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Film & TV
Last Exit to Brooklyn
Last Exit to Brooklyn Last Exit to Brooklyn is a very violent film. In fact, the film’s purpose is to have the audience look at the whole question of violence. The film shows, in a very realistic way, the psychological, verbal and physical violence that permeates a Brooklyn neighborhood in the midst of a bitter strike during the 1950s. The film is based on the book, Last Exit to Brooklyn, by Hubert Selby, which was banned for its violent and sexually explicit content. Verbal violence is very prevalent in this film. People swear at and verbally abuse one another throughout the movie. Everyone seems angry. There are several causes for their anger. First the film takes place during a strike. Many of the characters are unemployed and have little money. They resort to drinking and drugs that feed into their society’s violent tendencies. In one scene, the workers who are on strike are screaming obscenities at the scab workers and the boss. But in virtually every scene there is verbal violence. In every scene someone is being threatened, belittled, embarrassed or humiliated. The verbal violence is so punishing because behind it is the possibility of physical violence. Physical violence is also very common behaviour in the movie. For example, the very first scene shows a violent altercation between three soldiers and a gang of local thugs. Physical violence is the fundamental way in which the whole society behaves. The men use it to show that they are “macho,” so they beat up those who are weaker than they are, especially women. For example, Vinnie, the leader of a street gang, physically and verbally harasses a young prostitute named Tralala. In the most violent, nasty, and horrible scene in the movie, Tralala is gang raped and beaten by over a hundred men in a garbage dump. Many of the men in the film are homophobic and sexually insecure, and they act out their hostility and insecurity by beating up gays. They have problems at work and go out on strike. But their strike is full of violent incidents: they get into fist fights, they blow up trucks, they beat up cops. Whenever they have a problem, they use violence to deal with it. Psychological violence, that is, intimidation or the threat of violence, is also an important element of this film. Vinnie is a gang leader who uses psychological violence to control and manipulate his gang and other people in the neighborhood. He is able to manipulate people psychologically and verbally, to make people afraid of him. They believe that if they don’t listen him, he will turn physically violent. They have lots of reasons to believe this because Vinnie is infamous in his neighbourhood. Everyone knows that he is a violent person. To sum up, violence is a central element of the film, Last Exit to Brooklyn. The violence in this movie is never trivialized or gratuitous. Although there is a lot of violence, the whole point of the film is to show how violent American society really is. The violence is not “splatter” violence; it is not meant to excite or entertain the audience. It is there because it a “normal” part of the everyday behaviour of people who live in that society. In order to survive in a “tough” world, or to show that they are “somebodies” or “men,” characters inflict violence—verbal, psychological, and physical—on others, especially on those who are weaker than they are, like women and gays, or those who are non-violent. There are very few decent, non-violent characters in this film—a naive, young soldier who treats the prostitute as if she were a “person,” a young boy, who is in love with the prostitute and who is probably the only person who ever “cried” for her and tries to rescue her at the end. But the goodness of these characters is just overwhelmed by the sheer volume of violence in the society. Bibliography:
Word Count: 654
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