Oh cool, good to see some love for this movie. Guess what? I'd never seen it before. I'm not even sure if I had heard of it before.
It's sure different than those other gang movies. I've seen
Lords of Flatbush once and that was like 40 years ago! I plan on watching it again now that I have
gang fever I just requested
Rumble Fish and
The Outsiders from my library. Those should be good. I've seen
The Warriors several times, I love that film.
Definitely the music is a big part of the movie. Good point about Dylan signaling the change at the end of the movie (though I think that was a Dylan impersonator). Isn't he singing
The Times They Are A Changin' 1964. Quite appropriate.
The Ducky Boys gang was a weird concept alright. I'm still not sure what they represent? I read that there was a real Ducky Boys gang. I'm guessing it started in the 1950s and Ducky Boys is from their hair cuts of the time, the D.A.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duck's_ass
Enjoy the gang movies, Rules!
Yes, obviously not the real Bob Dylan (except for the voice of course) and I don't think they say the name or have it on a poster, but we know by the song and the environment who it is supposed to be.
Hope no one took offense at my referring to the Ducky Boys as Irish Catholics, but isn't there a scene of them taking communion at a Catholic church before a fight or something? Obviously the Wanderers have some Italian roots so it was always theorized that the Ducky Boys were Irish. My dad was a teen in the gang days of the late 40's & early 50's and he used to talk about the skirmishes between the Italian and the Irish gangs that ruled different parts of the city. He used to tell stories about how he had some Irish Catholic cousins and friends (gang members), so he'd wait on the church steps for them to get out of mass - and he said the nuns would come out and literally beat him off the steps (with school pointer sticks) because he was German Protestant! He was terrified of the nuns. Talk about the days of sectarian violence and religious intolerance!
I also remember the classroom scene near the beginning of the
Wanderers where a fight nearly breaks out when the teacher has the students cover all the ethnic slurs that they call each other.
Another movie this reminds me of is
Heaven Help Us (1985). It's not a gang movie, but takes place during the same era and is about boys attending a Brooklyn Catholic school in 1965. It's got that whole coming-of-age / end of an era feel to it and is very entertaining. If you liked the Wanderers, I also recommend
Heaven Help Us.
P.S. Don't f&%# with the Wongs!