Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. Mean Streets (conocida como Malas calles en España y Calles peligrosas o Calles salvajes en Hispanoamérica) es una película estadounidense de drama y crimen de 1973 producida y dirigida por Martin Scorsese, escrita por Scorsese y Mardik Martin, y protagonizada por Robert De Niro, Harvey Keitel y David Proval.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mean_StreetsMean Streets - Wikipedia

    Mean Streets is a 1973 American crime drama film directed by Martin Scorsese, co-written by Scorsese and Mardik Martin, and starring Robert De Niro and Harvey Keitel. It was produced by Warner Bros. The film premiered at the New York Film Festival on October 2, 1973, and was released on October 14. [3]

  3. Calles peligrosas es una película dirigida por Martin Scorsese con Robert De Niro, Harvey Keitel, David Proval, Amy Robinson .... Año: 1973. Título original: Mean Streets. Sinopsis: Nueva York, 1972.

  4. Mean Streets is a powerful tale of urban sin and guilt that marks Scorsese's arrival as an important cinematic voice and features electrifying performances from...

  5. 31 de dic. de 2003 · Martin Scorseses “Mean Streets” is not primarily about punk gangsters at all, but about living in a state of sin. For Catholics raised before Vatican II, it has a resonance that it may lack for other audiences.

  6. Martin Scorsese’s “Mean Streets” isn’t so much a gangster movie as a perceptive, sympathetic, finally tragic story about how it is to grow up in a gangster environment. Its characters (like Scorsese himself) have grown up in New York’s Little Italy, and they understand everything about that small slice of human society except how to survive in it.

  7. www.metacritic.com › movie › mean-streetsMean Streets - Metacritic

    Martin Scorseses Mean Streets is a true original of our period, a triumph of personal filmmaking. It has its own hallucinatory look; the charac­ters live in the darkness of bars, with lighting and color just this side of lurid.