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  1. Jerod S Granted, the culture of the late 70s is lost on me. But, it was just a bunch of dudes running around NYC trying to get to Union Station. Rated 2.5/5 Stars • Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 05 ...

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      Full Review | Original Score: 10/10 | Sep 29, 2023. It’s a...

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      A turf battle between New York City street gangs that rages...

  2. The Warriors. "The Warriors" -- "a ballet of stylized male violence." "The Warriors" is a real peculiarity, a movie about street gang warfare, written and directed as an exercise in mannerism. There's hardly a moment when we believe that the movie's gangs are real or that their members are real people or that they inhabit a real city.

  3. The Warriors: Directed by Walter Hill. With Michael Beck, James Remar, Dorsey Wright, Brian Tyler. A street gang known as the Warriors must fight its way from the Bronx to its home turf on Coney Island when its members are falsely accused of assassinating a respected gang leader.

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    • 2 min
    • Walter Hill
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  5. Feb 6, 2019 · In a weird way, this all adds up to why we’re still talking on this, forty years on. The Warriors is a gangland fantasia, cut tighter than a snare drum, made for maximum impact. Rooted in the rebel yells of modern and ancient history, served up in a wiry 1970s look, the film still clicks and kicks.

  6. www.metacritic.com › movie › the-warriorsThe Warriors - Metacritic

    The Warriors is a comic book morality tale, Westside Story crossed with A Clockwork Orange. The movie is so perversely fascinating in a variety of ways that it’s too bad the imagination demonstrated wasn’t used for something better than what turns out to be one more exploitation film in which the audience is encouraged to cheer the sights ...

  7. The Warriors is a visual feast. Director Hill fills the frame with vibrant colors, bright lights, and nonstop motion. The uniforms of the various gangs are unique, funny, fearsome, and more than a bit theatrical. The exciting fight scenes are brilliantly choreographed, and instead of focusing on the violence, Hill concentrates on pure movement ...

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