
The early ‘80s was a tough time for Italian exploitation cinema. The spaghetti western had long since rode into the sunset, audiences had become tired of increasingly nonsensical gialli by the mid-1970s and directors were finding it tough to top Fulci’s Zombi 2 for carnage and atmosphere. Then, suddenly, there was a windfall – The Road Warrior and Escape From New York were released the same year (1981), and Italian schlocksters were once again seeing lira signs.
Enter Sergio Martino (Torso, The Strange Vice of Mrs. Ward), whose meal ticket was punched when gialli were no longer chic. Although he was not the first director to capitalize on the post-apocalyptic epic, he was easily the best, as 2019: After the Fall of New York, his first foray into the genre, is the stick by which all other bad post-apocalyptic cinema should be judged.
Honestly, where do we begin with this one? It’s probably one of the nuttiest b-movies to ever come down the pipeline. Our story begins with the standard ominous text introduction, which informs us that yes, we did in fact nuke ourselves into oblivion, and that the superpowers have separated into two groups – the Pan-American confederacy, and the Euraks, or European-Asian union, who are responsible for this whole mess (it’s never the Americans, y’know). Furthermore, the human race is extra-fucked, as the women were all rendered sterile by the radiation. The credits roll over a very obvious model of a ruined New York City, setting the tone for the rest of the model work in the movie (and there’s a LOT of it).
The hero of the day is Parcifal (a poor man’s combination of Snake Plissken and Mad Max, played by the awesome Michael Sopkiw, of Massacre in Dinosaur Valley fame), who quit his work for the Pan-Americans to freelance in the American Southwest, winning loot by battling in demolition derbies involving bargain-basement automobile rejects from the sets of the Max films. He gets picked up by the confederacy and taken to their top-secret Antarctic base (another model!), where he is given little choice – he must sneak into New York City and rescue the last fertile woman on the planet, accompanied by the mysterious Bronx (“the strongest man in the confederacy”) and Ratchet (“a virtual map of New York City”).
Now, this is where the movie gets really crazy, as once they hit the city, they get into one wacky Eurotrashy adventure after another. They do battle with a Warriors-cloned street gang in an abandoned bus yard, meet and are captured by a colony of rat-eating mutants in the sewer, are forced to escape from Eurak HQ, run into a gang of midgets, run into ANOTHER gang, this time of guys who wandered off the set of Planet of the Apes, who are led by the always great George Eastman. They also have to escape through the Lincoln Tunnel in a DIY armored station wagon. After the apocalypse, the tunnel was apparently outfitted with glowing spikes and deadly guarded barricades.
Whew.
Everything about this movie is incredibly cheap, but it just looks so cool and imaginative that I couldn’t help but fall in love with the visual style. This type of movie reminds me of exactly why I love films done on shoestring budgets so much – they inspire wild creativity through compensation. I would rather watch this than the latest sterile, forgettable Michael Bay or Jerry Bruckheimer actioner any given day.
2019: After the Fall of New York is truly a movie that must be seen by anyone who claims to be a fan of b-cinema or science fiction. The pace never lets up, and the director knows what’s important in exploitation movies – giving the audience what they paid to see!
BLANKET STATEMENT ALERT – If you do not appreciate this movie, you are not a fan of bad cinema. In fact, I could re-watch this one more often than The Road Warrior or Escape From New York. Yes, they are better-made movies and are awesome in their own right, but I don’t care. On a side note, I couldn’t help but be reminded of this movie as I was watching Children of Men. This movie was released in 1984. The P.D. James book on which Children of Men was based was published in 1992, and the movie came out in 2007. Coincidence?
Is this movie worth your $2?:
UNEQUIVOCALLY - YES YES YES! It’s worth your $20. Own it! Love it!