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In the novel....
Posted: Tue Nov 01, 2005 12:38 pm
by egrorian
I'm confused as Sol Yurick mentions in his (retrosepctive) introduction that The Warriors (or Coney Island Dominators as they were termed in the novel) were black. I'm sure this was also mentioned in the new DVD special features (the DVD review mag actually says the Warriors were "Native Americans" but this must be an error).
However, in the scene where Hector, Lunkface and Bimbo meet the nurse in the park, Hector is described as "a pretty boy with blonde wavy hair"! So, can anyone clarify?
In the novel....
Posted: Tue Nov 01, 2005 10:23 pm
by egrorian
No-one? I thought this was an interesting question.
'Hector' is obviously the equivalent of 'Swan', so the long wavy blond hair was interesting, especially as the common view - even mentioned by the author himself! - seems to be the Warriors of the novel were an all black outfit.
Re: In the novel....
Posted: Tue Nov 01, 2005 11:54 pm
by MrVess
The excuse explanation: bleached hair or wig.
The realistic explanation: Yurick's goof.
In the novel....
Posted: Wed Nov 02, 2005 1:49 am
by ohs
hmm I just recently read the book and I was never under the impression that they were black, although Lunkface was called the N word by the nurse in the park, which infuriated him. Ima have to look over the book again see if I can find anything else.
Re: In the novel....
Posted: Wed Nov 02, 2005 5:07 pm
by LATEM
egrorian wrote:I'm confused as Sol Yurick mentions in his (retrosepctive) introduction that The Warriors (or Coney Island Dominators as they were termed in the novel) were black. I'm sure this was also mentioned in the new DVD special features (the DVD review mag actually says the Warriors were "Native Americans" but this must be an error).
However, in the scene where Hector, Lunkface and Bimbo meet the nurse in the park, Hector is described as "a pretty boy with blonde wavy hair"! So, can anyone clarify?
I don't know what Mr. Yurick's idea is of "black" but some of his characters are also Latinos. The reason I am clearing this up is because there seems to be a huge confusion between color and cultural background. Here in the States we are so stupid as to ask questions on forms such as: "Please indicate your ethnic group: White Latino, Black Latino, Other" It is plain stupid. I am glad that the movie we all love is made of all backgrounds.
In the novel....
Posted: Wed Nov 02, 2005 5:52 pm
by wolverine_95
I think Hector was supposed to be Hispanic. As for the DVD jacket saying the Warriors are Native-American, I think they were trying to say they were Native-American themed. I've seen this description in a few places. I tend to think it's a miscategorization, but maybe the word Warriors has a connotation I'm not aware of. Plus, Cochise?s headband looks like it could be inspired by Native-Americans and the rank of War Chief sounds Native-American.
Re: In the novel....
Posted: Mon Mar 27, 2006 6:53 am
by Juniper
I read the book all i can find out is that Lunkface is Ajax and I have been wondering who The Junior and the rest is.
Re: In the novel....
Posted: Mon Mar 27, 2006 6:03 pm
by wolverine_95
Juniper wrote:
I read the book all i can find out is that Lunkface is Ajax and I have been wondering who The Junior and the rest is.
The book and the film are so different that it's hard to find the parallels. The Junior seems to be like Rembrandt yet Hinton is the writer.
Re: In the novel....
Posted: Mon Mar 27, 2006 8:07 pm
by BaseballFury100
black people can have blonde hair

Re: In the novel....
Posted: Tue Mar 28, 2006 12:00 am
by Ravage
In the novel Lunkface is described as "...American, a Puerto Rican of Spanish descent..." in the part with the nurse in the park.
I am thinking the Dominators were a Puerto Rican gang.
Re: In the novel....
Posted: Tue Mar 28, 2006 2:42 am
by Grits
Is the novel a must-read if you're a big fan of the film?
Re: In the novel....
Posted: Tue Mar 28, 2006 2:54 am
by SoldierHeavyMuscle
Grits wrote:
Is the novel a must-read if you're a big fan of the film?
NO, NO, NO!!!!
you want a "book" version of film?
a GOOD version?
read the script!!Â

Re: In the novel....
Posted: Tue Mar 28, 2006 5:00 am
by mavissum
well i think the book kinda gives you a more intresting background to the characters even though you dont really know who they are, you can figure alot of them out. thats just my opinion of course