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Monday, September 15, 2025 |
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Zeitgeist Films announces the US theatrical release of KOCH, a documentary by Neil Barsky. |
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Ed Koch in the office of his campaign manager, David Garth, September 1977. As seen in KOCH, a film by Neil Barsky. A Zeitgeist Films release. Photo: The New York Post.
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SANTA MONICA, CA.- Former Mayor Ed Koch is the quintessential New Yorker. Still ferocious, charismatic, and hilariously blunt, the now 88-year-old Koch ruled New York from 1978 to 1989a down-and-dirty decade of grit, graffiti, near-bankruptcy and rampant crime. First-time filmmaker (and former Wall Street Journal reporter) Neil Barsky has crafted an intimate and revealing portrait of this intensely private man, his legacy as a political titan, and the town he helped transform. The tumult of his three terms included a fiercely competitive 1977 election; an infamous 1980 transit strike; the burgeoning AIDS epidemic; landmark housing renewal initiatives; and an irreparable municipal corruption scandal. Through candid interviews and rare archival footage, Koch thrillingly chronicles the personal and political toll of running the worlds most wondrous city in a time of upheaval and reinvention.
Three-time New York City Mayor (19781989) Ed Koch is combative, funny and blunt. He is also intensely private. In Koch, first-time filmmaker Neil Barsky gives us a contemporary history of the world's greatest city, and an intimate portrait of the 87-year-old former mayor, as he confronts his own mortality and legacy. The film examines issues still relevant todayrace relations, homelessness, AIDS and gay rightsand provides a window into the trials and tribulations of the nation's most famous mayor in the world's most wondrous city.
Through candid and colorful interviews, rare archival footage and photographs, and verité footage, this new documentary takes the viewer on a journey back to a time when the city was beset by nearbankruptcy, high crime, graffiti and collective depression. It chronicles how Ed Koch gave the city its morale back, while engaging in exhausting confrontations with his critics.
Koch begins in the late 1970s, when New York was on the precipice of bankruptcy, dependent on the state and federal governments for its survival. Ed Koch is the master of street politics, and we watch him transform himself from a little-known liberal Congressman to a law-and-order mayoral candidate who cut deals with key constituencies to defeat the better-known Mario Cuomo. Joining his 1977 campaign was also Bess Meyerson, the former Miss America whose constant companionship during that campaign helped mute whispered rumors that Koch was gay.
Koch follows the mayor as he restores New York's fiscal health and rallies New Yorkers on the city's bridges during the infamous 1980 subway strike, only to embark on a racially divisive decision to close down Harlems Sydenham Hospital. Koch rises to become America's Mayor and see him defeated as his third term becomes mired in a municipal corruption scandal.
The film also delves into deeply personal issues, and examines the complex relationship Ed Koch has with his own identity and family. A lifetime bachelor who has always lived alone, we observe the mayor hounded by rumors of his personal life, and hear him explain in poignant detail why he has chosen to keep the details of his personal life private.
Koch is a portrait of a lion in winter as the onetime celebrity strains to remain in the spotlight. We watch the former mayor glad-hand at campaign stops, hobnob with political well-wishers on election night, appear on television and radio and speak in front of small groups. He puts on a stiff upper lip as he is snubbed by Andrew Cuomo, son of his bête noir Mario Cuomo, on election night. We see his spirits brighten at his Gracie Mansion birthday party when Mayor Bloomberg announces the renaming of the Queensboro Bridge in his honor. By the end, we come to realize that while Koch is mortal like the rest of us and cannot overcome the inevitability of old age, he will fight the fight to the end. Asked what, at 86, he still wants out of life, he answers plainly: More. Better.
The documentary is beautifully filmed in high-definition and filled with New York characters and life on the street. As we come to understand how the seeds of New York City's recovery were planted in his administration, Ed Koch emerges as the quintessential New Yorkerembattled and unapologetic. And while he is a man in many ways alone, viewers will come to see and hear what an enormous historical impact he had on the city.
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Today's News
February 17, 2013
Dallas Museum of Art is the exclusive U.S. venue for exhibition Chagall: Beyond Color
Exhibition focuses on Dieter Roth's prolific and innovative period of art-making from 1954 to 1972
Everson Museum of Art in Syracuse hosts works by Georgia O'Keeffe, Norman Rockwell
Expanded Saint Louis Art Museum to open its new East Building by Sir David Chipperfield in June
Exhibition presents works by artists who ripped, shot, cut, burned, and affixed objects to the canvas
France to return art from the 17th and 18th centuries stolen during World War II to Jewish heirs
PinchukArtCentre presents "Chicken", a solo exhibition of Jake & Dinos Chapman's work
Zeitgeist Films announces the US theatrical release of KOCH, a documentary by Neil Barsky.
First exhibition devoted to manipulated photography through the 1980s opens at National Gallery of Art
Princeton University Art Museum presents "Revealing the African Presence in Renaissance Europe"
Vancouver Art Gallery presents major retrospective of the work of renowned comic artist Art Spiegelman
Raqib Shaw transforms Manchester Art Gallery with flowers and plants in new exhibition
Retrospective by major African American artist William H. Johnson opens at UGA's Georgia Museum of Art
For its fourth edition, Beirut Art Fair continues to grow
Fuller Craft Museum opens exhibitions by nationally recognized jewelry artists
Japan's renewed kabuki theater lights up
Swede's Gaza children's funeral shot wins World Press Photo
Katharina Grosse: Two Younger Women Come in and Pull out the Table opens at Museum De Pont
Recent work by artists Phillip Estlund, Kirsten Kindler, and Katie Sinnott on view at ACME.
UNESCO chief 'worried' over Timbuktu heritage, pledges help
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