Harvey Keitel (born May 13, 1939) is an American actor and producer. An Oscar and Golden Globe Award nominee, he has appeared in films such as Martin Scorsese’s Mean Streets and Taxi Driver, Ridley Scott’s The Duellists and Thelma & Louise, Quentin Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction, Jane Campion’s The Piano, Abel Ferrara’s Bad Lieutenant, Robert Rodriguez’s From Dusk till Dawn, James Mangold’s Cop Land, and National Treasure and its sequel, National Treasure: Book of Secrets. Along with actors Al Pacino and Ellen Burstyn, he is the current co-president of the Actors Studio.
Drama in which three car plant workers fed up with mistreatment at the hands of both management and union brass, decide to rob a safe at the union office.
The lives of two mob hit men, a boxer, a gangster’s wife, and a pair of diner bandits intertwine in four tales of violence and redemption.
An Arkansas waitress and a housewife shoot a rapist and take off in a ’66 Thunderbird.
A small-time hood struggles to succeed on the “mean streets” of Little Italy.
The sheriff of a suburban New Jersey community populated by New York City policeman slowly discovers the town is a front for mob connections and corruption.
A mentally unstable Vietnam war veteran works as a late night taxi driver in a city whose perceived decadence and sleaze feeds his urge to violently lash out, attempting to save a teenage prostitute in the process.