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How Historically Accurate is the movie Gangs of New York

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The <i>[https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006RXQ800/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=B006RXQ800&linkCode=as2&tag=dailyh0c-20&linkId=1a7786e898d7a531f39a6a1fb458773d Gangs of New York]</i> is widely viewed as an outstanding movie, but it is not particularly historically accurate. This movie is a 2002 epic directed by one of the greatest modern directors, Martin Scorsese. The now-defunct Miramax produced the movie, and it was based on an idea by Jay Cocks. The movie had a heavyweight cast starring Leonardo Di Caprio, Cameron Diaz, and Daniel Day-Lewis. The motion picture was generally well-received, but critics were not in love with the movie's script. It was a commercial success, and it received ten academy award nominations but failed to win any awards.
==Is the Gangs of New York a true story?==
While events inspire the movie in the New York City of the 1860s, the movie is not based on a true story. The Gangs of New York, like many Scorsese movies, is an examination of organized crime in New York City. In essence, the movie is a vengeance drama. It is set in the American metropolis before and during the American Civil War. The movie's focus is on the gangs that once controlled the Five-Points area of New York, which was a notorious slum.
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====What are the Five Points in New York City?====
[[File: Gang one.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Martin Scorsese, director of Gangs of New York]]
The Scorsese movie has a definite sense of place, and the director sought to bring the Five Points neighborhood of the 1860s to life. There was a lavish amount of money spent to make sure that the motion picture was as realistic as possible and that viewers had a sense of what it was like to live in a 19th-century urban slum.
The movie concentrates on the battle between the native gang under Bill the Butcher and his mob, who are all rapidly anti-Irish. While there was violence between the newcomers and natives and in the 1857 riots, the Irish were more often than not battling each other to control criminal enterprises and for political influence than Nativists. <ref> Mandelbaum, p 135</ref> While there is some truth in Scorsese’s account of New York’s underworld, he took a great deal of dramatic license.
====The Fictionalization Which Characters in Gangs of Characters==New York are Fictional?==
[[File: Gangs four.jpg|200px|thumb|left| Daniel Day-Lewis who played ‘Bill the Butcher’ in the movie]]
In the 1860s, there were many well-known and influential gang leaders in New York. Indeed, history offers many infamous and colorful characters that could have been used by the Gangs of New York makers. However, by and large, the characters are all fictional. Bill the Butcher was not a real figure, but he was probably based on William Poole, an infamous gang leader from the 1840s. Like Bill, he was virulently anti-Catholic and disliked immigrants, but he was murdered before the Civil War.
The Irish gang leaders were all entirely fictionalized, and none of them had any basis in fact. Some have argued that Amsterdam Vallon was based on an Irish-born gambler and gangster. The love interest of Di Caprio’s character, who is played by Cameron Diaz, was another purely fictional character. Also, the names of the gangs are not correct. For example, the Irish gang is known as the ‘Dead Rabbits’ in the motion picture, but they never existed. A newspaperman invented them in the 1850s. <ref>Walkowitz, Daniel J. "‘The Gangs of New York’: The mean streets in history." In <i>History Workshop Journal</i>, vol. 56, no. 1, pp. 204-209. Oxford University Press, 2003 </ref>
====What were the New York City Draft Riots 1863==?==
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The climax of the movie is a vicious fight between Amsterdam and Bill the Butcher. This takes place during a riot by mainly Irish residents against the draft. The riot was a historical event, and it was one of the worst outbreaks of public disorder in the history of New York City. The New York City Draft Riots of 1863 were a violent expression of growing discontent among the poor and the working class. The economy of New York had suffered greatly during the war, and unemployment was high, and wages were low.
Additionally, the use of a cannon to quell the riots was both theatrical and completely inaccurate. Although soldiers fired on the mob to break it up, cannons were not fired on the crowds.<ref> Schecter, p 101</ref>
====How accurate is the movie==Gangs of New York?==
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