Next Stop, Greenwich Village

Greenwich Village, 1953. It was coffeehouses and high adventure, it was your first love and your best dream, it was girls who drank wine and your mother back home asking God to forgive you.

6.3
19761h 51m

An aspiring Jewish actor moves out of his parents' Brooklyn apartment to seek his fortune in the bohemian life of Greenwich Village in 1953.

Production

Logo for 20th Century Fox

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Stop a Greenwich Village - Trailer

Stop a Greenwich Village - Trailer

Cast

Photo of Lenny Baker

Lenny Baker

Larry Lapinsky

Photo of Shelley Winters

Shelley Winters

Faye Lapinsky

Photo of Ellen Greene

Ellen Greene

Sarah Roth

Photo of Lois Smith

Lois Smith

Anita Cunningham

Photo of Christopher Walken

Christopher Walken

Robert Fulmer

Photo of Antonio Fargas

Antonio Fargas

Bernstein Chandler

Photo of Mike Kellin

Mike Kellin

Ben Lapinsky

Photo of Rashel Novikoff

Rashel Novikoff

Mrs. Tupperman

Photo of Jeff Goldblum

Jeff Goldblum

Clyde Baxter

Photo of Rochelle Oliver

Rochelle Oliver

Doctor Marsha

Photo of Sol Frieder

Sol Frieder

Mr. Elkins

Photo of Helen Hanft

Helen Hanft

Herb's Wife

Photo of Joe Madden

Joe Madden

Old Poet

Photo of Milton Frome

Milton Frome

Drugstore Customer (uncredited)

Photo of Paul Mazursky

Paul Mazursky

Casting Director (uncredited)

More Like This

Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

There were loads of these type of films made in the mid 1970s about aspiring types finally out from under their parental wing and now hitting the big city with dreams and hormones racing. Here, the quite charismatic Lenny Baker is “Larry”, a Jewish lad who thinks he could be the next Marlon Brando, or maybe Laurence Olivier - even though a local beat cop reckons he might want to change professions altogether. He has moved away from his doting but overpowering mother (Shelley Winters) and takes up with his girlfriend “Sarah” (Ellen Greene) for the usual slew of castings, romantic interludes, fights and squabbles as he tries to keep his life on an even keel whilst he seeks that elusive break. Will it ever come? This is an observational look at a chunk of his life. We learn a little of his earlier life but for the most part we just follow their day-to-day antics as he tries to reconcile his ambitions with  her’s and the reality of his new and bumpy Brooklyn life. There are no conclusions here, though maybe progress is made as he begins to realise that he is not the first in his family to want more, nor is he the only one with the talent to perhaps support that. He begins to appreciate that sacrifices have been made for him just as he has to make them now, himself. Winters doesn’t really feature that often, but when she does she delivers quite strongly with a short burst of Maria Callas livening things up and lightening the mood for a few moments too. Thanks to characters like Christopher Walken’s “Fulmer” and “Bernstein” from the man forever remembered  as “Huggy Bear” (Antonio Fargas) it also manages to take a light-hearted swipe at the pomposity of the creative community and it’s occasionally flamboyant population. It’s an enthusiastic and lively production that does play a little to stereotype now and again, but it keeps clear of sentiment, is quite funny and worth a watch.

You've reached the end.