Author picture
10 Works 231 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Dito Montiel, his work, and his band Gutterboy have been featured in cover stories in such magazines as In Fashion and Details. His articles, interviews, poetry, etc. have appeared in Vanity Fair, Interview, and numerous other magazines. He lives in Santa Monica, California

Works by Dito Montiel

A Guide to Recognizing Your Saints (2003) — Author — 118 copies, 5 reviews
Empire State [2013 film] (2013) — Director — 26 copies
Fighting [2009 film] (2015) — Director — 19 copies
The Son of No One [2011 film] (2012) — Director — 12 copies
Boulevard [2014 film] (2015) — Director — 12 copies
The Clapper [2017 film] (2018) — Director — 4 copies
Man Down (2017) 3 copies
The Story of Milk (2012) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Occupations
writer
musician
film director

Members

Reviews

Reminiscent of the beats, and very enjoyable. The story of the author's upbringing in Queens back in the 80's, when Astoria was still a rough-and-tumble narrative. Robert Downey Jr. stars in the film version.
 
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alissamarie | 4 other reviews | Oct 25, 2009 |
Reminiscent of the beats, and very enjoyable. The story of the author's upbringing in Queens back in the 80's, when Astoria was still a rough-and-tumble narrative. Robert Downey Jr. stars in the film version.
 
Flagged
alissamarie | 4 other reviews | Oct 25, 2009 |
Reminiscent of the beats, and very enjoyable. The story of the author's upbringing in Queens back in the 80's, when Astoria was still a rough-and-tumble narrative. Robert Downey Jr. stars in the film version.
 
Flagged
alissamarie | 4 other reviews | Oct 25, 2009 |
I read this almost in one sitting. It's entertaining. Caught myself rolling my eyes a few times at the hyperbolic descriptions of wild times - had Montiel toned it down a bit, the credibility would have been stronger for me. That being said -- I believe nearly every word of this memoir, based on the context of the time. Some lives are just that incredible. I just found the "extreme wildness" angle distracting, comparing it in my mind to descriptive writers who have had longer periods of consistent wildness, and yet don't seem to get so "in-your-face" about it. What I liked best was the way Montiel's love for New York shows itself in his prose, and the spiritual nature he brings into his observations of events. There is also a refreshing lack of negativity in his storytelling.… (more)
 
Flagged
kallos | 4 other reviews | Sep 9, 2008 |

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Statistics

Works
10
Members
231
Popularity
#97,643
Rating
3.2
Reviews
5
ISBNs
28

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