The movie began in New York, in 1843, the battle of the gang. Bill's "Butcher" Cut "Native" Gang challenged the "Dead Rabbit" (the most Irish immigrant group) and tried to solve the most powerful gang in the area. After a fierce battle, "Aboriginal" won by killing the leader of "dead rabbit" also the father of Amsterdam (hero). Later Amsterdam was taken to an orphanage where Bill Cutting won 5 points in most of New York.
Martin Scorsese '2002 movie "New York Gang" claimed that it was a historic movie about the gang competition centered on the ethnic groups of New York City in 1863, but this movie relies heavily on poetry licensing ing. Rather than digging historical features and realistic details, emphasize the story of violence and typical Hollywood 's "right and wrong". It is almost certain that the gangs caught the past tastes and myths of American ethnic diversity, and violence and tension of American citizenship, but the historical theme of gang processing is also secondary It is a fact. Main driving force: Make movies that are smooth and profitable
New York's violent gang, proposed by West Side, has been in New York City for hundreds of years. In the 1950s the number of Latin American immigrants in Latin America, Caribbean countries, especially Puerto Rico, and mass violence increased. Leonardo Bernstein 's musical "West Side Story" depicts contemporary adaptation of Romeo and Juliet, using the theme of the real world gang warfare in New York. The wrestling with violence against women in Uttar Pradesh in India, wearing a stick called Pink Sully and Lattice (the baton used by the police), they are aggressive in the abuse of men / sheds around the world It is to overcome such a method. Spread the news
Youth gang violence from the 1950s to the 1980s has a strange history. During this period, Miller (1992: 2) insists that the national view of the gang was dominated by the view of the media in New York City: "The flowering of the 1950s, the death of the 1960s, the resurrection of the early 1970s , And dormant in the late 1970s. "A survey of gang issues in his major US cities (Miller, 1975, 1992) prove that the second half of this media theory is wrong I will. According to Miller's study, gang violence was very common in the 1960s and 1970s. He believed that he has not changed since the 1950s; on the contrary media and public interest shifted from gang to Vietnam War, civil rights movement and subsequent riots.