Prince of the City

A cop is turning. Nobody's safe.

7.0
19812h 47m

New York City detective Daniel Ciello agrees to help the United States Department of Justice help eliminate corruption in the police department, as long as he will not have to turn in any close friends. In doing so, Ciello uncovers a conspiracy within the force to smuggle drugs to street informants.

Production

Logo for Orion Pictures

Available For Free On

Logo for Kanopy

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Prince of the City (1981) Original Trailer [FHD]

Prince of the City (1981) Original Trailer [FHD]

Cast

Photo of Treat Williams

Treat Williams

Daniel Ciello

Photo of Jerry Orbach

Jerry Orbach

Gus Levy

Photo of Richard Foronjy

Richard Foronjy

Joe Marinaro

Photo of Carmine Caridi

Carmine Caridi

Gino Mascone

Photo of Norman Parker

Norman Parker

Rick Cappalino

Photo of Paul Roebling

Paul Roebling

Brooks Paige

Photo of Bob Balaban

Bob Balaban

Santimassino

Photo of James Tolkan

James Tolkan

George Polito

Photo of Steve Inwood

Steve Inwood

Mario Vincente

Photo of Lindsay Crouse

Lindsay Crouse

Carla Ciello

Photo of Matthew Laurance

Matthew Laurance

Ronnie Ciello

Photo of Ronald Maccone

Ronald Maccone

Nicholas 'Nick' Napoli

Photo of Tony Munafo

Tony Munafo

Rocky Gazzo

Photo of Ron Karabatsos

Ron Karabatsos

Dave DeBennedeto

Photo of Lee Richardson

Lee Richardson

Sam Heinsdorff

Photo of Lane Smith

Lane Smith

Tug Barnes

Photo of Peter Michael Goetz

Peter Michael Goetz

Charles Deluth

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Reviews

G

GenerationofSwine

10/10

It hurts to watch... literally. Every time i catch it it looks like I'm watching a copy of an old VHS tape. If anything was in need of remastering.... well, Prince of the City isn't going to be remastered because I don't even think it has a cult following.

And that is a crying shame, because it is a really good movie that you can currently only find bad copies of on Amazon.

The script is.... meh. It really is. You have seen the corrupt narcotics pitch many times before. That's not the draw. This was riding on Serpico's heels.

What is the draw is the directing. It is severely understated, severely actor focused, and entirely atmospheric. It is really minimalist directing done right and... it works.

The cast are a bunch of B-Listers at best, but they are B-listers that brought their A-Game and out classed most of the names you see on the marquees. So it's sort of like watching the underdogs win. They really nailed it, and their performances meshed perfectly with the direction.

It's not going to stand out for reasons of a rehashed plot... but it's going to have an effect on you. You will walk away thinking, "that was done well. They gave great performances, why haven't I heard of this?"

You've reached the end.