The Basketball Diaries

The Basketball Diaries

Movie |

School Suspension | New York City

  • :
  • Genre(s): Drama, Crime
  • Language(s): English
  • Director(s): Scott Kalvert, Lisa Katcher
  • Cast(s): Mark Wahlberg, Lorraine Bracco, Michael Imperioli, Ernie Hudson, Juliette Lewis See all Cast & Crew
  • Duration: 1h 42min
  • Music: Graeme Revell,Susan Kurtz,Victor Iorillo,Daniel Tripoli,Larry Hoki
  • Award(s): Jury Prize 1996 (Won)
    Young Artist 1996 (Nominated) Awards List
  • Similar To: He Went That Way, The Marsh King's Daughter
  • Story:
    Film adaptation of street tough Jim Carroll's epistle about his kaleidoscopic free fall into the harrowing world of drug addiction.
    Full Story
7.3/10
IMDb

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The Basketball Diaries - Cast

The Basketball Diaries - Crew

The Basketball Diaries - IMAGE GALLERY

STORY AND RATINGS

Story
Film adaptation of street tough Jim Carroll's epistle about his kaleidoscopic free fall into the harrowing world of drug addiction.
Ratings

7.3/10

IMDb

AWARDS

Won
Jury Prize Award

Outstanding Performance | 1996 | Leonardo

Nominations
Young Artist Award

Best Young Leading Actor Feature Film | 1996 | Leonardo

YoungStar Award

Best Performance by a Young Actor in a Drama Film | 1995 | Leonardo

BOX OFFICE

Budget 2,000,000 USD

Box Office Collection 2,381,087 USD

TRIVIA AND POPULAR DIALOGUES

Trivia

A popular misconception holds that River Phoenix was set to play the lead before tragically dying on the Los Angeles sidewalk. This is not entirely accurate. Rivers was a big fan of the book, and as the film version entered various stages of readiness, he was always the front-runner. However, prior to his death, he had declined the role due to a combination of feeling he was too old to play a fifteen year old and trying to broaden his range with more adult roles.

A drug consultant was hired for authenticity and was present on set. DiCaprio outlined how to talk like an addict to the Los Angeles Times. "The voice: you go down an octave," DiCaprio explained. "Even when you raise your voice it's like you got this frog in your throat. It's not necessarily being tired and it's not necessarily like being drunk. It's sort of like your body becomes jelly and all your bones and everything become completely relaxed. You just feel at peace. Supposedly. I don't know. I've never done it. Right?"

Jim Carroll was unaware of who Leonardo DiCaprio was at first. "When they first told me it was gonna be Leo, I didn't know who he was," Carroll told The Los Angeles Times. "If they'd said the kid from Growing Pains (1985), I would have known, because when I first saw that kid, I said, 'This kid has a lot of presence.' I said, 'That kid is very pretty. He's gonna do well.'"

The movie became one of several subjects to a lawsuit filed shortly after the 1997 shooting at Heath High School, where a group of praying students was shot and killed by a fourteen-year-old. The infamous (now disbarred) attorney Jack Thompson, who filed the suit, claimed that this film, as well as several video game companies, two internet porn sites, and Natural Born Killers (1994) were directly responsible for influencing the shooter. The case was ultimately dismissed in 2001.

The songs "Catholic Boy" and "People Who Died", which play in the film, were written and sung by Jim Carroll. They were also performed by The Jim Carroll Band.

Popular Dialogues

"Jim Carroll: You're growing up. And rain sort of remains on the branches of a tree that will someday rule the Earth. And it's good that there is rain. It clears the month of your sorry rainbow expressions, and it clears the streets of the silent armies... so we can dance."

"Jim Carroll: First, it's a Saturday night thing when you feel cool like a gangster or a rockstar- just something to kill the boredom, you know? They call it a chippie, a small habit. It feels so good, you start doing it on Tuesdays... then Thursdays... then it's got you. Every wise ass punk on the block says it won't happen to them, but it does."

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