'Mean Streets' (1973)

Limited edition giclee printed on photo rag 308 gsm fine art paper

crime drama thriller


'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art
'Mean Streets' (1973) - film-art

Regular price £139.00 Sale

Please select a size and framing option

Preview Matinee Feature Blockbuster Premiere
Unframed Black White Oak



Notes on sizing

All measurements given are for the printed image only. To calculate the overall dimensions of a framed print please add 200mm to both the horizontal and vertical measurements.

Example: A print image that is specified as being 825mm x 351m will sit inside a frame that has the approximate outside dimensions of 1025mm x 551mm.

'Mean Streets' (1973)

Limited edition giclee printed on photo rag 308 gsm fine art paper

Director: Martin Scorsese

Writers : Martin Scorsese, Mardik Martin

Stars : Robert De Niro, Harvey Keitel, David Proval

The future is set for Tony and Michael - owning a neighbourhood bar and making deals in the mean streets of New York city's Little Italy. For Charlie, the future is less clearly defined. A small-time hood, he works for his uncle, making collections and reclaiming bad debts. He's probably too nice to succeed. In love with a woman his uncle disapproves of (because of her epilepsy) and a friend of her cousin, Johnny Boy, a near psychotic whose trouble-making threatens them all - he can't reconcile opposing values. A failed attempt to escape (to Brooklyn) moves them all a step closer to a bitter, almost preordained future.