Executive ProducerMichael Zilkha
Additional InformationThis film is just as much a tribute to New York's Lower East Side in the 1980s--a grimy, crazy, bohemian "paradise" where drug-peddling street junkies, super models, post-punk rockers, and hustlers in stretch limousines all stand on equal ground--as it is about the artist Jean Michel Basquiat. The film follows 19-year-old Basquiat during a 24-hour period as he wanders the streets aimlessly. Reciting poetry in voice over, Basquait sprays graffiti art on alleyway walls, flirts with beautiful women he sees on the street, charms a rich collector into buying one of his paintings for $500, smokes joints, and drifts from club to club all night long. In fact, the second half of the film takes place almost entirely in smokey clubs, and unrolls like a rock video capturing some excellent, unmistakably '80s, rock performances. Debbie Harry of Blondie, and bands DNA, Tuxedo Moon, and the Plastics all make appearances. Basquiat died in 1991 at age 29. The film was shot 10 years prior, in 1981, under the title "New York Beat," but the production was left unfinished until 2000, when its title was changed to DOWNTOWN 81. In 2001, it received a theatrical release in New York City.
ReviewsNew York Times - ...The New York of 20 years later may be a more snug and secure environment, but it has also eliminated a good deal of the opportunity for fortuitous meetings and creative ferment that DOWNTOWN 81 effectively depicts and desultorily celebrates...
ScreenwriterGlenn O'Brien
MusicLydia Lunch, Grandmaster Melle Mel, Vincent Gallo, Kenny Burrell, John Lurie
FeaturedDeborah Harry, Tuxedo Moon