Showing posts with label Caught Stealing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Caught Stealing. Show all posts

Saturday, August 30, 2025

IDLES pack into Night Club 101 for surprise East Village set

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy

On Wednesday night, IDLES stormed the small stage at Night Club 101 on Avenue A for a surprise set.

The English punk band — more accustomed in recent years to playing larger venues like Fenway Park, where they'll be on Sept 7 — tore through 12 songs in a sweaty and full-tilt show. 

And it didn't matter that they had a smaller-than-usual stage — the band simply incorporated the show floor alongside concertgoers...
The performance tied into the group's collaboration with East Village-based director Darren Aronofsky. When developing his latest film, "Caught Stealing" — which opened yesterday and stars Austin Butler and Zoë Kravitz — Aronofsky turned to IDLES, his favorite band, to help shape the movie's high-energy sonic identity and 1998 setting. 

Drawing inspiration from the 1990s New York punk scene that drives the film, IDLES contributed four original tracks and recorded the full score with composer Rob Simonsen. (He worked with Aronofsky on "The Whale.") The soundtrack includes their take on Junior Murvin's "Police and Thieves" — covered by The Clash — along with new originals such as "Rabbit Run" and instrumentals titled "Tompkins Square Park" and "6th and A." (No instrumentals on Wednesday — the band stayed in loud-and-fast mode.) 

Aside from a few members of the press (EVG included), the secret set was the payoff for a "Caught Stealing"-related scavenger hunt. A few vintage payphones, suddenly back on city corners, like outside the Second Avenue F stop, offered cryptic directions that led from one receiver to another.

The trail ended at A-1 Record Shop on Sixth Street, where participants walked out with paper tickets to see The Idles at the Pyramid Club, the former legendary venue at 101 Avenue A, on Aug. 27, 1998. (Thankfully, everyone in the audience seemed to be an IDLES fan.)
A replica of the Pyramid Club sign appeared briefly above the entrance during the show...
Aronofsky was in attendance (here with Zoë Kravitz) and Austin Butler (who can be spotted in the crowd in one of the above photos).
Following the set, local photographer and IDLES superfan Krys Fox, who took part in the scavenger hunt, scored Joe Talbot's signature inside a heart on his bicep. The autograph soon became a tattoo, courtesy of Andromeda Studio on St. Mark's Place. He also had the band sign his shirt.
As Fox shared on Instagram: "I love it so much, it will always serve as a reminder of my strength, perseverance, and of how the band helps pump me full of love, guts, and queer power."
And three of five IDLES on Avenue A...
The band released this montage from the night on Instagram...

Thursday, August 28, 2025

EVG Q&A: Darren Aronofsky on 'Caught Stealing' and revisiting the East Village of 1998

Darren Aronofsky (in the green shirt) as seen filming on 6th Street last fall 
Photos and interview by Stacie Joy 

Director Darren Aronofsky filmed parts of "Caught Stealing" in the neighborhood last fall, recreating a 1998 version of the East Village with authentic details, including signage from Kim's Video and Benny's Burritos at their former storefronts. 

Adapted by Charlie Huston from his novel of the same name, this crime thriller — with some welcome humor — premieres Friday. In the area, the film is showing at the Village East by Angelika, AMC Village 7, Regal Essex Crossing, and Regal Union Square, where it had its debut on Tuesday night.

The story focuses on Hank Thompson (played by a charming Austin Butler), a former baseball star now adrift and working as a bartender who inadvertently becomes entangled in New York's criminal underworld. (The Double Down Saloon on Avenue A between Second Street and Houston represented Hank's workplace, Paul's Bar). 
The cast includes Regina King, Zoë Kravitz, Liev Schreiber, Vincent D'Onofrio, Bad Bunny, Matt Smith and Griffin Dunne.

We'll admit we expected Aronofsky, an Academy Award nominee whose films include "Requiem for a Dream," "The Wrestler," "Black Swan" and "The Whale," to come across as dark and brooding (especially after seeing his bonkers 2017 "mother!"). 

Instead, the longtime East Village resident, raised in Brooklyn, was thoughtful, genuine, and even quick to laugh during a Zoom interview with EVG as he talked about filming on his home turf, bringing back pieces of the neighborhood's past, and how he sees it today. 

Charlie's book is set in 2000. Why did you choose 1998 for the film? 

You know what? It's a good question, and people have asked that, but I don't know. Actually, if I see Charlie [Huston] tonight at the premiere, I'll ask him, because I can't really remember. I think it may have been as simple as the postseason in baseball. And we wanted the Giants. We just, you know, baseball fans are very, very fanatical about statistics, and we wanted to be truthful, and we liked the postseason of the Giants in '98 more than we did in 2000. [Hank, the main character, is originally from the Bay Area and loves the Giants.] 

What was it about that specific moment in New York that you wanted to capture? 

I lived through that time in New York City, and I wanted to share the kind of joy I had back then. 

You've said the East Village was the place to be when you were growing up in Brooklyn. What's one memory from those early days that still informs how you see the neighborhood? 

I think it's always been a very, very kind of energetic, exciting, young place that hasn't changed. Even now. 

I think it's very hard to gentrify our neighborhood too much, and many things have remained the same. It's changed a lot, but it hasn't been destroyed, I don't think, by any means. But, gosh, I mean, from my high school years, which had been in the 1980s, I think it was a lot more dangerous, and there was definitely some really scary criminal things that happened when I was there, just seeing kind of a lot of danger on the streets. Still, the good memories were how you could really flow from event to event. And there was always something happening three blocks away that was interesting. 

Of course, it always topped off with Save the Robots [on Avenue B], which was such an amazing classical mythical place — before I ever got in there. And then, when you do get in there, you just realize it's this tiny room. It was still amazing. 

When you were shooting here last fall, did anything about the neighborhood surprise you, either in how it's changed or how it hasn't?

Definitely, I couldn't believe how much of a circus Friday and Saturday nights have become. It's like being on Bourbon Street, and it's just so crazy with the bridge and tunnel crowd that it's gone to a different level, but the kind of density of the nightlife scene is just on a whole other scale.

Vanity Fair mentioned an anecdote about a woman urinating on a PA from a fire escape during filming here. Beyond that, how did residents react to the filming? Any other unexpected interactions you'll remember? 

Yeah. There were a few comments where people would walk by and go, "Get the f out of my neighborhood." And all I was thinking was like, actually, I'm pretty sure I've been in this neighborhood longer than you have, so you should be getting out of my neighborhood. 

But I think there was an excitement, too. Look, I live here. I know how much of a pain shooting in one's neighborhood is, so I had a lot of empathy for that. We were careful to have a light touch and to involve as many neighborhood businesses as we could, so that we weren't such a drag on everyone. But you can't make everyone happy. You know, when you ask a New Yorker to cross the street, they're just never going to be happy.
Aronofsky with Austin Butler on 6th Street

What little details did you make sure were accurate, that only someone who lived or hung out here back in the late 1990s East Village would recognize? 

All the businesses. I think that has been a really big hit — from Benny's Burritos and Kim's Video, and people have been pretty psyched when they were up, and also when they see them in the film. But we were really careful. 

We went as deep as the graffiti that was up, contacting some of the great graffiti artists from that time period and asking them if we could put some of their pieces up. My designers went really, really deep into every decision on that and presented me tons of photos. 

There were many little things, such as the type of trash piles, which featured a huge selection of bikes. My production designer showed me a picture of it, and it totally triggered a memory of it. But there would just be the weirdest kind of art, sculptural, part-artistic things that were happening in the streets back then, which were fun to recreate.
You folks did a phenomenal job. EVG documented it pretty obsessively. I was super impressed.

Thank you!
The East Village has always had a push and pull between being a stage for outsiders and a home for locals. How do you balance showing its grit and unpredictability while avoiding caricature? 

Oh, I mean, it's always tricky. You know, they call it a cliche because it's often true. So how do you walk down that line? Very carefully. I think we were just honest and truthful. And then, of course, there's always a conversation like, Is that too much? And if it's too much, you pull back.
Was there an instance where you pulled back? 

That would happen more in wardrobe, makeup, and hair, that type of thing. I think in the actual landscape, it's hard, you know. Sometimes with picture cars, sometimes that looks too much like a real kind of collectible car, like a show car, more than like a car that would have been in the East Village that was often like, "Get that Cadillac out of here!" Because if there was a Cadillac parked here in the 1990s, the radio would be gone, and no one would really park that car on the streets here.

If you could drop back into the East Village of 1998 for one night, where are you going first? 

One night? 

Yep, one night. 

I know I always go to Sophie's [on Fifth Street near Avenue A]. Start the night in Sophie's and end the night in Sophie's. It's always my place. Best jukebox, best pool table, best bartenders. 

Can't argue. Best black and white cookie?

I mean, if I were in the East Village, gosh, I'm totally spacing…What was the Jewish place on Second Avenue that's now a French bakery? What was it called again? 


Yeah, Moishe's!
Aronofsky with Austin Butler at the Double Down Saloon on Aug. 17.

Sunday, August 17, 2025

'Caught' celebrating: Why Austin Butler, Zoë Kravitz and Darren Aronofsky were at the Double Down Saloon last night

Photos and reporting by Stacie Joy 

Early this morning, there was a little "Caught Stealing" reunion at the Double Down Saloon on Avenue A. 

Last fall, the place was transformed into Paul's Bar while crews filmed scenes for Darren Aronofsky's upcoming crime thriller. In the film, the lead character Hank — played by Austin Butler — works as a bartender there. 

There had already been some buzz among Double Down regulars that a special guest might show, so I stopped by to check it out.

Anyway, fittingly, the Double Down was the setting for Butler's 34th birthday celebration, where, around 12:30 a.m., he arrived with Aronofsky, co-star Zoë Kravitz, and a handful of friends and family.
Filmmaker Ari Aster was among the bday wishers...
Despite those in attendance, the cake was the star. Empire Cake crafted a frighteningly realistic cat cake of "Caught Stealing" co-star Tonic, who plays Bud — the feline who inadvertently immerses Hank into the criminal underworld. (BTW, you may recall Tonic's excellent turn in the 2019 version of "Pet Sematary.")
The "Caught Stealing" crew didn't linger too long at Double Down — more stops were waiting on their night/early morning out. 

The movie, filmed in part in the East Village, opens on Aug. 29.

Wednesday, July 9, 2025

'Caught Stealing' catches eyes with new poster

Poster courtesy of Sony 

After 347 posts on the filming of "Caught Stealing," we thought you might like to see the new poster. ⬆️

The black comedy-crime thriller from Darren Aronofsky (based on Charlie Huston's novel) is set (in part) in the late 1990s East Village. 

Austin Butler, playing an East Village bartender, stars alongside Bad Bunny, Zoë Kravitz, Griffin Dunne, Matt Smith, Regina King, Liev Schreiber and Vincent D’Onofrio, among others. 

"Caught Stealing," set to hit theaters on Aug. 29, was filmed throughout the neighborhood this past fall.

No word yet if the film will have its own specialty popcorn bucket.

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

First look at the 'Caught Stealing' trailer, filmed partly in the East Village last fall

Photo via Sony Pictures 

Today, Sony dropped the first "Caught Stealing" trailer. 

The black comedy-crime thriller from Darren Aronofsky (based on Charlie Huston's novel) is set (in part) in the late 1990s East Village. 

Austin Butler, playing an East Village bartender, stars alongside Bad Bunny, Zoë Kravitz, Griffin Dunne, Matt Smith, Regina King, Liev Schreiber and Vincent D’Onofrio, among others. 

"Caught Stealing," set to hit theaters on Aug. 29, was filmed throughout the neighborhood this past fall.

Check out the trailer below... (you'll catch a glimpse of the Kim's Video set)...

   

The official plot: 

Hank Thompson (Austin Butler) was a high-school baseball phenom who can't play anymore, but everything else is going okay. He's got a great girl (Zoë Kravitz), tends bar at a New York dive, and his favorite team is making an underdog run at the pennant. 

When his punk-rock neighbor Russ (Matt Smith) asks him to take care of his cat for a few days, Hank suddenly finds himself caught in the middle of a motley crew of threatening gangsters. They all want a piece of him; the problem is he has no idea why. As Hank attempts to evade their ever-tightening grip, he's got to use all his hustle to stay alive long enough to find out…

Tuesday, May 20, 2025

The Butler did it!

Photo by Stacie Joy 

A curious flyer taped up outside Ben's Deli on Avenue B might look, at first glance, like a DIY attempt to identify a local thief — someone possibly swiping six-packs of White Claw or that Clarins you should of had delivered to the office.

But look closer, and it's clear this is something else entirely. The flyer is some sort of guerilla marketing campaign for "Caught Stealing," an upcoming crime thriller from Darren Aronofsky. The film stars Austin Butler — shown in character on the flyer — alongside Bad Bunny, Zoë Kravitz, Griffin Dunne, Matt Smith and Regina King. 

The film is set to hit theaters on Aug. 29 — the same date stamped on the flyer. 

As we previously reported, "Caught Stealing" was filmed extensively throughout the East Village last fall.

Tuesday, February 4, 2025

'Caught Stealing' slides into theaters this August

Pics from 2024 by Stacie Joy 

ICYMI: Sony announced that Darren Aronofsky's crime thriller "Caught Stealing" now has an Aug. 29 (2025!) release date, per the Hollywood trades

As we diligently noted, "Caught Stealing" was filmed throughout the neighborhood this past fall. 

There were multiple sightings of lead Austin Butler (below), whose character lived on the SW corner of Sixth Street and Avenue A. Also, on Avenue A, the Double Down Saloon subbed for Paul's Bar, the scene of a lot of action. (It was on Avenue B in the book.)
Charlie Huston adapted the screenplay from his 2004 book "Caught Stealing." The story finds Hank Thompson (Butler), a former baseball prodigy, now a binge-drinking bartender, being chased by a criminal element in the East Village of 2000. 

The cast includes Bad Bunny, Action Bronson, Vincent D’Onofrio, Zoë Kravitz, Liev Schreiber, Griffin Dunne, Matt Smith and Regina King. 

We're looking forward to seeing this because a) we read the book, b) we're curious to see the East Village as depicted in the film, and c) we generally really like Aronofsky's movies (and he also lives in the neighborhood).

Sunday, November 3, 2024

'Caught' taking photos of Austin Butler's stand-in

Photos by Stacie Joy 

On Tuesday, crews for the Darren Aronofsky-helmed crime thriller "Caught Stealing" (aka "Chelsea Honeymoon") returned to the neighborhood to film at several locations, including at Quick Coin laundromat on Avenue B between Third Street and Fourth Street.
Here is lead actor Austin Butler in character on Oct. 2 on Sixth Street and Avenue A...
He was in the same outfit for the scenes this past week While Butler distracted the assembled paparazzi, we could focus more on his stand-in/lighting double, who was rockin' a similar slouchy yet dreamy orange-and-olive ensemble.
We spotted AB a little later entering the set...
Charlie Huston adapted the screenplay from his 2004 book "Caught Stealing." The story finds Hank Thompson (Butler), a former baseball prodigy, now a binge-drinking bartender, being chased by a criminal element in the East Village of 2000. 

The cast includes Zoë Kravitz, Regina King, Matt Smith, Liev Schreiber, Bad Bunny, Griffin Dunne, Vincent D’Onofrio and Action Bronson.

Sunday, October 27, 2024

Another chance to catch 'Caught Stealing' filming around the East Village

Photos by Stacie Joy 

Crews for the Darren Aronofsky-helmed crime thriller "Caught Stealing" (aka "Chelsea Honeymoon") will return to the neighborhood this week. 

We've seen fliers covering a pretty wide swath, from Cooper Square to Avenue B, for the filming taking place on Tuesday. So expect to see more late 1990s set dressing ... one confirmed location is the Quick Coin laundromat on Avenue B between Third Street and Fourth Street.

The laundromat will be closed for set dressing during the day tomorrow (open again after 5 p.m.) ... closed Tuesday... reopening Wednesday after 4 p.m.
Several weeks ago, workers were seen dating the laundromat to fit the late 1990s. However, there must have been a change in the production schedule, as the filming didn't take place.
Everything with the yellow caution tape was for the shoot. 
Charlie Huston adapted the screenplay from his 2004 book "Caught Stealing." The story finds Hank Thompson (Austin Butler), a former baseball prodigy, now a binge-drinking bartender, being chased by a criminal element in the late-1990s East Village. 

The cast includes Zoë Kravitz, Regina King, Matt Smith, Liev Schreiber, Bad Bunny, Griffin Dunne, Vincent D’Onofrio and Action Bronson.