Search - King Of The Gypsies on DVD


King Of The Gypsies
King Of The Gypsies
Actors: Eric Roberts, Sterling Hayden, Shelley Winters, Susan Sarandon, Judd Hirsch
Director: Frank Pierson
Genres: Drama
R     2008     1hr 52min

Susan Sarandon and Brooke Shields head up an all-star ensemble that explores the real world of gypsies in America. Eric Roberts plays David, a typical New Yorker with a not so typical family history. When his grandfather d...  more »

     
4

Larger Image

Movie Details

Actors: Eric Roberts, Sterling Hayden, Shelley Winters, Susan Sarandon, Judd Hirsch
Director: Frank Pierson
Creators: Sven Nykvist, David Grisman, Paul Hirsch
Genres: Drama
Sub-Genres: Family Life
Studio: Legend Films
Format: DVD - Color,Widescreen
DVD Release Date: 06/03/2008
Original Release Date: 01/01/1978
Theatrical Release Date: 01/01/1978
Release Year: 2008
Run Time: 1hr 52min
Screens: Color,Widescreen
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 5
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Languages: English

Similar Movies

Stiletto Dance
Director: Mario Azzopardi
8
   R   2002   1hr 37min
Runaway Train
   R   1998   1hr 52min
The Lords of Flatbush
Directors: Martin Davidson, Stephen Verona
   PG   2000   1hr 26min
The King of Comedy
   PG   2002   1hr 49min

Similarly Requested DVDs

The Cider House Rules
Miramax Collector's Series
Director: Lasse Hallström
   PG-13   2000   2hr 6min
   
An Unfinished Life
Director: Lasse Hallström
   PG-13   2006   1hr 48min
   
Before the Devil Knows You're Dead
Director: Sidney Lumet
   R   2008   1hr 52min
   
Charlotte Gray
Director: Gillian Armstrong
   PG-13   2002   2hr 1min
   
Last Stand At Saber River
Director: Dick Lowry
   NR   2005   1hr 34min
   
Volver
Director: Pedro Almodóvar
   R   2007   2hr 1min
   
Black Snake Moan
Director: Craig Brewer
   R   2007   1hr 55min
   
The Getaway
Deluxe Edition
Director: Sam Peckinpah
   PG   2005   2hr 2min
   
Whale Rider
Director: Niki Caro
   PG   1hr 41min
   
Into the Wild
Director: Sean Penn
   R   2008   2hr 28min
   
 

Member Movie Reviews

Jean W. from JORDANVILLE, NY
Reviewed on 2/1/2011...
interesting movie..Eric Roberts does a terrific job as the young gypsy looking to get away from his family

Movie Reviews

A FLAMBOYANT FILM THAT TELLS AN INTERESTING STORY
lesismore26 | Chicago, Illinois USA | 12/05/1999
(4 out of 5 stars)

"I've admired this film since it was first released to theaters in 1978. Although pure fiction (it was originally a novel), it arouses considerable curiosity about a particular segment of society of which relatively little is known. It may even encourage many to satisfy that curiosity by doing research on gypsies in general.Whatever, this film has a lot of color, atmosphere, and mood, which is greatly enhanced by a stunning musical score which weaves its way through the film quietly, and finally bursts forth like a gusher at the conclusion of the film and through the film's final credits. The story itself is sordid stuff indeed. A young gypsy (Eric Roberts in his film debut) raised in New York in the 1940's, and "working" since he was five, reaches his teens -- completely illiterate -- becomes repulsed by the gypsy life and soon repudiates everything his family and life has stood for. The harder he tries to escape it, however, the more tightly and vehemently it enfolds him. A family power struggle ensues, which brings the entire conflict to a violent showdown, the results of which lead him to realize his true destiny. Eric Roberts is intense, brooding, and totally convincing as a young man with a true and valid identity crisis. As his father from hell, Judd Hirsch is curt, bellicose, and a real scum. Susan Sarandon, even at this very early stage of her film career, delivers an authorative performance as his primitive but ultimately helpless mother. An incredibly young and beautiful Brooke Shields is his vulnerable sister, Annette O'Toole, the girl friend who tries to understand him. In a very curious and strange performance, Sterling Hayden is the old gypsy king, and a blown-up and blown-out Shelley Winters his gypsy queen (I doubt whether she has ten sustained sentences throughout this entire film, but she is seen throughout --- how can you miss her?) Summing up, this is a film that many may find a little disturbing, yet somewhat enlightening and totally entertaining. It's unlikely that you will be bored."
Violence, tension and love in a U.S. Gypsy family
Linda Linguvic | New York City | 12/15/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This 1978 film is based on a non-fiction book about gypsy life here in the U.S. The cast is great. Sterling Hayden plays the aging Gypsy King and Shelly Winters plays his wife. The king wants to leave the leadership of the clan to his grandson, Dave, played by Eric Roberts. Dave's abusive father, however, played by Judd Hirsh tries to stand in his way. His mother, Susan Sarandon, gives an excellent performance as Rose. She's both the streetwise gypsy fortune teller and the loving mother who was herself kidnapped as a young girl to be a bride.Some of the most interesting scenes in the film are during Dave's childhood, when he helps his mother steal diamonds from an upscale jewelry store. Throughout, he is a reluctant gypsy. He and his sister, played by a young Brook Shields, are never sent to school, never learn to read and write. As he matures, he has some important choices to make. The film moves swiftly, from beginning to end. There was action, violence, and a sense of the special kind of families that gypsies have. They live outside of the mainstream of society and have their own special rituals and rules. It was an education for me. Here there is music, dancing, partying. Here there are customs that are in direct opposition to the law. There is comedy, conflict, and tension throughout. But yet the family ties and love shine through.Fine acting. Fine writing. Fine story. Recommended."
Long Live the King!
Frank Leonidas | 07/01/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Peter Maas wrote a book in 1974 called King of the Gypsies. It was the basis for Frank Pierson's film of the same name in 1978. Maas and Pierson are both excellent writers in their own right. Maas also wrote the book that was the basis for the 1975 Sidney Lumet film Serpico starring Al Pacino. Pierson won an Academy Award for Original Screenplay in 1975 for his work on Lumet's Dog Day Afternoon also starring Pacino. There's no doubt that King of the Gypsies is a well written film. It's also a well acted film. This was Eric Roberts' first major starring role (before he became King of the B-Movies) and he delivers the goods. Judd Hirsch plays the bad guy (a nice change of pace) and next to his Academy Award nominated performance in 1980's Ordinary People, this was his finest work on film. Susan Sarandon has never looked better than she does in this film and the great Sterling Hayden (The Asphalt Jungle, Dr. Strangelove, The Godfather) is perfectly cast as the aging patriarch "King Zharko Stepanowicz". The film also boasts a tremendous musical score (courtesy of David Grisman and Stéphane Grappelli among others). So the writing, acting and music are all excellent; what went wrong?

To be honest, King of the Gypsies is not a bad film at all. It's actually quite entertaining. The problem is it's just not epic enough to suit the material. Google the term "King of the Gypsies" or look it up on wikipedia and you will begin to see just how interesting the subject material truly is. Pierson mainly became a television/cable film director. Gypsies has that unmistakable "TV film" feel to it (despite cinematography by the late, great Sven Nykvist) when it should have felt more cinematic like The Godfather. That is the conflict that went on in my mind the entire time I was watching this film. The first time I saw it was years ago on (you guessed it) Television, and I thought it was a made-for-TV movie. The fact is, King of the Gypsies deserves a wider audience. It has mainly become a cult film over the years (primarily due to it's lack of exposure on home video and DVD). The film has been all but forgotten. A lot of film and TV shows have portrayed the East Coast American gypsy community over the past several decades (Bill Paxton's Traveller and Eddie Izzard's The Riches both come to mind) but none have ever gotten it exactly right; King of the Gypsies does get it right; even if it doesn't quite have the gravitas of The Godfather. I recommend this movie to anyone with a love of American films from the Seventies. Brooke Shields also made the underrated (and problematic) Pretty Baby for director Louis Malle that same year. Coincidentally, both Baby and Gypsies were photographed by Sven Nykvist. It is interesting to compare his camera work with different directors; while nothing compares to his collaborations with master Ingmar Bergman, his style is nevertheless interesting and never less than intimate.

Regardless of how you feel about the film, and for whatever the reasons, King of the Gypsies has become one of those "lost classics" of American cinema. Fortunately it is finally available now in the proper aspect ratio and deserves to be seen. I don't know if it is a great or important film, but I do know it fully deserves it's reputation. Enjoy!"