The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations: Travel Guide to Film Locations

REGION 1
REGION 2

AMAZON.CO.UK

AMAZON.COM


(Serpico location, Minetta Street, Greenwich Village)  

Serpico: Frank Serpico's Greenwich Village apartment: 5-7 Minetta Street, New York

SERPICO filming locations


CREDITS
SERPICO, 1973
dir: Sidney Lumet

Al Pacino
John Randolph
Jack Kehoe
Tony Roberts
F Murray Abraham
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 don’t – as is claimed in many NY guidebooks – actually get to see the famed Village hangout. You can, though, see the cafe, NY’s 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.



To report mistakes or to add further information: locator555@aol.com
 
FILMING LOCATIONS FOR SERPICO
New York
 
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

 

All material Copyright ©2006
The Worldwide Guide To Movie Locations
webmaster@movie-locations.com
Designed by Tony Reeves