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Martin Scorsese's Gangs of New York opens with an enormous closeup of a pair of eyes. It's a clammy, intrusive shot, and its stillness and forced intimacy serve as set up for the surprising sweep of the next few minutes, as the camera hurls past dozens of men preparing their weapons before marching into a street fight. The film takes its structure and achieves its impact from this strategy of moving from the smallest details to grand tableaus. Playing out national political struggles through a simple tale of vengeance, it earns its resonance by getting the details of its smaller conflict exactly right.