 |
|
Serpico:
Frank Serpico's Greenwich Village apartment: 5-7 Minetta
Street, New York
|
|
|
SERPICO
filming locations
|
|
 |
CREDITS
|
|
Frank,
let's face it. Who can trust a cop who don't take money?
The gruelling exposé of police
corruption, based on real events and made on real locations
around New York.
Upright undercover cop Frank Serpico (Al
Pacino) crosses the Williamsburg
Bridge from Brooklyn to start a new life
in Greenwich Village.
The apartment he moves into is 5-7
Minetta Street.
He studies Spanish at New York
University in Greenwich
Village, on the east side of Washington
Square Park. Though his classmate says she
works in Caffe Reggio, 19 MacDougal
Street at West 3rd Street, we dont
as is claimed in many NY
guidebooks actually get to see the famed Village
hangout. You can, though, see the cafe, NYs
oldest, in the dull Sean
Connery thriller The Next
Man and in the original Shaft.
Serpico takes in a ballet at the New
York State Theater, on the south side of
Lincoln Center Plaza, 150
West 65th Street at Broadway, on the West
Side.
The subway station, where Serpico gives chase after
seeing a burglary in progress, only to get shot at by
the cops for his troubles, is Ditmars
Boulevard, Astoria, in north Queens,
at the end of the Broadway Local line. And, on the same
line, he encounters a cop, stoned out of his mind after
a drug lesson, at 57th Street
Station.
Serpico masquerades as a porter in the meatpacking district
on the West Side, collaring loan shark Casaro at the
Red Triangle Building,
14th Street at Ninth Avenue, which was home
to both Glenn Close
in Fatal Attraction
and Ed Harris
in The Hours.
|
|
|
|
 |
FILMING
LOCATIONS FOR SERPICO
|
|
TRAVEL
|
New York:
Flights: JFK
Airport
Minetta Street: subway:
West 4th Street/Washington Square
 |
ASSOCIATED
FILMS |
|
Al
Pacino returns to Greenwich Village, on
the other side of the law, in Brian
De Palma's Carlito's
Way
The basement of the Red
Triangle Building once housed notorious
S&M dive The Hellfire Club, which served as
a location for both William
Friedkin's Cruising
(with Al
Pacino, again, as an undercover cop infiltrating
the gay leather scene) and for cult low-budget
horror Basket Case
|
|
|