The Wanderers

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

The Wanderers is a 1979 movie that centers on the members of a Bronx youth gang, and their interactions with the other local gangs. At school, a high school teacher accidentally sparks a race riot between the Italian gang the Wanderers and the Black gang the Del-Bombers. Looking to gather allies to their fight as the Del-Bombers have bigger numbers, The Wanderers get rejected (humiliatingly) by the Fordham Baldies and by the Chinese Wongs. But they do get a new member with the arrival of bulky Perry, a newcomer to the neighborhood who proves himself in a fight. Just as it looks bleak for the gang, the local mafia hoods led by 'Chubby' Galasso intervene and negotiate to have the rumble changed into a football match.

Based on a book by Richard Price.

Not to be confused with El-Hazard: The Wanderers.

Tropes used in The Wanderers include:
  • Adaptation Distillation: Price's novel is episodic in nature. Director Philip Kaufman and his wife Rose re-wove the narrative into a more coherent plot.
  • Ambiguously Gay: Turkey. And Perry and Joey.
  • Ax Crazy: Joey's father, Emilio. And the Ducky Boys gang.
  • Badass: Emilio, Perry, the Wongs and the Fordham Baldies.
  • Battle Royale
  • Big Bad: The Ducky Boys. They're the one street gang willing to kill.
  • Big Applesauce
  • Bittersweet Ending: Richie came back to the Wanderers in time to help out with the football game, and with the fight against the Ducky Boys. While re-affirming his friendship with Joey, they still end up parting ways as Joey flees to California with Perry to escape Joey's Ax Crazy father. Richie stays to marry his knocked-up girlfriend. And their other friend Turkey was killed by the Ducky Boys. Meanwhile The Baldies are all gone serving in Vietnam, the life of being in a street gang is getting more violent, and the feeling of New York City changing for the worse heading into The Sixties and The Seventies hovers over the ending.
  • Coming of Age
  • Cult Classic
  • Dirty Coward: The Wanderers and Del-Bombers who split before the fight with the Ducky Boys. Averted by members of the Wongs, who join in with the remaining Wanderers and Del-Bombers even when it wasn't their fight.
  • Dueling Movies: With The Warriors, believe it or not.
  • End of an Age
  • For the Evulz: The Ducky Boys.
  • Gangsterland
  • Huge Guy, Tiny Girl: Terror and Peewee
  • Hustler: The bowling team from Long Island.
  • Improvised Weapon: Plenty, during the final fight with the Ducky Boys.
  • Laser-Guided Karma: Turkey.
  • One of the Boys: Peewee
  • Precision F-Strike: Don't fuck with the Baldies/Wongs.
  • The Mafia: Richie's father-in-law.
    • The gang fight between the Wanderers and Del-Bombers get taken over by both the Italian and Black mafias and turned into a football match that the mobsters could bet over.
    • At the end of the movie, it's obvious that Richie is getting too old to be with the Wanderers and will promote upward into his father-in-law's gang.
  • The Sixties: The movie takes place in 1963, as the culture of The Fifties gives way to this one. Towards the end of the film, John F. Kennedy is assassinated, the Baldies all drunkenly signed up for Vietnam, and Richie watches as the proto-hippie girl he liked leave him to go watch some new folk singer named Bob Dylan perform. The movie itself ends with Joey and Perry fleeing for California in the footsteps of Joey's favorite author Jack Kerouac.
  • What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic: The football game devolving into a Battle Royale between the Ducky Boys and the Wanderer/Del Bomber/Wong team-up foreshadows the violent confusion of the Vietnam War. Topped by Joey's violent father joining in the battle and attacking his own son in the confusion.
  • White Gang-Bangers