Sunnyside | |
Director: | Timothy Galfas |
Producer: | Robert Schaffel |
Story: | Jeff King Robert L. Schaffel |
Starring: | Joey Travolta |
Music: | Alan Douglas Harold Wheeler |
Cinematography: | Gary Graver |
Editing: | Herbert H. Dow |
Distributor: | American International Pictures |
Runtime: | 100 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Sunnyside is a 1979 American action drama film written by Timothy Galfas and Jeff King, directed by Galfas and starring Joey Travolta.
In Queens, New York, Nick Martin is a gang leader in the tough neighborhood of Sunnyside, but he aspires to move his mother, Mrs. Martin, and two brothers to a better way of life. Nick, however, is entangled in the politics of the street and wants to help his community, as the leader of the “Nightcrawlers.” When vendors at a local carnival swindle Sunnyside residents, the Nightcrawlers join forces with rival hooligans, the Warlocks and the Deathmakers, to rob the amusement park. Although the groups agree to use fake weapons, a carnival employee is shot by a real gun at the hands of the Warlocks. As Nick confronts Warlock leader, Eddie Reaper, about the killing, tension between the rival gangs escalates. Meanwhile, Nick and his family make plans to move out of the neighborhood. Nick’s brother, Denny, a fledging artist, pursues employment as an illustrator, while Nick shows his mother an apartment in Manhattan. Violence erupts when the Warlocks murder a member of the Nightcrawlers. Nick and his gang retaliate by destroying the Warlocks’ hideout in an explosion. Before the final confrontation, Denny tries to warn his brother, but Nick is shot and killed, along with his rival, Reaper.
The film was screened at the Embassy II theater in New York City on 1 June 1979.[1]
Leonard Maltin awarded the film one and a half stars.[2]