Hi. I’m Jason and I write about movies.

I write about movies online - my bylines include The New York Times, Vanity Fair, Bloomberg, RogerEbert.com, Vulture, Rolling Stone, The Playlist, Slate, Flavorwire, The Atlantic, Salon, Vital City, and Crooked Marquee, where I am editor-in-chief. You can read some of my work here.

I write about movies in books, including Fun City Cinema: New York City and the Movies That Made It, Richard Pryor: American Id, Pulp Fiction: The Complete Story of Quentin Tarantino's Masterpiece, and my latest, Gandolfini: Jim, Tony, and the Life of a Legend.

And I write (and talk) about movies on podcasts, including our current show Guide for the Film Fanatic and our previous shows A Very Good Year and Fun City Cinema.

 

"A riveting look inside the mind of a towering talent, this is a must for Sopranos fans.”
- Publisher’s Weekly


Based on extensive research and original reporting, including interviews with friends and collaborators, Gandolfini is a detailed and nuanced appraisal of an enduring artist.

More than a decade after his sudden passing, James Gandolfini still exerts a powerful pull on television and film enthusiasts around the world. His charismatic portrayal of complex, flawed, but always human men illuminated the contradictions in all of us, as well as our potential for grace, and the power of love and family.

Gandolfini: Jim, Tony, and the Life of a Legend is out April 29, 2025 from ABRAMS Press. Order your copy here.

1600+ “must-see movies,”
one movie at a time.

Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your podcatcher of choice.

 

100+ episodes, each covering a full year in cinema -
the year's best films, award winners, box office champs, and what was happening in the “real world.”
Listen to season 1 here.
Listen to season 2 here.

 

Though the American motion picture industry began in New York City, it migrated to California in the 1910s – just as the city was becoming the financial and cultural capital of the country. Over the century that followed, New York experienced trials and tribulations, boom periods and downfalls; that roller-coaster ride was documented, often gleefully, by the films shot in New York during those years. Many of them took the danger and speed of the city as their implicit (and often explicit) subject, creating a perception of “Fun City” that added to its allure, and may have further fueled its decline. 

In Fun City Cinema, author Jason Bailey crafts two intertwining histories: of a great American city in flux, and the classic films and legendary filmmakers that took their inspiration from its grittiness and splendor, creating what we can now view as “accidental documentaries” of the city’s moods and modes.

Fun City Cinema: New York City and the Movies That Made It is out now. Order your copy here.

"Jason Bailey's elegant, deeply informed journey through 100 years of New York movies and moviemaking is a remarkable history of a city, an industry, and an art form that continues to capture a metropolis in constant motion and evolution. It's suffused with passion for and knowledge about both the films and their urban milieu—and it's an ideal companion volume for anyone who wants to explore either, or both."

— Mark Harris, author of Pictures at a Revolution, Five Came Back, and Mike Nichols: A Life

"You know the scene in The Man Who Would Be King when Sean Connery and Michael Caine glimpse the treasure room, waiting for them since the time of Alexander the Great? If New York is the room, this book is the treasure."

— Greil Marcus, author of Mystery Train and Lipstick Traces

 

Now streaming

Episode 8: 'Subway Stories' 


How they made two of the great New York subway movies – and what those movies still tell us about an imperfect system.

Now streaming

Episode 9: 'Keep America Beautiful'

How a riot in Manhattan reconfigured a New York exploitation classic – and American politics for half a century. 

Now streaming

Episode 10:
'The Deuce'

How two New York classics captured the essence of Times Square then – and what they tell us about it now.