Fodor's Brooklyn
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About this ebook
Written by local experts, Fodor's travel guides have been offering advice and professionally vetted recommendations for all tastes and budgets for 80 years.
In less than a generation, Brooklyn has transformed itself into a global capital of culture and creativity. It buzzes with energy, excitement, and the inherent tension of coupling reinvention with a dedication to authenticity. Each of Brooklyn’s neighborhoods has its own allure, including the art and culinary scene in Williamsburg, the amazing views from Brooklyn Heights, and the architecture and greenery of Park Slope. It’s is a melting pot of makers and the food scene here is second to none, with locally minded, innovative chefs all over the borough.
This travel guide includes:
- UP-TO-DATE COVERAGE: This new guide goes far beyond the Brooklyn coverage in Fodor's New York City. It includes 30 top neighborhoods and covers Brooklyn landmarks as well as exciting new restaurants, hotels, night spots, attractions, and events.
- SPECIAL FEATURES: Fodor's Brooklyn highlights the borough's top attractions, experiences, and festivals and events, and the best ways to see the borough in summer, in winter, and with kids. A special section is devoted to our Best Bet recommendations for everything from the best places to eat pizza to top art galleries, alfresco dining and drinking, shops, bars, and performance venues. Notable neighborhood residents are also interviewed.
- CHIC DESIGN: Illustrations and hand-drawn color maps by noteworthy local Brooklyn illustrator Claudia Pearson showcase the content.
- INDISPENSABLE TRIP-PLANNING TOOLS: An opening chapter about Brooklyn helps travelers decide what neighborhood to visit with Best Bets lists and features on where to go, what to do with kids, and top things to do in summer and winter. Other chapters focus on top things to do in specific neighborhoods.
- DISCERNING RECOMMENDATIONS: Fodor's Brooklyn offers savvy advice and recommendations from local writers to help travelers make the most of their visit. Fodor's Choice designates our best picks, from hotels to nightlife.
- COVERS: The Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn Flea, Brooklyn Bridge Park, Williamsburg, Greenpoint, Bushwick, East Williamsburg, Bedford-Stuyvesant, Crown Heights, Fort Greene, Clinton Hill, Prospect Heights, Park Slope, Prospect Park, Gowanus, Dumbo, Brooklyn Heights, Downtown Brooklyn, Boerum Hill, Cobble Hill, Carroll Gardens, Red Hook, Columbia Waterfront District, Windsor Terrace, Greenwood Heights, South Slope, Sunset Park, Bay Ridge, Brighton Beach, and Coney Island.
Planning to visit New York? Check our Fodor's New York City guide.
Fodor's Travel Guides
For over 80 years, Fodor's Travel has been a trusted resource offering expert travel advice for every stage of a traveler's trip. We hire local writers who know their destinations better than anyone else, allowing us to provide the best travel recommendations for all tastes and budgets in over 7,500 worldwide destinations. Our books make it possible for every trip to be a trip of a lifetime.
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Fodor's Brooklyn - Fodor's Travel Guides
WELCOME TO BROOKLYN
In less than a generation, Brooklyn has transformed into a global capital of culture and creativity. It buzzes with energy, excitement, and the inherent tension of coupling reinvention with a dedication to authenticity.
BROOKLYN TODAY
Across the East River from Manhattan on Long Island’s western edge, Brooklyn is one of New York City’s five boroughs. At 71 square miles, it’s more than three times the size of Manhattan. With more than 2½ million people, if Brooklyn were a city, it would be the fourth largest in the United States by population.
For decades Manhattan was New York City’s most significant draw, but now visitors come specifically to Brooklyn: to eat, drink, see, absorb, and experience one of the most talked-about places in the world. What made Brooklyn the trendsetting destination it is today? It would be hard not to use the H
word—referring to the L-train-riding hipsters who moved to Williamsburg in the 1990s when the rents were cheap, and put their creative DIY ideas into action. It was, at least in part, their energy that grew and spread to other neighborhoods in the borough, where old factories were turned into innovative maker spaces, rooftops into urban gardens, and parking lots into farm-to-table restaurants whose rustic chic Brooklyn-style
decor can now be found in Paris, Bogotá, Tokyo, and beyond. Brooklyn today is, of course, more than a playground for tattooed and bearded skateboarders; it’s a place where old and new mingle, and continue to change—in some places slowly and at breakneck speed in others.
HISTORY
The Lenape, a Native American people, originally inhabited much of the land Brooklyn now occupies. The Dutch settled here in 1636, but the British displaced them in 1664. Over the next two-plus centuries Brooklyn—an Anglicization of Breuckelen, the area’s Dutch name—developed into the independent city incorporated in 1854. Four decades later residents narrowly voted to join Manhattan, Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island to form New York City. Before and after the 1898 merger, many key events in U.S. history took place in Brooklyn. Gowanus hosted the largest battle of the American Revolution in 1776; Walt Whitman pioneered a uniquely American style of free-verse poetry in the mid-19th century; the Brooklyn Bridge, completed in 1883, was among the era’s premier engineering feats; and Brooklyn Dodger Jackie Robinson became professional baseball’s first African American player in 1947. And that’s just for starters. The Brooklyn Historical Society is a great place to delve deeper into the borough’s past and present.
IMMIGRATION
From the 19th century to the present, successive waves of immigrants reshaped Brooklyn every generation or two. Irish, Germans, Italians, Poles, and Russians were among the Europeans who emigrated in large numbers early on, with many of the new arrivals finding work in factories and shipyards. Jewish people came in several waves, as did Puerto Ricans, whose earliest significant migration occurred in the 1940s. A 21st-century study credits immigrants from Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean, many of whom settled in Brooklyn during the 1970s and 1980s, with sparing New York City from the depopulation Detroit and other rust belt cities experienced during the late 20th century. With nearly half of current residents speaking a language other than English at home, it’s possible to hear conversations in Urdu, Arabic, Spanish, Yiddish, and Mandarin in a single afternoon—or on a single subway car.
GENTRIFICATION
Many Brooklyn neighborhoods have become upscale in recent decades, a development that native son and film director Spike Lee disparaged in 2014 during an impromptu exchange at Brooklyn’s Pratt Institute. Lee mocked what he dubbed the Christopher Columbus syndrome, one group discovering
a neighborhood that other people already live in. Lee also reproved newcomers who come in when people have a culture that’s been laid down for generations
and ignore or disrespect it. What Lee described isn’t a new phenomenon: the completion of the Brooklyn Bridge prompted similar disruption when many Manhattan residents, seeking lower rent, larger living spaces, and an easy commute, relocated here. Flash forward a century later to Park Slope, Williamsburg, and elsewhere, and the same dynamic unfolded.
Contemporary gentrification is admired by some, and cause for concern among others. Proponents applaud higher property values and improved infrastructure. Critics decry the evictions of long-term residents and the loss of neighborhood character. Wherever you stand, know that gentrification is a touchy subject for many Brooklynites. Keep in mind, too, that all of Brooklyn isn’t gentrified, affluent, and fashionable. There are also many residents, among them Williamsburg’s Hasidic Jews, who strive to maintain their traditional ways, while in other highly visitable areas housing project residents struggle with poverty.
medium imageWHAT’S WHERE IN BROOKLYN
Each of Brooklyn’s neighborhoods has its own allure. To help you choose where to visit, here’s a rundown of the areas we cover in detail. The numbers refer to chapter numbers.
2. WILLIAMSBURG
An industrial neighborhood turned creative mecca, this popular choice for visitors generates worldwide buzz with its vibrant nightlife, chic boutiques, innovative restaurants, and happening arts scene.
3. GREENPOINT
Predominantly Polish Greenpoint has been absorbing the spillover of Williamsburg, its trendsetting neighbor. Family-run corner stores and Eastern European restaurants abound, but you’ll also find fantastic boutiques, restaurants, and bars.
4. BUSHWICK AND EAST WILLIAMSBURG
Older homes and mom-and-pop shops in these neighborhoods coexist with DIY music venues and happening bars and eateries. Street art and avant-garde galleries are daytime draws; at night, huge warehouses open for edgy dance parties.
5. BEDFORD-STUYVESANT AND CROWN HEIGHTS
Though undergoing rapid change, Bed-Stuy and Crown Heights retain their mostly residential ambience. Up-and-coming bars and ethnic eateries that reflect the flourishing diversity are reasons to visit.
6. FORT GREENE AND CLINTON HILL
Tree-lined residential streets and historic architecture provide the backdrop for sophisticated dining and mellow nightlife in these side-by-side neighborhoods. The Brooklyn Academy of Music anchors the borough’s performing arts scene.
7. PROSPECT HEIGHTS
Adjacent to Park Slope, with easy access to Brooklyn Botanic Garden, the Brooklyn Museum, and the Barclays Center, Prospect Heights is a must for culture lovers. Cool cocktail bars and locavore restaurants thrive here.
8. PARK SLOPE AND PROSPECT PARK
Family-friendly Park Slope entices with historic streets, brownstone stoops, specialty shops, and well-regarded restaurants. Adjoining Prospect Park hosts copious festivals and summer concerts.
9. GOWANUS
Creative types enliven this neighborhood that once bustled with factory workers. Quirky performance spaces and innovative food and drink destinations keep things hopping.
10. DUMBO
The chic area known as Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass seduces with cobblestone streets, boutiques, arts spaces, and killer Manhattan views.
11. BROOKLYN HEIGHTS AND DOWNTOWN BROOKLYN
The borough’s oldest neighborhood, Brooklyn Heights, pleases with its varied architecture and enchanting promenade. The Brooklyn Historical Society mounts outstanding shows; Downtown Brooklyn is a convenient transportation hub.
12. BOERUM HILL AND COBBLE HILL
These delightful neighborhoods are perfect for strolling. Brownstones, redbrick row houses, and cozy cafés lend the area an upscale, family-friendly suburban feel. Antiques stores and bright boutiques are plentiful.
13. CARROLL GARDENS
This neighborhood owes its down-to-earth vibe to its Italian-American base. Innovative restaurants and boutiques share the streets with old-style bakeries and butcher shops.
14. RED HOOK AND COLUMBIA WATERFRONT DISTRICT
These waterfront locales win points for their artsy vibe, knockout views, and destination bars and restaurants. The remoteness only adds to their attraction.
15. WINDSOR TERRACE, GREENWOOD HEIGHTS, AND SOUTH SLOPE
A deep sense of community characterizes these areas near Prospect Park. Their bars, restaurants, and shops exude local energy, and Green-Wood Cemetery is an oasis of greenery with historic cachet.
16. DITMAS PARK AND MIDWOOD
Victorian homes and landscaped front yards impart a suburban air to these areas south of Prospect Park, but their historic districts, and range of bars and restaurants radiate big-city appeal.
17. SUNSET PARK
Home to Brooklyn’s Chinatown, this multiethnic enclave also has a rapidly developing waterfront. The neighborhood is a prime contender for the borough’s next exciting frontier.
18. BAY RIDGE
Waterfront parks and stunning views of the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge set the scene for the architectural charms of Bay Ridge’s residential streets and diverse dining options.
19. BRIGHTON BEACH AND CONEY ISLAND
Golden sands, a fabulous boardwalk, amusement park rides, restaurants, and retro nightclubs make for a giddy good time at these beachside playgrounds.
TOP EXPERIENCES IN BROOKLYN
Everyone has favorite things to do or see in Brooklyn, the ones to go back to again and again, and to recommend to friends and family. These top 10 experiences will guide you to the best of the borough.
GRAND ENTRANCES
A stroll across the Brooklyn Bridge from Manhattan is an exhilarating way to enter the borough. Along the way, you can take in the bridge’s Gothic Revival towers, read the plaques detailing the challenging construction process, and marvel at the views of the Manhattan and Brooklyn skylines. You’ll want to snap a few photos, too. You can also enjoy sweeping vistas of the bridges and the city via the NYC Ferry or the New York Water Taxi to various points in Brooklyn.
WATERFRONT VIEWS
Brooklyn’s waterfront provides unparalleled city and harbor views. For perspectives on Manhattan, head to Brooklyn Bridge Park, WNYC Transmitter Park, and East River State Park. To enjoy the scenery with a cocktail in hand, slip inland three blocks to The Ides, on the Wythe Hotel’s roof, or head to The River Café to appreciate the views accompanied by a special meal. The Statue of Liberty is in clear view from Louis Valentino Jr. Park & Pier, whose panorama includes a generous portion of New York Harbor. From its perch overlooking its namesake neighborhood, Sunset Park, though not on the water, delivers bird’s-eye views of New York Harbor and Lower Manhattan.
EATING AND DRINKING
Farm-to-table restaurants, traditional ethnic eateries, loungey cocktail dens, artisanal coffee roasters, and craft-beer bars make for dynamite eating and drinking options around the clock. For fine dining and glamorously casual cafés, head to Williamsburg, Boerum Hill, and Carroll Gardens. Fort Greene, Prospect Heights, and Cobble Hill shelter influential restaurants that source everything from the tenderloin to the tableware thoughtfully and sustainably. Bartenders and mixologists across the borough prove equally adept at fashioning classic and innovative cocktails. Bay Ridge and Sunset Park showcase Mexican, Middle Eastern, Italian, Chinese, and other cuisines. In good weather, the patios and rooftop spaces of Brooklyn’s restaurants and bars are the best places to be.
medium imageHAPPENING NIGHTLIFE
Brooklyn’s cool kids convene in Williamsburg, East Williamsburg, Greenpoint, Gowanus, and elsewhere for nighttime revelry. To tap into Williamsburg’s limitless vitality, check out a concert at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, catch the buzzy vibe at Maison Premiere, and go dancing at Output. For hanging out in chill backyards, stop in at Hot Bird or Lavender Lake. For something unique, head to the Nitehawk Cinema, which screens indie films and serves dinner. For games, there’s bowling at the Gutter or Brooklyn Bowl, shuffleboard at Royal Palms Shuffleboard, bocce at Floyd and Union Hall, and arcade games at Barcade.
URBAN HISTORY
Brooklyn reveals its long history indoors and out. Thanks to the iconic bridge and fabulous architecture, you need only step outside to sense the borough’s rich past, and a visit to the museums and institutions can heighten the impression. The curators at the Brooklyn Museum and the Brooklyn Historical Society assemble dynamic, sometimes interactive exhibits from their institutions’ collections of prints, photographs, and artifacts. The diverting New York Transit Museum celebrates subways, trolleys, trams, and other public conveyances, and the Old Stone House re-creates life at a 17th-century Dutch farmhouse that played a key role in the Battle of Brooklyn. The Weeksville Heritage Center pays homage to one of New York’s first communities of free blacks.
THE ART SCENE
The Brooklyn Museum stands as a testament to its borough’s enduring commitment to art. A stop here is essential, but numerous other venues merit investigation. The spaces at the multidisciplinary BRIC Arts Media House include a large gallery specializing in works by Brooklyn-based artists. The Museum of Contemporary African Diaspora Arts focuses on works with a social or political message about the African diaspora. Meanwhile, the Pratt Institute Sculpture Park includes more than 50 sculptures and the Bushwick Collective presents several dazzling blocks of street art. A fun way to survey the current art scene is to attend various neighborhoods’ block parties, festivals, and open-studios events.
PARKS AND GARDENS
Green spaces small and large, waterside and inland, grace Brooklyn’s landscape. At Brooklyn Bridge Park you can stroll the waterfront, picnic in the bridge’s shadow, ride Jane’s Carousel, and admire the Manhattan views. Louis Valentino Jr. Park & Pier and Sunset Park also have distinctive city and harbor vistas, and the Shore Park and Parkway affords stunning takes on the Verrazano–Narrows Bridge, which links Brooklyn with Staten Island. Inland, Fort Greene Park is a local favorite steeped in history, and 500-acre Prospect Park entices with lush greenery, winding paths, and walking and horseback-riding trails. With its large grounds and conservatory, the extraordinary Brooklyn Botanic Garden provides a colorful sanctuary year-round.
FESTIVALS AND EVENTS
Fun festivals and events happen year-round, and many are free. For the quintessential Brooklyn summer experience, tote a blanket and picnic fixings to Prospect Park for Celebrate Brooklyn! concerts and performances, or head to one of the parks in Williamsburg, Greenpoint, DUMBO, and Red Hook for outdoor movie screenings. The Bushwick Collective throws a massive summer block party, with street artists at work, food stands, and live music. Art galleries in Williamsburg, Greenpoint, and DUMBO often stay open late (and sometimes serve drinks) on Thursday and Friday for exhibit openings. Sunset Park’s Industry City complex hosts fun, family-friendly dance parties See our Best Brooklyn Events listings in this chapter for more ideas.
BROOKLYN SHOPPING
The borough attracts designers, craftspeople, and artists, so you’ll find shops and galleries here touting all sorts of made-in-Brooklyn merchandise and artworks. Williamsburg, Carroll Gardens, Boerum Hill, Cobble Hill, Greenpoint, and DUMBO are pivotal stops for clothing, objects, and art, while the seasonally open DUMBO outpost of the Flea is a great place to browse for just about anything. There are also plenty of Brooklyn bookstores, most of which sell wonderful Brooklyn-made gifts and handmade stationery and cards in addition to books, many by Brooklyn’s literati.
PERFORMING ARTS
As major performing-arts consumers, Brooklynites support diverse venues and cultural organizations. The stalwart and innovative Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) presents concerts, plays, dance, and other performances; so, too, do quirky loft and storefront spaces. The renowned St. Ann’s Warehouse has commissioned cutting-edge theater, music, and high-art puppeteering for three-plus decades, while the Kings Theatre, a renovated movie palace, emerged in 2015 as an exciting new venue. Children’s-literature-based performances and puppet shows at the Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts and Puppetworks delight budding arts devotees, while classical-music lovers take in concerts in the BAM halls, the floating Bargemusic barge, and other spaces.
medium imageBROOKLYN WITH KIDS
Interactive museums, roller coasters, carousels, and state-of-the-art playgrounds make it a snap to entertain kids in Brooklyn. The only problem you’ll have is figuring out what to do first.
AQUARIUM, ZOO, MUSEUM
There are museums that kids enjoy and there are museums made with kids in mind. The Brooklyn Children’s Museum is the latter, and it’s paradise for the under-eight set, who can dig in at the greenhouse, play in the sand and the water feature, and pretend to be pizza makers, bakers and travel agents. The New York Aquarium has plenty of watery wonders to delight children and adults, including playful penguins, otters, and seals, while the Prospect Park Zoo has a petting zoo with farm animals, a giant outdoor sea lion tank, and lots of other animals, large and small. Exhibits at the New York Transit Museum gets raves from all ages; the entrance resembles that of a subway station, and the subterranean space is full of vintage train cars and fun transportation-related activities.
SHOPPING
Who doesn’t love a new toy? Take the kids to Norman and Jules for the most desirable handmade blocks and games, fun room accessories, and arts-and-crafts projects that will absorb attention for hours, if not days and weeks. Area Kids is another one-stop shop for whimsical playthings as well as a small selection of adorable children’s clothes. The borough’s many bookstores have wonderful children’s books and lots of fun storytelling events. In particular, check out Books are Magic, Community Bookstore, Word, Greenlight Books, and Barnes and Noble.
PLAY TIME
Great parks and playgrounds are plentiful in this borough. Brooklyn Bridge Park is a must, with several playgrounds, including the Water Lab’s water jets, Swing Valley’s swings and Tarzan-style ropes, Sandbox Village, and Slide Mountain. Brooklyn has several carousels, including the lovingly restored Jane’s Carousel in Brooklyn Bridge Park and the Carousel in Prospect Park. Out at Coney Island, take the kids for a spin on the iconic Wonder Wheel and, for those tall enough to ride, the Cyclone roller coaster. The LeFrak Center in Prospect Park is a hit year-round, with ice-skating in the colder months and roller skating and water jets in summer.
FOOD AND DRINK IN BROOKLYN
Locally minded, innovative chefs, bartenders, baristas, and bakers can be found all over the borough. A hop on the subway is all you need to experience outstanding restaurants, bars, and cafés.
PIZZA
From old-school coal-oven-baked slices to nouveau pies dressed with innovative toppings, this is the pizza capital of the country. Legendary pizza makers have been slinging pies in Brooklyn for decades, while in recent years the borough has been the incubator for the new-wave Neapolitan craze. What makes the pizza so good here? Some say it’s the special qualities of New York City water.
WORLD CUISINE
Think of a cuisine, and there’s a good chance you can find it deliciously represented in Brooklyn. In a single day, you can have a superb Mexican breakfast, an authentic Chinese or Vietnamese lunch, a toothsome Czech Republic or Central American afternoon snack, and an outstanding Middle Eastern or Italian dinner. You’d still only be scratching the surface of the variety of eats you can enjoy here.
BEER AND COCKTAILS
Brooklynites take their drinks seriously. Want to sip artfully mixed cocktails made with house-brand bitters, guzzle Brooklyn brews in a happening beer hall, or taste Brooklyn-distilled liquor at its source? You can do all this and much more here.
COFFEE
Coffee has a serious presence in Brooklyn and pour-overs and local roasts are a source of pride. The profusion of local coffee bars and minichains, as well as top names from around the country, mean there’s an abundance of cool or cozy spots for coffee connoisseurs looking to get a cup (to go or to stay).
SWEETS
No sweet tooth goes unsatisfied in Brooklyn, where cookies, cakes, pies, and pastries get local and creative. Small-batch chocolate factories, ice-cream shops with cult followings, bakeries that specialize in pie, and doughnut shops with lines out the door are among the local institutions churning out irresistible confections. Try not to leave the borough without tasting a hibiscus-glazed doughnut, a slice of chocolate julep pie, or a scoop of Ooey Gooey Buttercake ice cream.
MADE IN BROOKLYN
Brooklyn is a melting pot of makers, so what could be a better souvenir than something Brooklyn made? Here’s a short list of local brands to look for when you’re browsing.
CLOTHING
Madison Avenue may be famed for luxury shopping, but Brooklyn is where you go to discover up-and-coming talents. Be tempted by breezy silk blouses and dresses by Rachel Rose, wonderful Indian-inspired prints by Ace & Jig, and sleekly silhouetted frocks by Ilana Kohn. For a one-stop shop, hit one of the four Bird boutiques in the borough: they’re in Carroll Gardens, Fort Greene, Park Slope, and Williamsburg.
ACCESSORIES
Accessories purchased on location are the perfect way to remember a trip. Digby & Iona, Scosha, and AILI are all known for their unique yet casual jewelry: look for them and others at Catbird, in Williamsburg. The shop is also known for its own line of delicate pieces. For purses and totes, keep your eye out for Brooklyn brands like Hayden-Harnett’s clever zip pouches and cross-body styles, as well as sumptuous leathers by KikaNY.
BEAUTY PRODUCTS
Homemade beauty brands abound in Brooklyn. Lip and body-care lines like Stewart & Claire, Apotheke, and MeowMeow Tweet have literally been cooked up in the borough. The Shen Beauty emporium carries these and many, many others.
HOME DECOR
Buy yourself, or a friend, something for the home: everyone adores the totes and tea towels with whimsical motifs hand-drawn by Fodor’s Brooklyn’s own illustrator Claudia Pearson. Design lovers rave about the stunning wood cutting boards from Gowanus Furniture, coasters by Brooklyn Slate, offbeat dishware by Recreation Center, and everything from custom cabinets to small goods like coasters and trays from Noble Goods. The Brooklyn Flea in DUMBO and Artists & Fleas are good places to shop.
EDIBLES
Dozens of Brooklyn-based purveyors produce delicious snacks, nibbles, and spreads—pickles by Brooklyn Brine, Mike’s Hot Honey, jams and jellies by Anarchy in a Jar, Mama O’s kimchi, and so much more. Whole Foods is the perfect place to stock your kitchen or find a gift.
WHAT TO WATCH AND READ
To learn more about Brooklyn, before or after you visit, consider these movies, TV shows, books, magazines, and blogs as a primer to the borough’s past, present, and ever-changing future.
MOVIES
Movies can capture time and place so perfectly, sometimes so much so that they quickly become dull and dated: not so these Brooklyn-based films, which both entertain and capture slices of Brooklyn life over time. Hal Ashby’s 1970 film The Landlord takes a comedic look at Park Slope real estate and the diverse neighborhood. Hometown hero Spike Lee’s revolutionary debut, She’s Gotta Have It (1986), depicts the now-legendary independent arts scene brewing in Fort Greene in the 1980s. Called Brooklyn Boheme, the movement established the neighborhood—and Brooklyn itself—as a creative destination with global impact. Lee’s Do The Right Thing (1989) also harks back to the 1980s, with a riveting portrayal of the racial tensions in Bedford-Stuyvesant at that time. As neighborhood demographics continue to shift through contemporary Brooklyn, the film remains powerfully relevant. Requiem for a Dream, Darren Aronofsky’s 2000 screen adaptation of Hubert Selby’s 1978 novel, is a searing look at addiction, set largely in Coney Island. Revisit 1977’s Saturday Night Fever, in which John Travolta got his start as Italian-American Bay Ridgeite Anthony Tony
Manero, and the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge plays a significant role. Moonstruck, Norman Jewison’s 1987 film, is one of the era’s quintessential romantic comedies, set against the backdrop of Brooklyn Heights. Another favorite, The Squid and the Whale, Noah Baumbach’s award-winning 2005 indie flick, captures the fiercely intellectual, vaguely neurotic character of Park Slope. Baumbach’s 2015 film, While We Were Young, is a wryly comedic look at very contemporary life in Brooklyn.
TV SHOWS
With Brooklyn’s outsize personality, it’s no wonder the