
"Noah Segan's light-footed crime noir The Only Living Pickpocket in New York is a film obsessed with the gap between the old and new. There are memories shared about how things used to be, and some older characters refusing to keep up with digital progression, while there are eye-rolls from the younger generation, poking fun at those losing touch with how the world now operates."
"I'd argue that the theme is often a little overplayed, a classic case of writer-director Segan a frequent Rian Johnson collaborator telling rather than showing. But his film makes a convincing case for the old, a brisk throwback to a 70s-era character-led thriller, made with borrowed flair from yesteryear. The title is itself partly borrowed from a Simon and Garfunkel song and speaks to a protagonist of a dying breed, a pickpocket who prides himself on the old ways;"
"He's played by John Turturro, an actor who hasn't enjoyed many a lead role of late his last was in the ill-received Big Lebowski sequel The Jesus Rolls and that's only because he wrote and directed it himself. But this is a welcome step up, or step back up, for someone deserving of something more substantial to tear into. Fittingly, he's someone who would have arguably had a more prominent career as a leading man in a different time."
"His character, Harry, might be straight from a dog-eared crime novel you could fit in your coat pocket works alone, sticks to his routine, makes for a better thief than he ever did a father but part of the film's pleasure lies in the familiar. Nostalgia can become a crutch for so many film-makers but there's also real sincerity here."
The Only Living Pickpocket in New York centers on Harry, an old-school pickpocket who prides himself on traditional techniques despite modern smartphones. The film plays with nostalgia and generational contrast, showing older characters resisting digital change and younger characters mocking them. John Turturro leads as Harry, portraying a solitary thief who favors routine and simple subway steals while caring for a mute, degenerative-disease–afflicted wife. Harry sells to pawnbroker Ben (Steve Buscemi) and reflects a 1970s-style character-led thriller tone with sincere homage to past cinematic flair. The film borrows from Simon and Garfunkel imagery and emphasizes character over spectacle.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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