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.
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…
A few things about The Houston, the new 12-story mixed-use building at 280 E. Houston St. on the north side between Avenue A and Avenue B.
1) Yes, it seems enormous, given that the lot was previously a one-level strip of storefronts and a gas station decades before that... photo below from 2016...
2) Several readers pointed out that workers have removed most of the sidewalk bridge.
Households that earn $33,909 to $218,010 are eligible to apply for one of the units. The apartments are designated for New Yorkers earning between 40% and 130% of the area median income (AMI), which varies based on household size. Studio rents start at $989. One-bedroom and two-bedroom units are also available.
The Houston, with its sleek, clean lines, represents a new caliber of New York City living — crafted for residents seeking the best of both worlds: refined luxury paired with the authentic, eclectic spirit of the East Village.
Spanning 224,809 square feet, The Houston makes a bold architectural statement with its brick façade—an homage to the neighborhood's industrial past, reinterpreted through a contemporary lens. The building's thoughtfully designed eighth-floor setback creates an expansive outdoor amenity terrace, featuring a rooftop sky lounge complete with grilling stations, dining areas, a media lounge, sun deck, and refreshing misting showers.
Residents will also enjoy an impressive array of lifestyle amenities, including an indoor-outdoor fitness center with a dedicated yoga studio, a fully equipped pet spa, a coworking library lounge, and a private screening room.
Citi Bike crews yesterday swapped out the old docking station on the SW corner of First Avenue and 14th Street for a new electrified model.
The DOT announced earlier this month an expansion of electrified Citi Bike charging station networks, with plans to electrify 13 charging stations in existing station locations across Manhattan and Brooklyn.
Per the DOT:
Electric grid-connected stations allow Citi Bike e-bikes to charge on-site while docked, rather than requiring batteries to be manually swapped out by staff in vehicles. Based on experience deploying bikeshare charging stations in cities like Barcelona and Montreal, Lyft projects that a network of Citi Bike charging stations will both improve e-bike availability for riders and significantly reduce operational costs from manual battery swapping.
Lyft officials have said that electric Citi Bike ridership surpassed 29 million e-bike trips in 2024, some of them not even on First Avenue or Second Avenue in the East Village.
FYI: Citi Bike's fleet features 15,000 pedal-assist e-bikes and over 20,000 traditional pedal bikes.
An employee spotted at Taverna East Village stated that the Greek restaurant would reopen in a few weeks.
With the open gates this past week, this was the first activity we've noticed here in months.
Taverna has been closed since at least early December at 228 First Ave. between 13th Street and 14th Street.
According to a patron in December, the Greek restaurant was closed without any notice to the public until a sign later arrived noting the closure due to a "required Con Edison" inspection. The rolldown gates remained down.
Meanwhile, the restaurant's website still notes: "We are currently closed due to a Kitchen Renovation project. We are working very hard to reopen as soon as possible."
The outpost of Astoria's favorite Taverna Kyclades opened in the fall of 2013. However, ownership changed hands, and the name change to Taverna East Village was made public last June.
Ănjelly, a Vietnamese dessert shop, has apparently officially closed.
A for-rent sign now hangs above the storefront at 103 St. Mark's Place between Avenue A and First Avenue.
We noticed the gate had been down in recent weeks. Yelp lists it as closed while the shop's Instagram account is no longer on the platform.
Ănjelly went viral shortly after opening in the fall of 2023 for its jiggly dessert animal collection.
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.
Starting tomorrow (Wednesday!), The Brant Foundation is presenting an exhibition of works by Glenn Ligon.
The show, which runs through July 21, "features video, neon installations, and paintings by the artist, whose practice reconsiders American history through engagements with the written word."
The tickets are free. You can reserve them at this link.
Hours: Wednesday to Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
The Brant Foundation is at 421 E. Sixth St. between Avenue A and First Avenue.
If you like great songs, big drinks, and strangers drawing frogs on your
face — head for the Rainbow Spring Fair this Thursday evening at Otto's Shrunken
Head.
The lineup:
7 p.m. — Phoebe Kreutz: East Village native, lyrical sharpshooter, and queen of unexpected emotional left-hooks. Her
songs are funny until they're not, then funny again.
8 p.m. — Josh Taggart: What if your favorite campfire storyteller went cosmic? Taggart's set delivers heart and harmony
with a side of existential shimmer.
9 p.m. — Double Deuce. Toby Goodshank (Moldy Peaches) and Angela Carlucci (Little Cobweb) form this maximalist-minimalist rock duo. Expect riffs, winks, and something you can't quite name but won't forget.
All night — face painting: Why wear your heart on your sleeve when you can wear Bart Simpson on your forehead? Our
face paint station will get you weird and wonderful for the spring season.
Otto's Shrunken Head is at 538 E. 14th St. between Avenue A and Avenue B. Doors at 6:30 p.m., music from 7-10 p.m. $10 cover, but the vibe is free, per organizers.
The New York City Community Garden Coalition and Loisaida United Neighborhood Gardens will host a Community Gardens' Mayoral Forum on Saturday, May 24, noon to 2 p.m., at St. Mark's Church-on-the-Bowery, 131 E 10th St. at Second Avenue.
The event will highlight the role of community gardens in New York City's sustainability and environmental future ... followed by a moderated Q&A with mayoral candidates.
The event will also challenge the narrative that community gardens obstruct affordable housing development, exploring solutions to balance urban growth and green space preservation.
This forum offers candidates the opportunity to share their vision for a sustainable New York City and engage with voters passionate about community gardens, environmental justice, and sustainable urban policies.
Find more background information here. You can sign up to attend at this link.
Yesterday afternoon, Second Street's FDNY Engine 28/Ladder 11 received a call that Nico the cat had escaped and was stuck high up in a tree outside his home at the Mariana Bracetti Plaza on Third Street near Avenue C.
Lt. Gallucci and firefighters Nick D'Amato, Jake Nier, Patrick Neh, Frank Dima and Gary Falco responded to the scene to carry out the rescue.
Falco — met with cheers of "You got this, Gary!" — climbed the ladder, armed with a towel and endless patience.
After several tense minutes and a bit of feline negotiation (with loud meows), Nico was safely rescued and reunited with his relieved mom, who gave him some kitty treats and carried him home.
About 50 or 60 people stopped to watch the scene unfold. Hugs and applause followed — for both Nico and the cat-rescuing heroes of the FDNY.
Here are a few other items of possible interest...
New Liquor License Applications
• Time Out New York (Manhattan) LLC, 124 E 14th St (op)
As we reported in late March, Time Out Market, Union Square, is opening a food hall on the ground floor of Zero Irving (formerly the Union Square Tech Training Center, 14 @ Irving, and tech hub) at 124 E. 14th St. (pictured above)
The 10,000-square-foot market hall will soon house seven kitchens, a fully-stocked bar and a stage set to host talent and performances from local artists. The 300-seat space will also feature an outdoor terrace. The new destination will build upon the legacy of Time Out Markets across the world — all with the mission of featuring the city’s best and up-and-coming culinary and cultural talents.
You can look at the questionnaire here to see more details. There is a list of potential vendors (some of which are possibly aspirational) that you will recognize. The market plans to open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m., with an 11 p.m. weekend close.
Time Out currently has 10 similar markets worldwide, including a 24,000-foot converted warehouse that opened in 2019 in Dumbo.
The now-closed Urbanspace Union Square had its food hall here after a December 2022 debut.
• Village East by Angelika (Citadel Cinemas Inc), 181-189 2nd Ave (upgrade to op)
The theater is looking to upgrade its license from beer-wine to full liquor. (They received the OK for the beer-wine in late 2021.) The paperwork shows that there won't be any bar seating but a concession stand for someone to purchase a drink to bring into the auditorium. (There is also an expanded food menu that includes items like flatbread pizza.)
Many local theaters, including Metrograph and those operated by AMC or Regal, have alcohol sales — a standard practice now to help with revenue shortfalls at a time when people's moviegoing habits have changed coming out of the pandemic.
In January 2021, the State Liquor Authority ruled that movie theaters could now apply for beer and wine licenses, with consumption allowed in seats — not just from a lobby bar-cafe... ending a years-long debate about alcohol in theaters.
Items not heard at Committee
• Blue Dimsum NY LLC, 19 St Marks Pl (wb)
According to the paperwork on the CB3 website, the owners of Mountain House East Village are changing concepts at 19-23 St. Mark's Place between Second Avenue and Third Avenue.
The new place will be Blue Dimsum. There isn't any other info about it in the paperwork.
You can visit the CB3 website for the list of restaurants and bars looking to open a sidewalk or roadway cafe. These items will NOT be heard before the committee.
Tonight's meeting is at 6:30. The Zoom link is here. This is a hybrid meeting, and limited seating is available for the public — the first 15 people who show up at the Community Board 3 Office, 59 E. Fourth St., between Second Avenue and the Bowery.
Just days before one of the biggest events of the year in Tompkins Square Park, the Parks Department started re-sodded parts of the main lawn — only for the area to be walked on by festivalgoers and other parkgoers during Saturday's DanceFest, the celebration that follows the annual Dance Parade.
Despite signs and barriers indicating the lawn was off-limits, the area quickly started filling up with people on one of the spring's summeriest days.
"It was locked earlier today and people don't listen — they hopped the fence," Amy Taylor, the crew chief at Tompkins Square Park, said on Saturday. "The hose is still out there, equipment and the sod too."
When told the gate was open and the lawn was filling up, Amy reiterated that the area was "technically and officially closed" and said she did not know who had unlocked it.
Workers had spent three days seeding and laying sod ahead of the weekend.
As for why the work was scheduled so close to a major event: "I don't know. No one told me anything."
Now, the question lingers: Will the newly sodded lawn survive the summer — or will the Parks Department be back to square one?
And a look yesterday at the lawn, now with caution tape on the freshly sodded areas...
YoYo Chicken is opening an outpost at 418 E. 14th St. between Avenue A and First Avenue.
The family-owned brand, with several locations in the greater metropolitan area, serves various fried chicken sandwiches, smash burgers, waffle fries and more. Check out a menu here.
The business takes over for Mike Deli, an alleged hot spot for drug dealing that closed earlier last summer.
Sanku Maots'ai, a brand that claims 4,000 locations worldwide, is opening its first U.S. outpost at 167 First Ave. between Ninth Street and 10th Street.
Signage arrived late last week... noting its path from Chengdu, the capital city of the Chinese province of Sichuan, to NYC...
The restaurant specializes in Maocai, a spicy Sichuan dish. Patrons customize their meals by choosing from various ingredients, including broth.
You can find the menu and more info here. No word on an opening date. The brand has a new U.S. Instagram account here.
The 19th Annual Dance Parade and Festival took place yesterday... with 150-plus dance groups taking part on the route from 17th Street and Sixth Avenue to its conclusion on Avenue A and St. Mark's Place, where EVG's Stacie Joy was stationed ...
The dance party continued afterward with DanceFest in Tompkins Square Park ... where no one looked as if they just walked and danced a few miles in mid-80s temps...
• The 2025 edition of the Ukrainian Festival is this weekend on 7th Street (Thursday)
• New photo book captures life inside Ray’s Candy Store (Thursday)
• Kijitora, a Williamsburg-based coffee shop, is opening an outpost on 14th Street (Monday)
• Matcha House next for the former ChikaLicious space on 10th Street (Monday)
• That's all for the Dunkin' at 100 1st Ave. (Saturday)
• Signage alert: Lil Sweet Treat on 2nd Avenue (Wednesday)
• Nosh Up (officially) closes down on St. Mark's Place (Monday)
• The retail spaces for rent in the Untitled building on Avenue A (Tuesday)
• Owners of Penny and Claud looking at 12th Street space for a possible new project (Monday)
As we noted on Tuesday, the Village Alliance BID celebrated the unveiling of a new public artwork by Juliana Woods, a first-year student at The Cooper Union. People responded very favorably to her work ... sharing a few more shots here.
The spring edition of the biennial Village View tag sale is today (Sunday!) from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
As always, you can find the resident vendors — selling various items, including clothes, books, houseware, jewelry, bric-a-brac, and more — on the Fifth Street basketball court between Avenue A and First Avenue.