Weinberg: [being tied up] What do you think, Irving? Makes this cheap dago move on me, Bo Weinberg. The man who took out @Vincent Coll. The man who held Jack Diamond's ears so he could put the gun in his mouth. Who found the rackets he was to *stupid* to find for himself, who made him something more than the lowdown fucking guy that he is! The schmuck, I should expect something else. He pulls me off the the street right in front of my girl, like he don't know no better. Schmuck!
Dutch Schultz: Don't talk to Irving. Talk to me.
Bo Weinberg: Men talk. If they are men they talk. They have disagreement, they discuss these things. But you, I don't know Dutch. I don't know what stickin' womb of puss and scum and ape shit you came out of!
Dutch Schultz: Bo you should understand, I am past the madness part, I am past the anger. Don't waste your breath.



User Review

This Movie Deserves More Discussion

Rating: 8/10

It's kind of shocking to see less than 20 reviews (as of March, 2006) for a movie that stars Dustin Hoffman and Nicole Kidman and also has Bruce Willis and Loren Dean.

This story of gangster "Dutch" Schultz is told, like the beginning of Goodfellas, through the eyes of a young guy (Dean) who breaks into the business, so to speak. Probably in this case, he was more attracted to Kidman than the business, and who could blame him?

Dean was a complete no-name at the time and is a fine actor. Hoffman plays the crude Schultz and Kidman is his immoral wife. For some people, this film is remembered for quick full frontal nudity shots of Kidman. The most interesting person in the film, I thought, was Schultz' lawyer/confident Otto Berman, played by Steven Hill. Willis also helps make up a good cast, but his role is short.

For a gangster/action flick, there wasn't a lot of violence in here and I liked the period detail. It looks nice, especially on DVD. One downfall on some of these modern-day films: there isn't one morally upright character in the story and the filmmakers make Dean and Kidman into sympathetic figures. Overall, however, a good crime movie.





Comments:

Comments are closed.


Advertisments










Searching...