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Last Exit To Brooklyn Details

1989 Certificate 18
  • Rated:
  • 60
  • from 1225 members

Based on Hubert Selby, Jr.'s novel depicting the flip side of the "fabulous fifties" set against a violent dockworkers strike in Brooklyn 1952. The mean and desolate streets of Brooklyn are home to a host of unhappy, hopeless characters stuck in dead-end lives. A young self-destructive prostitute, named Tralala (Jennifer Jason .. Read more

Starring Jennifer Jason-Leigh, Burt Young, Stephen Lang, Peter Dobson
Director Ulrich Edel
Genres Drama, Gay/Lesbian

Buy From: £5.99

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Last Exit To Brooklyn

Based on Hubert Selby, Jr.'s novel depicting the flip side of the "fabulous fifties" set against a violent dockworkers strike in Brooklyn 1952. The mean and desolate streets of Brooklyn are home to a host of unhappy, hopeless characters stuck in dead-end lives. A young self-destructive prostitute, named Tralala (Jennifer Jason Leigh), emotionally numb from having sold her body so many times, regularly leads her prospective clients to a dark alley where a gang of petty criminals who roam the streets in search of passion and excitement, beats and robs them; Harry, a corrupt union leader who cannot deal with his repressed homosexuality; and a young girl's father refuses to admit that she is eight months pregnant. All these stories take place in a world waiting to explode: local workers are engaged in an angry strike against a nearby factory, while, not too far away at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, soldiers sail daily for Korea, many never to return. The personal and the political intermingle in this bleak look at poverty, drugs and violence in the inner-city in the early 1950s.

Starring Jennifer Jason-Leigh, Burt Young, Stephen Lang, Peter Dobson, Jerry Orbach
Director Ulrich Edel
Studio METRODOME DVD COLLECTION
Run time DVD: 1 hr 38 mins
Certificate Certificate 18
Genres Drama, Gay/Lesbian
Language DVD: English
Released DVD: 25 Jun 2004
Production year: 1989
Format DVD

Last Exit To Brooklyn (1989)

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    Based on Hubert Selby, Jr.'s novel depicting the flip side of the "fabulous fifties" set against a violent doc...

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    Bonus Features Include: It'll Be Better Tomorrow - A harrowing and engaging exploration of the life and art of...

  • Critics' reviews (6) of Last Exit To Brooklyn

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  • 3 stars out of 5

    Director Uli Edel's horrendously hard-hitting adaptation of a controversial collection of short stories by Hubert Selby Jr is as depressing a film as you'll ever see. That's not to say it isn't an accomplished movie, but its brutal early-fifties Brooklyn backdrop, plus the gallery of abusive lowlifes, make it a very uncomfortable viewing experience, especially during the climactic drunken gang bang involving prostitute Tralala (Jennifer Jason Leigh). Artistically shot and lit by cinematographer Stefan Czapsky (later to be a regular collaborator with Tim Burton), the film also benefits from some strong acting and a moody score from Mark Knopfler. But what's missing is a genuine feeling of emotional involvement with these characters.

    • Radio Times
  • A violent, harrowing, but oddly tender adaptation of Hubert Selby Jr's novel about life in a working class Brooklyn... read more on Time Out

    • Time Out
  • Most helpful member's review of Last Exit To Brooklyn

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  • 5 out of 5 people found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    3 stars for film - 0 for disc

    I have watched this on VHS before. The recent death of the author prompted me to re-visit the film on DVD and what a let-down. I would say that this must be one of the worst digital trasfers that I have ever come across. Avoid it until a more decent edition comes out. The people at Arrow should know better.

      • Tony from Surbiton, England
  • Most recent members' review of Last Exit To Brooklyn

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  • 1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

    Rated - 1 star

    Was this Transferred from VHS?

    Still a good film, 4 stars. Only 1 star because of the awful picture quality.

      • A customer from UK
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Rating breakdown

1,225 Member ratings
  • 100
60
  • 90
68
  • 80
164
  • 70
228
  • 60
264
  • 50
157
  • 40
114
  • 30
79
  • 20
61
  • 10
30

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