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Annual "The Warriors" (1979) is an absolute classic thread
Posted on 5/30/25 at 6:50 pm
Posted on 5/30/25 at 6:50 pm
It's crazy to me that no film looks remotely close to this 'low budget' B movie from 1970s anymore. The vibe. The art design. The originality. Just insane.
This film also essentially invented an entire video game genre, the street beat em up.
This film also essentially invented an entire video game genre, the street beat em up.
Posted on 5/30/25 at 7:50 pm to Jack Ruby

This post was edited on 5/30/25 at 7:57 pm
Posted on 5/30/25 at 8:06 pm to Jack Ruby
Can you dig it ????
The different gangs and their costumes and items .
Always liked that. Cool concept
The different gangs and their costumes and items .
Always liked that. Cool concept
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:04 pm to Auburn80
quote:
The Best
Best line of the entire film and that's saying something.
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:06 pm to Jack Ruby
I agree on the vibe, the street, subway and some menacing shite, but tons of goofball stuff too.
But it’s still cool as hell.
But it’s still cool as hell.
This post was edited on 5/30/25 at 9:09 pm
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:07 pm to Jack Ruby
It's an absolute classic. A long time ago, Tony Scott was working on a reboot to it. It was supposed to be a karate type movie set in LA instead of NY, which I thought would be a mistake because the dark city streets of NY are very much a part of what makes the original so good.
You might be able to pull off a reboot if you set it in a surrealist John Wick type of world but one where almost no one has guns, basically the opposite of JW. I'd watch it.
You might be able to pull off a reboot if you set it in a surrealist John Wick type of world but one where almost no one has guns, basically the opposite of JW. I'd watch it.
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:22 pm to Jack Ruby
“Warriors, come out to play!”
This post was edited on 5/30/25 at 9:22 pm
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:33 pm to Jack Ruby
My favorite line is at the end when the DJ, after spending all night broadcasting the Warriors’ location, says:
“Sorry bout that”
“Sorry bout that”
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:39 pm to blueboy
quote:
a surrealist John Wick type of world
Man, Wick steals so much from this film especially the 4th one where the entire second half of the film is basically just the Warriors plot line of getting through the dense city in one night alive.
Also steals the entire lore and vibe of the film that The Warriors barely scratched. It had an entire untapped comic book mythology, but never enet back into the well and elft it alone. That was why the 70s were so great... They didn't overexploit their stories
Posted on 5/30/25 at 9:43 pm to Jack Ruby
Seriously timeless. Ages well. Doesn’t feel campy and actually becomes more relative as the years go by. Can You Dig It?!?!
Posted on 5/30/25 at 11:06 pm to Lsudx256
quote:
Seriously timeless. Ages well
Just goes to show how high level analog filmmaking of bygone era produces significantly more timeless pieces....even as the film screams 1970s. No effects shots. No digital camera work. No shots of Toronto or Atlanta trying to double as NY. And no British actors doing bad American "working class" Brooklyn accents.
Just authenticity in every way, even as the film is essentially an enhanced fantasy.
Posted on 5/30/25 at 11:11 pm to Madking
quote:
“Warriors, come out to play!”
I read that line and the bottles were improvised and they love it
Posted on 5/30/25 at 11:15 pm to Jack Ruby
The first time I saw it as a kid my favorite part was that the chief from where in the world is Carmen Sandiego was the DJ
Posted on 5/30/25 at 11:19 pm to LuckySo-n-So
quote:
My favorite line is at the end when the DJ, after spending all night broadcasting the Warriors’ location, says:
“Sorry bout that”
That DJ later went on to play "The Chief" on "Where in the World is Carmen San Diego?"

Posted on 5/30/25 at 11:50 pm to Jack Ruby
The video game from Rockstar was awesome too and stayed true to the setting and vibe. Wish they would remaster it.
Posted on 5/31/25 at 6:46 am to Jack Ruby
I sat next to David Shaber on a flight from Dallas to LA, and we mostly talked about The Warriors. He worked on a lot of great movies but this B movie project was kind of his claim to fame.
I first caught the movie late one night on HBO. It was very cheesy, but I couldn't stop watching it.
I first caught the movie late one night on HBO. It was very cheesy, but I couldn't stop watching it.
Posted on 5/31/25 at 6:57 am to Jack Ruby
quote:
It's crazy to me that no film looks remotely close to this 'low budget' B movie from 1970s anymore. The vibe. The art design. The originality. Just insane.
I love the movie. However, to characterize it as a "low budget", "B-movie" is probably overstating the case.
With a budget of $4m, yes a relatively young Walter Hill directing, and Paramount distributing, it would be an exaggeration at the very least.
They made Kramer vs. Kramer for $8m. The China Syndrome cost $6m.
Now, is it fair to say that they did A LOT with the $4m they were given (compared to, say, Richard Donner's Superman at $55m)? Sure. They had no high dollar cast which helped out. Even Walter Hill wasn't "the" Walter Hill yet.
This post was edited on 5/31/25 at 6:58 am
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