10 Gangster Movies From the 1970s That Were Overlooked Because Of The Godfather

Summary

  • The 1970s were a Golden Age for crime movies, showcasing bold experiments and rising talents in the industry.
  • The Godfather
    may be the most famous, but lesser-known gems like
    The American Friend
    and
    Blue Collar
    are worth watching.
  • Filmmakers like Scorsese and Cassavetes made their mark with gritty tales of urban corruption in iconic films of the era.

The 1970s are known cinematically as the peak of New Hollywood, a period ripe with bold experimentation by artists at the height of their talent and influence, delivering a wave of classics in the making after the slow death of the creaky studio system. The era was also a high point for some of the best crime movies, from scrappy high-wire acts by older auteurs, like Sidney Lumet’s Dog Day Afternoon, to pulpy, high-concept thrill rides, like Walter Hill’s The Warriors.

The most famous ‘70s crime movie is undoubtedly Francis Ford Coppola’s mob masterpiece The Godfather, but beyond its obviously unique status as an enduring breakout classic, its success is also illustrative of the kinds of quality crime films being made by up-and-coming auteurs, studio draftsmen, and aspiring indie creatives alike. Many excellent gangster movies didn’t get the attention they deserved because of The Godfather, which won three Oscars and is known as one of the best crime movies of all time.

Godfather Trilogy

Rotten Tomatoes Score

The Godfather (1972)

97%

The Godfather, Part II (1974)

96%

The Godfather, Part III (1990)

66%

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A few unexpected gangster films have made big waves throughout the years, leaving behind a noticeable impact on the popular film genre.

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10 Mikey and Nicky (1976)

A Bungled Film Shoot That Became A Classic

Mikey and Nicky Movie Poster RCrimeDrama

Mikey and Nicky, directed by Elaine May, is a 1976 crime drama featuring John Cassavetes and Peter Falk. The film follows lifelong friends Nicky, who fears for his life after betraying his mob boss, and Mikey, who tries to help him navigate the perilous situation. The tense narrative explores themes of trust, loyalty, and betrayal within a gritty, urban landscape.

Director Elaine May Release Date December 21, 1976 Writers Elaine May Cast Peter Falk , John Cassavetes , Ned Beatty , Rose Arrick , Carol Grace , William Hickey Runtime 119 minutes Main Genre Crime Expand

Elaine May’s thriller Mikey and Nicky was produced under the gun at Paramount. Between inter-cast tensions and fights with studio bosses over production schedules and budgeting, the film’s final cut was ultimately taken away from the director, who had shot a reported 1.4 million feet of film by shooting’s end (that’s three times the length shot for the epic Gone with the Wind for a movie that ended up a mere 10,000 feet long). It’s unsurprising then that the resulting cut was also a boondoggle, flopping disastrously at the box office.

The film follows two small-time gangster buddies, Nicky (John Cassavettes), who’s perennially in hot water, and Mikey, (Peter Falk), who cleans up his messes. This time, Nicky’s stolen from the mob and has a hitman on his trail. The largely improvised film is both melancholy and tense as the two men discuss their ever-shrinking set of options, holed up in a motel. In 1978, May recut the film, which has subsequently become a classic.

9 Black Caesar (1973)

A Blaxsploitation Classic Starring Fred Williamson

Fred Williamson walking down the street in Black Ceasar 1973

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Black Caesar is a crime drama directed by Larry Cohen, featuring Fred Williamson as Tommy Gibbs, an African American gangster rising to power in Harlem. Set against the backdrop of racial tension, the film chronicles Gibbs’ ruthless ascent within the criminal underworld and explores themes of betrayal and revenge. Black Caesar is notable for its gritty portrayal of urban life and its strong performances.

Director Larry Cohen Release Date February 7, 1973 Writers Larry Cohen Cast Fred Williamson , Gloria Hendry , Art Lund , D’Urville Martin , Julius Harris , Minnie Gentry , Philip Roye , William Wellman Jr. Character(s) Tommy Gibbs , Helen , McKinney , Rev. Rufus , Mr. Gibbs , Momma Gibbs , Joe Washington , Alfred Coleman Runtime 87 Minutes Main Genre Crime Expand

Released less than a year after The Godfather, B-movie impresario Larry Cohen’s blaxploitation classic Black Caesar was originally commissioned by Sammy Davis Jr., who, sick of playing second fiddle to Frank Sinatra, wanted top billing on a film of his own. Trouble with the IRS prevented him from starring, however, and so this rise-and-fall story of a gangster taking over organized crime in Harlem became a breakout vehicle for former football star Fred Williamson.

Shot on location with the participation of local gangsters (who were cast, and even ended up on the poster as compensation instead of the payoffs they’d originally requested), the film has been canonized as a high point for the genre, in part due to its naturalistic, handheld shooting and memorable performances.

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While not without its controversy, there’s no doubt that the blaxploitation genre catapulted some of the best Black actors and actresses to stardom.

8 Blue Collar (1978)

A Tough-Guy Classic

Harvey Keitel and the Cast of Blue Collar 1978

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Blue Collar, directed by Paul Schrader, follows three auto workers at a Detroit car plant grappling with the pressures and injustices of their working environment. Richard Pryor, Harvey Keitel, and Yaphet Kotto star as the trio who plan to rob their union’s safe, hoping for a better life. The film delves into themes of class struggle, corruption, and the complexities of labor movements.

Director Paul Schrader Release Date February 10, 1978 Writers Paul Schrader , Leonard Schrader , Sydney A. Glass Cast Richard Pryor , Harvey Keitel , Yaphet Kotto , Ed Begley Jr. , Harry Bellaver , George Memmoli , Lucy Saroyan , Lane Smith Character(s) Zeke , Jerry , Smokey , Bobby Joe , Eddie Johnson , Jenkins , Arlene Bartowski , Clarence Hill Runtime 114 Minutes Main Genre Crime Expand

Paul Schrader’s directorial debut, Blue Collar tells the intertwining and morally grey stories of three union autoworkers (Richard Pryor, Harvey Keitel, and Yaphet Kotto), who have fallen on hard times. In need of cash and low on prospects, they rob their shop’s safe, only to find themselves caught up in a web of conflicting loyalties, a competition involving the FBI, organized crime, and organized labor. The men must decide whether to turn informer or stand their ground, possibly facing charges for the original crime–– or worse.

The film was a challenge for Schrader, made more difficult given his strained relationship with his actors. He eventually had an emotional breakdown. Nevertheless, the finished film is both intricately plotted and deft, lending a bittersweet sense of innocence lost to the kinds of tough-guy characters who spend long stretches drinking PBR on their couches. It’s become a classic of the genre.

7 The Friends of Eddie Coyle (1973)

Tragic And Warm Storytelling For A Gangster Movie

The Friends of Eddie Coyle RCrimeDramaThriller

An aging hood is about to go back to prison. Hoping to escape his fate, he supplies information on stolen guns to the feds, while simultaneously supplying arms to his bank robbing chums.

Director Peter Yates Release Date June 26, 1973 Writers George V. Higgins , Paul Monash Cast Robert Mitchum , Peter Boyle , Richard Jordan , Steven Keats , Alex Rocco , Joe Santos , Mitchell Ryan , Peter MacLean Runtime 102 Minutes Main Genre Crime Expand

The Friends of Eddie Coyle set the standard for the kinds of crime films set in Boston made famous by The Departed and The Town, decades later. Like Blue Collar, it follows a decent, deep-down kind of guy, Eddie “Knuckles” Coyle (Robert Mitchum), as he finds himself reduced to snitching on his friends in the bank robbery racket in hopes the cops will give him a break on a separate charge.

Director Peter Yates had previously become known for crime films like The Hot Rock and Bullit, and he brings a clear confidence and familiarity to this well-lived-in tragedy, watching his 50-something antihero cook with his wife, go to Bruins games, and push carts of groceries around softly lit parking lots in Quincy. The film was well received, and has subsequently earned a respectable reputation for its quietly tragic, warmly-felt storytelling.

6 Killing of a Chinese Bookie (1976)

A Great Example Of John Cassavetes’ Directing Style

A scene from The Killing of a Chinese Bookie 1976

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The Killing of a Chinese Bookie is a 1976 crime drama directed by John Cassavetes. The film stars Ben Gazzara as Cosmo Vitelli, a nightclub owner who becomes entangled with a group of gangsters after accumulating a gambling debt. To settle his debt, Vitelli is coerced into committing a serious crime, leading to a complex and dangerous situation. The movie delves into themes of power, control, and the dire consequences of desperate actions.

Director John Cassavetes Release Date February 15, 1976 Writers John Cassavetes Cast Ben Gazzara , Timothy Carey , Seymour Cassel , Robert Phillips , Morgan Woodward , John Kullers , Al Ruban , Azizi Johari Character(s) Cosmo Vittelli , Flo , Mort Weil , Phil , The Boss , The Accountant , Marty Reitz , Rachel Runtime 135 Minutes Main Genre Crime Expand

With John Cassavetes’ typically loose, frenetically improvisational style, The Killing of a Chinese Bookie is a unique gangster film full of oddball characters (presided over by David Bowie, who watched the shoot and appears sporadically in the background), beautiful locations, and a fidgety sense of deaths foretold lurking just under the smarmy smiles and wide synthetic collars of each character’s disco-ready suits.

The original cut, released in 1976, was a commercial dud, disliked even by Gazzara, but was released several years later as a much shorter cut

Cosmo Vitelli (Ben Gazzara) is a nightclub owner with artistic aspirations and painfully few funds to bring them to life, made all the more desperate when a loan shark comes to collect. Unable to pay, the reluctant Cosmo must kill a bookie, or pay the price. The original cut, released in 1976, was a commercial dud, disliked even by Gazzara, but was released several years later as a much shorter cut. Both versions have been held up since the director’s death as excellent examples of his style and knack with actors.

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5 The American Friend (1977)

A Tale Of Forgery & Criminal Conspiracy

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The American Friend, directed by Wim Wenders, stars Dennis Hopper as Tom Ripley and Bruno Ganz as Jonathan Zimmermann. The film follows the story of a dying picture framer who is drawn into a criminal underworld by an art forger and conman Ripley. As they form a complex friendship, the lines between morality and survival blur. Based on Patricia Highsmith’s novel Ripley’s Game, it is a tale of deception and loyalty.

Director Wim Wenders Release Date September 28, 1977 Writers Patricia Highsmith , Wim Wenders Cast Dennis Hopper , Bruno Ganz , Lisa Kreuzer , Gérard Blain , Nicholas Ray , Samuel Fuller , Peter Lilienthal , Daniel Schmid Runtime 128 Minutes Main Genre Crime Expand

The American Friend, directed by German auteur Wim Wenders (Wings of Desire, Paris, Texas, Perfect Days), is a meditative, meta-referential neo-noir. Based on the novel Ripley’s Game by Patricia Highsmith, Wenders cast other directors in many of the gangster roles (including Samuel Fuller) in his tale of forgery and criminal conspiracy between an American mobster, Tom (Dennis Hopper, whose role was originally intended for John Cassavettes) and Jonathan (Bruno Ganz), an art-forger turned (like Eddie in The Friends of Eddie Coyle) into an unwilling assassin.

Film critic Roger Ebert argued that Wenders’ intention with this loose meditation on the gangster genre was to “challenge” viewers “to admit that we watch (and read) thrillers as much for atmosphere as for plot.” Where films like The Godfather are visceral, this one is actively contemplative.

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4 The Yakuza (1974)

A Winding Tale Of Double-Crosses

Robert Mitchum and Ken Takakura stand in a kitchen in The Yakuza

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The Yakuza follows Harry Kilmer, a private investigator who returns to Japan to rescue a friend’s kidnapped daughter. Starring Robert Mitchum and directed by Sydney Pollack, the film delves into the complexities of Japanese organized crime, featuring themes of honor and betrayal. Practical use of swordsmanship and cultural depth add to its uniqueness within the crime genre.

Director Sydney Pollack Release Date March 19, 1975 Writers Paul Schrader , Robert Towne , Leonard Schrader Cast Robert Mitchum , Ken Takakura , Eiji Okada , Herb Edelman , Richard Jordan , James Shigeta , Keiko Kishi , Christina Kokubo Character(s) Harry Kilmer , Ken Tanaka , Toshiro Tono , Oliver Wheat , Dusty Hoekstra , Goro Tanaka , Eiko Tanaka , Hanako Tanaka Runtime 152 Minutes Main Genre Crime Expand

The Yakuza, directed by Sydney Pollack (They Shoot Horses, Don’t They?, Tootsie), is a winding tale of international crosses and double-crosses, following an American detective (Robert Mitchum), hired to help an American gangster (Brian Keith) retrieve his kidnapped daughter from the Japanese mob (the Yakuza). The film was originally set to be helmed by studio master Robert Aldrich (Kiss Me Deadly, What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?), but was replaced because of creative differences with Schrader and his insistence on casting Lee Marvin in the Mitchum role.

the box office response to
The Yakuza
was “disastrous,” according to Schrader in a

Film Comment

interview

In The Yakuza, Schrader’s characteristic metaphysical violence and air of mystery is on full display, tempered by Pollack’s often practical shooting style and clear interest in the underlying dreaminess of the material. The choice to set the story from the perspective of Mitchum’s world-weary detective places the film in an older, more overtly hard-boiled tradition than Mitchum’s more naturalistic criminal role in The Friends of Eddie Coyle, but, like Blue Collar, the box office response to The Yakuza was “disastrous,” according to Schrader in a Film Comment interview. Like the earlier film, though, it has been reclaimed as part of both artists’ oeuvres.

3 Mean Streets (1973)

An Underrated Martin Scorsese Film

Mean Streets - Poster RCrimeDramaThriller

Mean Streets is a crime drama directed by Martin Scorsese, following the lives of small-time criminals in New York City’s Little Italy. Starring Harvey Keitel as Charlie and Robert De Niro as the reckless Johnny Boy, the film explores themes of guilt, redemption, and the harsh realities of street life. Mean Streets is noted for its gritty portrayal of urban corruption and the dilemmas faced by those entangled in it.

Director Martin Scorsese Release Date October 14, 1973 Writers Martin Scorsese , Mardik Martin Cast Robert De Niro , Harvey Keitel , David Proval , Amy Robinson , Richard Romanus , Cesare Danova , Victor Argo , George Memmoli Runtime 112 Minutes Main Genre Crime Expand

Martin Scorsese’s underrated Mean Streets is a rich, fraught, and deeply spiritual film drawn from the young director’s experiences growing up Catholic in Little Italy. The movie, though not his first, was his breakout, and the first which he was able to fully control. Like Mikey and Nicky, Mean Streets tracks the relationship between two small-time mobsters, the almost masochistically impulsive Johnny Boy (Robert De Niro), and Charlie (Harvey Keitel), his closest friend and level-headed protector.

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De Niro and Keitel were both praised for their performances, and Scorsese was able to ride the film’s success

As Johnny Boy’s antics escalate out of control, Charlie sticks his neck out further and further, stretched to the breaking point, working to stay true to his values in a fundamentally corrupt, violent system. The film’s luxurious color palette and beautiful neon-soaked cinematography complement its tonal switchbacks between exuberant (often desperate) energy and morose (equally desperate) contemplation. De Niro and Keitel were both praised for their performances, and Scorsese was able to ride the film’s success, aided tremendously by approval from Pauline Kael, to work first with Ellen Burstyn on Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, and then Taxi Driver.

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2 The Harder They Come (1973)

Inspired By Real-Life Crime Lord, Vincent Martin

RCrimeDocumentaryDrama Director Perry Henzell Release Date September 1, 1972 Cast Jimmy Cliff , Janet Bartley , Carl Bradshaw , Ras Daniel Hartman , Basil Keane , Bob Charlton Runtime 120 minutes Main Genre Crime

Considered one of the most important Caribbean films of the era, The Harder They Come, directed by Perry Henzell, is a gangster film loosely inspired by real-life crime lord Vincent Martin, known as Rhyging. The film stars reggae singer Jimmy Cliff and features original songs by the artist.

its propulsive storytelling remains deeply compelling, and it stands as a unique view of Black Jamaican communities

The film, sumptuously shot on location, is performed largely in thickly-accented creole, and required subtitles when it was finally released in the US by Roger Corman’s B-studio, New Word Pictures. After a little-seen limited theatrical run, the film gained attention as a midnight attraction that spring, and became a modest hit. While The Harder They Come was criticized as overly plot-y by American critics at the time, its propulsive storytelling remains deeply compelling, and it stands as a unique view of Black Jamaican communities who were rarely shown on-screen at the time.

1 Performance (1970)

A Unique, Artsy Crime Film

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Performance is a 1970 British crime drama film co-directed by Donald Cammell and Nicolas Roeg. The film stars James Fox as Chas, an East London gangster on the run who hides out in the decaying mansion of a reclusive rock star, Turner, played by Mick Jagger. As Chas and Turner interact, their identities and realities begin to blur, creating a surreal narrative that explores themes of power and transformation.

Director Donald Cammell , Nicolas Roeg Release Date September 4, 1970 Cast James Fox , Mick Jagger , Anita Pallenberg , Michèle Breton , Ann Sidney , John Bindon , Stanley Meadows , Allan Cuthbertson Runtime 105 Minutes Main Genre Crime Writers Donald Cammell Character(s) Chas , Turner , Pherber , Lucy , Dana , Moody , Rosebloom , The Lawyer Expand

It took Nicolas Roeg and Donald Cammell’s mysterious, intricate, deeply poetic gangster film, Performance, decades to gain the recognition it deserved. Shot in 1968, the film, which tells the psychosexually tangled tale of a gangster (James Fox) on the lam at the luxurious home of a brooding, psychedelic libertine (Mick Jagger) after pulling a hit, was shelved until 1970 for its overt sexuality and heady philosophical overtones.

Over the course of that decade, this endlessly fascinating artistic crime film was screened sporadically in the US and Europe, only reaching a widely receptive audience following its home video release in 1980. It was a totally different type of film than The Godfather, but that’s what made it so unique.

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While it’s the movie has its defenses, it must be admitted that The Godfather Part III paled in comparison to its untouchable two predecessors.

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Source: Film Comment

The Godfather Poster The Godfather (1972) RDramaCrime Where to Watch

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Francis Ford Coppola directed this 1978 classic that would go on to become one of the most iconic crime films ever made. Starring Marlon Brando, James Caan, and Al Pacino, The Godfather gives a tense and introspective look into the Corleone crime family of New York City.

Director Francis Ford Coppola Release Date March 24, 1972 Studio(s) Paramount Pictures Writers Mario Puzo , Francis Ford Coppola Cast Marlon Brando , Diane Keaton , James Caan , Al Pacino , Robert Duvall Runtime 175 minutes Expand

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