Color, 1979, 117 mins. 9 secs. / 123 mins. 50 secs.
Directed by Philip Kaufman
Starring Ken Wahl, Karen Allen, John Friedrich, Toni Kalem, Alan Rosenberg, Tony Ganios, Linda Manz, William Andrews, Erland van Lidth, Val Avery, Dolph Sweet
Kino Lorber (Blu-ray & DVD) (US RA/R1 HD/NTSC), Koch Media (Blu-ray & DVD) (Germany RB/R2 HD/PAL), Warner (DVD) (US R0 NTSC) / WS (1.85:1) (16:9)
The same year movie theater owners were panicking over the inciting of violence by the release of The Warriors and a handful of smaller films like Walk Proud, another much more nostalgic film about youth gangs was suppressed in the process and only became a cult favorite through word of mouth and initial popularity outside the U.S. That film was The Wanderers, a long-standing dream project for director Philip Kaufman after he was turned on to the source novel by Richard Price (Clockers) by his son, with Kaufman's wife Rose writing the screenplay. A years-long quest to make the film became a reality for Kaufman in between his Invasion of the Body Snatchers and The Right Stuff, proving he could tackle any setting or genre with supreme confidence.
a character added for the film). In the process they pick up a new member, recent muscle-bound arrival Perry (Porkys' Ganios), who likes to jump in and save little guys from being beaten up. Other gangs in the vicinity include the violent Ducky Boys from Brooklyn, a black gang called the Del Bombers, and even an Asian gang with formidable martial arts chops, the Wongs (who inspire the film's most indelible slogan).
Detours on the way to a climactic gang football match include Richie's turbulent love life between multiple women including the smart and sunny Nina (Allen), run-ins with the local Mafia (led by Dolph Sweet), bowling alley hijinks, classroom spats, and deeply flawed parents grappling with abusive impulses and addiction.
Lidth, who only appeared in three other highly
memorable films (Alone in the Dark, Stir Crazy, and of course, playing Dynamo in The Running Man). Be sure to keep your eyes out for a pre-Oscar-winning Olympia Dukakis, too.
film's producers. Kino Lorber followed this successful run (which played more screens than the film ever did in first run) by bringing it to both Blu-ray and DVD in 2017 with a wealth of extras as a double-disc set. The film's theatrical version can be played on disc one with or without a
2-minute written statement by Kaufman about being inspired by the source novel by "the Bronx Mark Twain" and the film's growing cult audience, including an appreciative Telluride screening with Zhang Yimou! The new 2K HD transfer looks excellent with perfect flesh tones, organic detail, and perfectly balanced blacks; thankfully no attempts have been made to make the film look more contemporary or slick like some other unfortunate vintage titles. In appearance it's very close to the German disc in terms of framing, black levels, and detail, taking up less disc space but looking only marginally different in motion with a bit less overall saturation or, most significantly, less of a yellow skew than the German transfer. The DTS-HD MA English 2.0 stereo track (with optional English SDH subtitles) sounds pristine, with the large amount of oldies on the soundtrack faring especially well. The Kaufman audio commentary from the German releases is also included.
Price gets his due with the very colorful and engrossing "Back to the Bronx (35m18s), in which he's followed around throughout a day both in a car and on the street as he chats off the cuff about his memories of the place that inspired the book, noting the real gang competitions in the area and encountering a number of local residents along the way. "The Wanderers Forever!" video reunion (16m35s) brings together Allen, Ganios, Toni Kalem ("the widow of Big Pussy -- you can say that in public now for some reason"), and (briefly) Price for a Bruce Goldstein-hosted screening at the Film Forum in New York, with topics including the delicacies of Bronx accents, Ganios' decision to chew a
matchstick as his "business" (which resurfaced again in Kaufman's Rising Sun), and the way a push-up bra played a major role in one audition. A original U.S. theatrical trailer is also included.