There’s a certain breed of ‘80s film that doesn’t really tell a story so much as it vibes its way through 90 minutes. Alphabet City is one of those movies. Stylish, fast-paced, and about as deep as a puddle in August, it’s a coke-fueled neon fever dream that thinks it’s Mean Streets but lands somewhere closer to After School Special: The Mafia Edition.
It’s got mobsters, cars, drugs, crime… and Jami Gertz doing her best “angel in a hellscape” impression. Honestly, without her, you’d forget this movie even existed.
🧊 The Setup: One Night in Alphabet City
Our protagonist is Johnny—played by Vincent Spano, a walking can of Aqua Net with cheekbones sharp enough to slice deli meat. Johnny’s a 19-year-old Italian-American who’s been running the local rackets for the mob and living his best “Miami Vice audition tape” life. He’s slick, he’s in a hurry, and he’s about to have a bad night.
It’s all set over the course of a single evening. Johnny drives around in his white Trans Am, decked out in leather and chain-smoking through moral dilemmas. He’s supposed to torch a building… that just so happens to house his mom and sister. Oops. Mob life gets messy like that.
Cue the inner turmoil, existential windshield-staring, and synth-heavy background music.
💊 Crime, Drugs, and Zero Consequences
This movie wants to be gritty. It tries. There are drug addicts in bathtubs, sleazy club owners, and an array of goons who look like they were all rejected from a Bon Jovi music video.
But the stakes never feel real. The tension is artificial. Johnny never seems that scared or that dangerous. He mostly drives around like he’s late for a New Wave dance class, frowning a lot and occasionally waving a gun like it’s a fashion accessory.
The whole thing has the tone of a student film with a decent budget and a lot of dry ice.
🎭 Acting: When Everyone’s Trying Just Hard Enough
Vincent Spano isn’t bad. He commits. He broods. He smokes. He doesn’t blink much. But he’s also not bringing much depth to Johnny. You get the sense he’s been directed to act like Al Pacino but is still thinking about his dinner plans.
The supporting cast is made up of the usual street-level caricatures: sweaty, twitchy guys in leather jackets who probably have names like “Ratso” or “Frankie Bananas.” None are memorable.
Except one.
✨ Jami Gertz: The Bright Spot in the Grit
Oh, Jami Gertz. She shows up like a light in the smog. She plays Johnny’s girlfriend, Angie, and while the script gives her very little to do, she somehow pops. She has that rare ‘80s magic—equal parts glam, innocence, and streetwise charm.
The camera loves her. The audience does too. If you’ve ever wondered why she went on to steal scenes in The Lost Boysand Less Than Zero, here’s your early proof.
She’s the kind of presence that makes you sit up and say, “Wait, who is that?”—even as the plot grinds through another scene involving Johnny frowning in a nightclub.
🎬 The Style: MTV Noir
Visually, Alphabet City is all in on neon. Pink, green, purple—if the lighting was any more aggressive, the cast would need sunglasses indoors. It’s got that early MTV aesthetic: flashy edits, synth-heavy score, and scenes that exist purely to look cool.
It’s shot almost entirely at night and seems to think that if you just keep the fog machine running and add saxophone wails, you don’t really need a story. And to be fair, in the early ‘80s, that was almost true.
🧨 Final Verdict: Not Great, Not Terrible, But Very Purple
Alphabet City is one of those movies that’s interesting more for what it tries to be than for what it actually is. It wants to be a gritty one-night crime saga, but it’s more of a glossy street fashion show with occasional monologues.
It’s not a disaster. You’ll finish it. You won’t throw the remote. But you also won’t remember much beyond the neon, the sax, and the flash of Jami Gertz looking like she just stepped out of a dream… into a very confused crime film.
💀 Verdict:
2.5 out of 5 neon-lit alleyways
A slick B-movie trying to cosplay as something deeper. Watch it once for the atmosphere and the Gertz.

