
No Picnic
1987
Philip Hartman
A black-and-white love letter to pre-gentrification New York City, Phil Hartman's NO PICNIC captures a remote time and place - the East Village circa 1985, a vibrant, seedy neighborhood populated by musicians, pimps and poets. Macabee Cohen (David Brisbin), whose heyday as a rock musician is long gone, travels the city in a beat-up VW bus, supplying records to local juke boxes. His beloved Lower East Side neighborhood is in turmoil: rampant real estate speculation, tenants on rent strike, art invading the bars - "in my own neighborhood, I felt like I was in the middle of a party that I hadn't been invited to," he says. Mac's personal life is in turmoil, too: his girlfriend dumped him for the Air Force, his neighbor is pressuring him into a green card marriage, his father has left his mother for a younger man, and his brother is sending post cards from his sexual sojourn to all fifty states. Then a mysterious girl appears in his life, and Mac's obsession to find her becomes a quest of self-discovery, too - "I was looking for someone to save," he says, "to save myself."
Cast
David Brisbin·Anne D'Agnillo·Steve Buscemi·Clare Bauman
Producers
Doris Kornish·Chris Sievernich
Languages
Major Awards
1 win · 1 nomination
Wins (1)
Festival Grand Prize
Dramatic
Nominations (1)
Festival Grand Prize
Dramatic
Where to Watch
No streaming, rental, or purchase options found for this title yet.
Streaming data by JustWatch