The Panic In Needle Park -1971- -

Notice the use of mirrors and windows. Characters are constantly reflected in shattered glass, fragmented and doubled. This visual motif suggests the split identity of the addict: the self that wants to live and the self that wants to get high.

The plot is deceptively simple. Bobby (Al Pacino) is a small-time dealer and addict who drifts through the park with a cynical charm. Helen (Kitty Winn) is a young, middle-class woman from Indiana who has just had a back-alley abortion and is trying to escape a dead-end relationship with a photographer. They meet on the street. He says, "You look like a young Elizabeth Taylor." She smiles. It is the first and last moment of romanticized innocence in the film. The Panic in Needle Park -1971-

Before understanding the film, one must understand the setting. "Needle Park" was not a fictional construct. It was the real-life nickname for on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, near 72nd Street and Broadway. Throughout the late 1960s and early 70s, this particular strip of greenery became the unofficial headquarters for New York City’s heroin trade. Addicts congregated there not to hide, but to survive. The panics referenced in the title are the recurring droughts of heroin supply. When a "panic" hits, the price skyrockets, the quality plummets, and the addicts become feral. Notice the use of mirrors and windows