
The Book
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: New York and the Movies That Made It, author Jason Bailey digs through New York’s last century via one quintessential New York film of each decade: The Jazz Singer, King Kong, The Naked City, Sweet Smell of Success, Midnight Cowboy, Taxi Driver, Wall Street, Kids, 25th Hour, and Frances Ha.
In doing so, 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.
Available now; purchase links below.
Publisher’s Weekly Review
“Cinephiles will relish every stop of this entertaining tour of the big city.”
Library Journal Review
Anyone interested in the history of American film will find much to savor here.”
RogerEbert.com Review
“One of the most essential film books of 2021… a must-own.”
Paste Review
“That fascinating and all-too-rare project that leaves you more interested in its subjects than when you started.”
Airmail Review
“Impressive...poignant.”
The Film Stage Review
“Fun City Cinema is the book NYC deserves, Jason Bailey without question the right author for the job.”
Promo Pods
WTF with Marc Maron
Jason joins Marc Maron at the historic Paris Theater in New York City for the first live audience episode of the show in more than six years to talk about Fun City Cinema - followed by an excerpt from the Fun City podcast.
The Next Picture Show (Part 1) (Part 2)
Jason joins two of his favorite film critics, Keith Phipps and Scott Tobias, for a discussion of the Sopranos prequel film The Many Saints of Newark, as well as The Godfather Part II
Force Five Podcast
Jason and host Jason Kleeberg select and explain their picks for the top five New York exploitation movies of all time.
Pure Cinema Podcast
Jason talks up the book with hosts Elric Kane and Brian Saur, and presents a list of his top five film discoveries from the research process.
Writers on Film
John Bleasdale welcomes Jason to a discussion of film book subject selection, research, and writing.
Podcast Like It’s 1999
Both Sidney Lumet and Gloria had seen better days when they crossed paths in 1999, but Jason and hosts Phillip Iscove and Kenny Neibart nevertheless look at Lumet’s inexplicable remake of John Cassavetes’s 1980 hit.
Praise for Fun City Cinema: New York and the Movies That Made It
"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
"Bailey's book is a double anatomy—one of a city, the other of its filmic depictions. His astonishing talents as a researcher yield historical ore that his astonishing critical acumen turns into film-lover gold. Even when you disagree with his conclusions, the connections he makes will send your own thinking into heretofore unconsidered dimensions."
— Glenn Kenny, author of Made Men: The Story of Goodfellas
"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
"By collapsing the distance between the dream New York and the one we can see, this marvelous book illuminates a third New York: the one that lives forever in the movies. From the rise of the skyscraper to post-9/11 anxiety, from the age of grime and crime to the era of excessive gentrification, Fun City Cinema shows how movies have kept pace with the city's myriad transformations, whether we're talking ten decades ago, ten years ago, or ten minutes ago."
— Stephanie Zacharek, film critic for TIME
"Fun City is an astonishing history of NYC told through the films that shot on the streets and the politics that shaped each era. From the glamor of early talkies to the grit of film noir to the dirty old New York of the 1970s. Page after page of fascinating behind the scenes tales of classics like Sweet Smell of Success, Midnight Cowboy, Taxi Driver, and Uncut Gems. It's a book full of insightful prose and great photos that I found impossible to put down."
— Larry Karaszewski, co-writer of Ed Wood, The People vs. Larry Flynt, and Dolemite Is My Name
"Fun City Cinema is a beautifully exhaustive, insightful, and engrossing study of New York City and the movies that reflected its political, economic, and cultural shifts over a century. Bailey writes eloquently not just about the importance and artistry of these films, but also how they helped shape our sense of the city in which they were set. This is a marvelous history of the Big Apple seen through the eyes of an incisive film critic who serves as a knowledgeable, ingratiating tour guide."
— Tim Grierson, author of This Is How You Make a Movie
“Cinematic histories don’t get more passionate, incisive and exhilarating than Fun City Cinema. Jason Bailey writes with an astonishing command of his mercurial subject: He sees New York in all its dizzying dimensions — political, economic, historical, cinematic — and shows us how those dimensions exist on the same continuum. Bailey knows that to love New York is, on some level, to love the movies that have seared it into our memories. To read this extraordinary book is to love them a little more.”
— Justin Chang, film critic for The Los Angeles Times
"Fun City Cinema is my favorite sort of film book. Jason Bailey takes us on a tour through not just New York cinema, but the city that gave birth to it and the fantastic, absurd, glorious ways in which New York's history is, all on its own, stranger than fiction. New York owes much to the cinema, and the cinema owes much back, and Fun City Cinema is a wild and gorgeous ride through that brilliant relationship."
— Alissa Wilkinson, film critic for Vox
"An un-put-downable work of political, cultural, and cinema history. You'll walk away from it knowing so much more about New York, about America, and about how some of the greatest films ever made came to be. You'll also have a mountain of new movie recommendations to start making your way through."
— Bilge Ebiri, film critic for New York magazine/Vulture
"Fun City Cinema is an express train that makes local stops at long-forgotten stations, pausing long enough to conjure the ghosts out of their hiding places and up onto the streets where they stalk, strut, and drift through a city that is, on the surface, always changing. Jason Bailey's accomplishment is that he sees and feels his way through those changes to the city's tough irreducible core. He could have called this book The Lights Above, the Grit Below. He's in touch with both."
— Charles Taylor, author of Opening Wednesday at a Theater or Drive-In Near You: The Shadow Cinema of the American ’70s
About the Author
Jason Bailey is a film critic and historian. The former film editor of Flavorwire, his work has appeared in The New York Times, Vulture, The Playlist, Vice, Rolling Stone, Slate, Crooked Marquee, and more. He is the author of four previous books: Pulp Fiction: The Complete History of Quentin Tarantino’s Masterpiece; The Complete Woody Allen Film Companion; Richard Pryor: American Id; and It’s Okay With Me: Hollywood, The 1970s, and the Return of the Private Eye. He lives in the Bronx with his wife and two daughters.