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A gangster film or gangster movie is a film belonging to a genre that focuses on and . It is a subgenre of , that may involve large criminal organizations, or small gangs formed to perform certain illegal acts. The genre is differentiated from Westerns and the gangs of that genre.


Overview
In 2008, the American Film Institute defines the genre as "centered on organized crime or maverick criminals in a twentieth century setting". The institute named it one of the 10 "classic genres" in its 10 Top 10 list, released in 2008. The list recognizes 3 films from 1931 & 1932, Scarface, The Public Enemy & Little Caesar. Only 1 film made the list from 1933 to 1966, 1949's . This was at least partly due to the limitations on the genre imposed by the , which was abandoned in favor of the Motion Picture Association of America film rating system in 1968.

Beginning in the 1960s, the genre was revitalized in the movement. New Hollywood directors were honored with 5 of the top 6 films on the list—1967's Bonnie and Clyde by , 1972's and 1974's The Godfather Part II both by Francis Ford Coppola, 1983's Scarface, a remake of the 1932 original, by Brian De Palma, and 1990's by . The rise and fall of a mobster in a classic gangster film is often a thematic trope.

(2025). 9781848850408, I.B. Tauris. .

In the 1970s, as genre theory came to the focus of academic study and the creation of a more specific taxonomy of genres was defined, gangster films started being distinguished from other subgenres, especially that of western. The genre has been predominantly defined by its historical, ideological, and sociocultural context. Three main categories of gangster films can be distinguished, according to Martha Nochimson: films that follow the escapades of outlaw rebels, such as Bonnie and Clyde, melodramas of villain gangsters against whom the in-story victims and the audience identify, such as Key Largo and, most predominantly in the genre, films following an outsider, immigrant gangster protagonist, with whom the audience identifies.

The first Japanese films about the evolved from the of the 1930s. They featured historical tales of outlaws and the abuses suffered by the common people, often at the hands of the corrupt powers that be.

(2007). 9780786431366, McFarland.
The so-called "Chivalry movies" of the 1960s gave way to the violent realism of , whose 1973 Battles Without Honor and Humanity would inspire future filmmakers across the globe.


Gangster films in the United States

Early Hollywood
In 1931 and 1932, three of the most enduring gangster films ever were produced. Scarface, Little Caesar and The Public Enemy remain as three of the greatest examples of the genre. However, starting in the mid-1930s, the Hays Code and its requirements for all criminal action to be punished, and all authority figures to be treated with respect, made gangster films scarce for the next three decades.

Politics combined with the social and economic climate of the time, influenced how crime films were made, and how the characters were portrayed. Many of the films imply that criminals are the creation of society, rather than its rebel,John Baxter, The Gangster Film (London: C. Tinling and Co. Ltd, 1970), p. 7. and considering the troublesome and bleak time of the 1930s, that argument carries significant weight. Often the best gangster films are closely tied to the reality of crime, reflecting public interest in a particular aspect of criminal activity. Thus, the gangster film is in a sense, a history of crime in the United States.Baxter, p. 7.

The institution of in 1920 led to an explosion in crime, and the depiction of bootlegging is a frequent occurrence in many early mob films. As the 1930s progressed, Hollywood also experimented with the stories of rural criminals and bank robbers, such as , Baby Face Nelson, and Pretty Boy Floyd. The success of these characters in film can be attributed to their value as news subjects, as their exploits often thrilled the people of a nation who had become weary with inefficient government and apathy in business.Baxter, p. 9. As the newly formed FBI increased in power, there was a shift to favour the stories of the FBI agents hunting the criminals, instead of focusing on the criminal characters. In 1935, at the height of the hunt for Dillinger, the Production Code office issued an order that no film should be made about Dillinger, for fear of further glamorizing his character.

Many of the 1930s crime films dealt with class and ethnic conflict, notably the earliest films, reflecting doubts about how well the American system was working. As stated, many films pushed the message that criminals were the result of a poor moral and economic society, and many criminal protagonists are portrayed as having foreign backgrounds or coming from the lower class. Thus, the film criminal is often able to evoke sympathy and admiration from the viewer, who often shift the blame from the criminal's shoulders, onto a cruel society in which success is difficult.Terry Christensen, Projecting Politics: Political Messages in American Films (New York: M.E. Sharp, Inc., 2006), p. 77 At the end of the 1930s, crime films became more figurative, representing metaphors, as opposed to the more straight forward films produced earlier in the decade, showing an increasing interest in offering a thought provoking message about criminal character.Christensen, p. 79.


New Hollywood
With the abolition of the in the late 1960s, studios and filmmakers found themselves free to produce films dealing with subject matter that had previously been off-limits. Early examples include 's 1967 depression-era tale of Bonnie and Clyde. In 1973's , Scorsese directed a cinema vérité story of a young aspiring mobster and his problem-gambler friend, played by Robert De Niro. In 1974, directed Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia, about the Mexican mob, family honor, and the opportunistic Bennie (), friend of the eponymous Alfredo Garcia, looking to make a big score when the chance drops in his lap.

Bonnie and Clyde was one of 1967's biggest box office hits and garnered 2 Academy Awards and 8 other nominations, including best picture. It, along with the others, were overshadowed by Francis Ford Coppola's Godfather saga.


The Godfather pioneering Italian-American Mafia films
In 1972, Francis Ford Coppola's was released. The epic story of the , its generational transition from post-prohibition to post-war, its fratricidal intrigues, and its tapestry of mid-century America's criminal underworld became a huge critical and commercial success. It accounted for nearly 10% of gross proceeds for all films for 1972.
(2025). 9780415281324, Taylor & Francis.
It won the Oscar for Best Picture, as well as the award for Best Actor for Brando declined the Oscar in protest of Hollywood's treatment of Native Americans. and is widely considered one of the greatest American films of all time. In 1974, The Godfather Part II became the fifth-highest-grossing film of the year and garnered 11 Academy Award nominations. It again won Best Picture. Coppola won Best Director and Robert De Niro won best supporting actor for his portrayal of a young .

The lesson of the films' successes was not wasted on Hollywood. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the studios issued a steady flow of films about Italian American gangsters and the Mafia. Some of these were critically acclaimed. Scorsese's about 's life and relationship with the Lucchese and Gambino crime families, was nominated for six Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director and won the award for Best Supporting Actor for 's performance. Italian-American film Once Upon a Time in America directed by about David "Noodles" Aaronson played by Robert De Niro is considered one of the best gangster films of all time.

The 1987 film The Untouchables was nominated for four . won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in his role as an associate of who helped bring down . Others, however, strayed into stereotypes and the gratuitous use of Italian ethnicity in minor characters who happened to be criminals. This created a backlash in a portion of the Italian American community.


Scorsese and the 1990s–2010s
In the 1990s there were several critically acclaimed mob films, many of which were loosely based on real crimes and their perpetrators. Many of these films featured long-time actors, well known for their roles as mobsters such as , Robert De Niro, and .

In 1990, , directed by , starred as real-life associate of the Lucchese crime family . It was one of the most notable gangster films of the 1990s. Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci also starred in the film, with Pesci earning an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role. The film was nominated for six Academy Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director, making Goodfellas one of the most critically acclaimed crime films of all time.

In 1990, The Godfather Part III was released. Al Pacino reprised his role as the iconic . The film served as the final installment in The Godfather trilogy, following Michael Corleone as he tries to legitimize the Corleone family in the twilight of his career.

In 1993, Pacino starred in Carlito's Way as a former gangster released from prison who vows to go straight.

In 1995, following their collaboration in Goodfellas, Scorsese, De Niro and Pesci teamed up again to make Casino, based on , an associate of the , that ran multiple casinos in Las Vegas during the 1970s and 1980s. The film was De Niro's third mob film of the 1990s, following Goodfellas (1990) and A Bronx Tale (1993).

In 1996, starred in the television film Gotti as infamous New York mobster, .

In 1997's Donnie Brasco, Pacino starred alongside in the true story of undercover agent and his infiltration of the Bonanno crime family of New York City during the 1970s. It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.

In 2006, Scorsese released , his adaptation of , the Hong Kong film. The Departed was also loosely based on the story, and Boston's Winter Hill Gang, which Bulger led. It earned Scorsese an Academy Award for Best Director, and won the Academy Award for Best Picture.

A 2018 biographical mafia film, Gotti, directed by Kevin Connolly, stars as John Gotti, released in June. On review aggregator , the film holds an approval rating of 0% based on 38 reviews, and an average rating of 2.3/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "." In 2019, Martin Scorsese released a biographical mafia film distributed by , , starring all three heavyweights in the genre, Robert De Niro as , as and as .


2020s
In 2021, The Many Saints of Newark was released, as a prequel to 's HBO New Jersey Italian mafia series, . Directed by Alan Taylor and produced by David Chase and , the film focuses on the young future mafia boss , with the 1967 Newark riots as a backdrop.


African Americans
Apart from telling their own tales of African American gangsters in syndicates, films like Black Caesar feature the Italian mafia prominently. Often the films of the 1970s such as Shaft tell the tale of African American gangsters rising up and defeating the established white criminal order. African Americans were under-represented in filmmaking roles during much of the 20th century. It took African American producers and directors of the 1990s like , and the to begin exploring the criminal lifestyle in American urban communities, telling stories of drugs, gang culture, gang violence, racism and poverty in African American communities. Examples of films from the 1990s fitting the African-American gangster genre include Boyz N The Hood, Menace II Society and New Jack City.


Cocaine and the cartels
Brian De Palma's 1983 remake of Scarface stars as , a Cuban exile and ambitious newcomer to who sees an opportunity to build his own drug empire. 's 1990 King of New York tells the story of Frank White, (Christopher Walken) and his return to New York City from prison. He navigates both the traditional Italian mafia authorities as well as the new cartels, as they are producing, smuggling and distributing cocaine in an uneasy business alliance.


Latino gang films


French gangster films
An early example of the Gallic gangster film is ’s 1935 film Justin de Marseille set in . Tourneur's gangster-hero differentiates from his American equivalent by valuing honour, artisanship, community and solidarity. Four years before of the rise of , in 1937, created Pépé le Moko, a French gangster film in the style of that takes place in the Casbah. Its distribution in America was blocked by the US-makers of its 1938 remake Algiers. French gangster films appeared again in the mid-1950s, most notably 's Touchez pas au grisbi, American blacklisted filmmaker 's and Jean-Pierre Melville's Bob le flambeur. Melville would directed 1967's Le Samouraï starring as mob hitman Jef Costello.

1969 and 1970 saw the release of three successful French gangster films featuring the day's biggest French movie stars. All three films featured good looking star . In 1969, , Delon, and starred in Le clan des siciliens, about a jewel thief and the . In 1970, Borsalino, a tale of the Italian Mafia in 1930 Marseilles, featured Delon, along with Jean-Paul Belmondo. In 1970, in Le Cercle Rouge, Delon, Gian Maria Volonté, and team up to rob an impenetrable jewelry store.

All three of the films were domestic successes, and Borsalino was popular elsewhere in Europe. None of them, however, broke through in the United States.

  • 22 Bullets
  • Mesrine (2008 film)


Italian-made gangster films
  • The Big Family
  • BiĂątiful cauntri
  • Black City
  • Blood Brothers
  • Blood Ties
  • Caliber 9
  • Camorra
  • Il Capo dei Capi
  • A Children's Story
  • The City Stands Trial
  • Confessions of a Police Captain
  • The Consequences of Love
  • Contraband
  • Corleone
  • The Day of the Owl
  • Il Divo
  • Excellent Cadavers
  • Fort Apache Napoli
  • From Corleone to Brooklyn
  • Gang War
  • Gang War in Naples
  • Giovanni Falcone
  • Gomorrah
  • How to Kill a Judge
  • Illustrious Corpses
  • In the Name of the Law
  • The Italian Connection
  • The Legendary Giulia and Other Miracles
  • Mafia and Red Tomatoes
  • The Mafia Kills Only in Summer
  • Mafioso
  • The Man of Glass
  • The Mattei Affair
  • The New Godfathers
  • One Hundred Days in Palermo
  • One Hundred Steps
  • The Palermo Connection
  • The Payoff
  • The Professor
  • Red Moon
  • Romanzo Criminale
  • Salvatore Giuliano
  • Tatanka
  • The Sicilian Girl
  • The Sicilian
  • Sgarro alla camorra
  • Suburra
  • The Immortal
  • Turri il bandito
  • Vento del sud
  • We Still Kill the Old Way
  • Weapons of Death
  • Where's Picone?


British gangster films
Various British and from the 1930s, 40s and 50s were set in the underworld with gangster or character, such as Night and the City (1950).

The 1947 adaptation of the novel by the same name, Brighton Rock, is a stark portrayal of a young gang leader and the racketeers in Brighton. It has been recognized as one of the greatest UK films ever by the British Film Institute.

The late 1960s to early 70s saw a brief boom in British gangster films, alongside and , mirroring similar trends in Hollywood, Italy and elsewhere. Some films from this era took a lighthearted to crime stories, like The Italian Job (1969), while others like Villain and (both 1971) had a much darker tone, a more story, and a more gritty and violent portrayal of gangster life.

The early 2000s saw a resurgence of British gangster films, popularised by director 's ensemble caper films Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998) and Snatch (2000), and by 's (2000).

Notable British gangster films from the 1960s onward include:

  • Robbery (1967) – a fictionalised portrayal of the 1963 Great Train Robbery
  • The Italian Job (1969)
  • Performance (1970)
  • Villain (1971)
  • (1971)
  • (1972)
  • The Long Good Friday (1980)
  • The Hit (1984)
  • Mona Lisa (1986)
  • Stormy Monday (1988)
  • Face (1997)
  • Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (1998)
  • (2000)
  • Gangster No. 1 (2000)
  • Love, Honour and Obey (2000)
  • (2000)
  • Snatch (2000)
  • I'll Sleep When I'm Dead (2003)
  • Layer Cake (2004)
  • The Business (2005)
  • A Very British Gangster (2006) – documentary
  • (2007) – Russian Mafia in the UK
  • (2008)
  • (2008)
  • Dead Man Running (2009)
  • (2009)
  • (2010)
  • Wild Bill (2011)
  • The Wee Man (2013) – Scottish gangster film
  • We Still Kill the Old Way (2014)

Films about the Kray Twins (active in the 1950s and 60s) include:

  • The Krays (1990)
  • The Rise of the Krays (2015)
  • Legend (2015)
  • The Fall of the Krays (2016)

's character in Villain (1971) was also loosely based on .


Japan and the Yakuza
The ninkyo eiga (chivalry films) were replaced in the late 1960s and early 1970s by a new style, pioneered by and inspired by the French New Wave and American called Jitsuroku eiga (true record films).
(2011). 9780810875418, Scarecrow Press.
The new style is considered to have begun with Fukasaku's Battles Without Honor and Humanity (1972), a violent, realistic portrayal of post-war gangs in the ruins of .

Prior to Battles, the films of had departed from the ninkyo eiga formula, but had met with limited commercial success. Suzuki's Branded to Kill later inspired other directors in the gangster film genre, including , and Quentin Tarantino.


Indian cinema
has several genres of gangster films.

  • , a genre about gangs in rural India. The genre often draws inspiration from real dacoits. Examples:
  • Mumbai underworld films, a genre about the Mumbai underworld, gangs hailing from the urban of , formerly Bombay. The genre often draws inspiration from real Mumbai underworld gangsters, such as , and .

Examples include:

    • Zanjeer (1973)
    • (1975)
    • Don franchise (19782012)
    • (1986)
    • Salaam Bombay! (1988)
    • Aryan (1988)
    • (1989)
    • Abhimanyu (1991)
    • Baashha (1995)
    • Satya (1998)
    • Company (2002)
    • Black Friday (2004)
    • Slumdog Millionaire is a 2008 film which is inspired by Mumbai underworld films from Indian cinema.
    • Once Upon a Time in Mumbaai (2010) and Once Upon ay Time in Mumbai Dobaara! (2013)
  • Gangs of Wasseypur is a film series which is based on the .
  • is a 2010 Tamil-language film which was based on crimes.
  • is a 2008 Tamil-language film Based on real life events in Madurai.
  • is a 2006 Tamil-language film written and directed by .
  • is a 2016 Malayalam-language gangster film by about the land mafia in .
  • is a 2017 Tamil-language film directed by Pushkar-Gayatri based on a folk tale .
  • is a 2018 Tamil-language film by which explores about the people and their lifestyle in the 90s
  • Om is a Kannada-language film written and directed by Upendra which explores Bangalore Underworld and mafia.
  • is a 2014 Kannada-language film which explores the underworld with world-building and revenge themes.
  • Vendhu Thanindhathu Kaadu is a 2022 Tamil-language film by Gautham Vasudev Menon which revolves around an MBBS graduate turning into a gangster


Hong Kong
The Hong Kong gangster film genre began with 1986's A Better Tomorrow, directed by and starring Chow Yun Fat.
(2007). 9781405163705, Blackwell Publishing. .
Woo's tale of counterfeiters portrays a gangster who balances "Kung Fu honor" and the materialistic goals of the Triads. It was the all-time biggest grossing Hong Kong film at the box office and was critically acclaimed. Woo followed with a string of successes, including The Killer, Bullet in the Head, and .


Russian cinema
Soviet propaganda has always said that organized crime exists only in the West. With the dissolution of the Soviet Union, people of Russia had to face the fact of what they used to previously read only in newspapers. Gang wars accompanied the formation of a free market in Russia. This decade in Russia received the name of the "Dashing 90s" (, Lihie devyanostye).

In 1997, director Aleksei Balabanov released Brother which acquired cult status, and started to return interest of local people to Russian cinema, which had been in crisis since the early 1990s. In 2000 came the sequel Brother 2, which was even more successful. In 2001, actor Sergei Bodrov Jr., who played a major role in both of those films, released Sisters, which was his directorial debut. Other notable films of those years were (2002) by Yegor Konchalovsky and Tycoon (2002) by .

In 2004, Pyotr Buslov, a young 26-year-old director, released Bimmer, which instantly became a hit. This movie about four friends was made in the road movie style. In 2006, Buslov released the sequel . In 2005, Aleksei Balabanov returned to the theme of gangster cinema and filmed a black comedy Dead Man's Bluff. In 2010, Balabanov returned to the theme of bandits in . In 2010, The Alien Girl was released by Anton Bormatov.

Russian television shows a lot of series about bandits, however, they are mostly of poor quality. A great success was the 2002 mini-series , which received cult status.


Comedy and parodies
  • Johnny Dangerously (1984)
  • The Freshman (1990)
  • Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood (1996) (not a Mafia film, but a hit gangster parody, by The )
  • Mafia! (1998)
  • Mickey Blue Eyes (1999)
  • (1999)
  • (2002)


See also

Bibliography


Further reading


External links

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