, a lovely character driven drama which hits theaters today, Bahrani gives us a glimpse into the life of Ahmad (newcomer Ahmad Razvi), a widowed, former Pakistani pop star who's trying to scrape together a living with coffee and donuts. Things begin to look up when Ahmad meets Noemi (Leticia Dolera), a Spanish girl running a nearby newsstand but only if he can figure out a way to keep it together. Gothamist recently chatted with Bahrani about fiction films that look like documentaries, how to make subtly political movies and the charm of a 1 a.m. visit to Night Court.
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It wasn't enough for Disney and Giuliani to clean up Times Square and the rest of the city: The Southern Baptists want to put their religious sheen into New Yorkers' lives. Gothamist has to agree with Tien Mao, who says "one group of fools campaigning for religious conversions, we don't need two" (the first group being Jews for Jesus, natch). While Gothamist is weary of sad and upsetting NY stories, we understand that the grit and grime are part of the New York we love. We just think that grit and grime should be akin to the crazy goings on we saw at Night Court with Judge Harry Stone, Bull, and that randy ADA Dan Fielding!
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Results tagged “nightcourt”
Director, Ramin Bahrani
Law vs. Order
Gothamist has been following the tempest-in-a-policeman's-coffee-mug story of Justice Laura D. Blackburne since late last week, when it turned out that Justice Blackburne let a drug dealer evade arrest. A detective was waiting to arrest Derek Sterling for a robbery case after Sterling's routine update hearing; Justice Blackburne stated:
"I understand that there is a detective on the premises who has some reason to believe that he ought to arrest you...I resent the fact that a detective came to this court under the ruse of wanting to ask you questions when, in fact, he had it in his head that he wanted to arrest you. If there is a basis for him arresting you, he will have to present that in the form of a warrant. I'm not trying to keep you from being arrested. I'm trying to keep you from being arrested today in my courtroom based on obvious misrepresentation on the part of the detective."And then she allowed the suspect to leave through a side door (he was arrested the next day). That just seems...nutty. But we think we see the judge's point. Then again, we do feel the police were trying to do their job, so we don't know! The police union, Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly, the detectives' union, court officer's union, all had a fit, asking for her to removed and for an investigation to occur, and yesterday, Justice Blackburne agreed to be transferred to from criminal court to civil court. The judge, though, has many supporters, including Lt. Eric Adams from 100 Blacks in Law Enforcement Who Care and Ron Kuby, who feel that the judge is simply doing her job and not cowing to the police. Kuby also points out "This is a complete failure of the judiciary to preserve its own independence in the face of an attack by the police union and the court officers' union. Typically, my clients are first charged, then tried, then punished if found guilty. Apparently there's a new system for judges, where they get punished first as long as the P.B.A. is demanding it." Ah, Ron Kuby - he's one tenth the man William Kunstler was, but Gothamist still enjoys his flamboyance.
Baptistizing New York
It wasn't enough for Disney and Giuliani to clean up Times Square and the rest of the city: The Southern Baptists want to put their religious sheen into New Yorkers' lives. Gothamist has to agree with Tien Mao, who says "one group of fools campaigning for religious conversions, we don't need two" (the first group being Jews for Jesus, natch). While Gothamist is weary of sad and upsetting NY stories, we understand that the grit and grime are part of the New York we love. We just think that grit and grime should be akin to the crazy goings on we saw at Night Court with Judge Harry Stone, Bull, and that randy ADA Dan Fielding!
2003 Emmys Wrap-up
One word: Boring. Okay, maybe seeing Edie Falco and Stanley Tucci together is cute, and we liked that Fred Rogers got two shout-outs, but come on - Doris Roberts for the third year in a row? Tyne Daly again? Gothamist spent our childhood watching Tyne Daly rack up FOUR Emmys for Cagney and Lacey - hey, Television Academy, she's talented, but spread the love. This is why no one cares about the Emmys, when Frasier or Kelsey Grammer wins year after year. John Larroquette won four Emmys in a row for Night Court - his randy D.A. Dan Fielding was funny, but not THAT funny. Ugh, we were right when the nominations came out earlier this summer: We weren't happy while watching.
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