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16[[quoteright:349:[[VideoGame/GrandTheftAuto https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/582fbf7cce3610c73407e34d1d236463.png]]]]
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18->'''Finian:''' America's full of gangsters, you know.\
19'''Sharon:''' I thought you said it was full of millionaires.\
20'''Finian:''' That depends on which newspaper you read.
21-->-- ''Theatre/FiniansRainbow''
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23This might be considered the UrbanHellscape counterpart of {{Eagleland}}, the perception (more ignorantly so in other countries) of American cities as crime-ridden [[ViceCity Vice Cities]]. This has much to do with the export of American films. Supposedly, you will find French people, for instance, believing that UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}} is still as it was when UsefulNotes/AlCapone was alive.
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25While they all derive from the movies, most versions of Gangsterland do reflect violent periods in the history of various cities -- at least if you turn your head and squint a little. UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity stand-ins will have violence courtesy of TheMafia, Chicago from the Mayor's office and Prohibition-era bootleggers, UsefulNotes/{{Boston}} from TheIrishMob and UsefulNotes/LosAngeles from [[GangBangers Black and Mestizo Hispanic street gangs]]. Note that the first is organized crime, the second is [[WhiteCollarCrime corrupt]][[DirtyCop ion]] (and organized crime), and the third is [[AnarchyIsChaos street anarchy]] (though the more successful street gangsters move up into organized crime, or die trying). However in terms of treatment of civilians, the first rarely fits into TotalitarianGangsterism, the second may fit into it (depending on the government) and the third is this full-on. Pray that the people who run the land are NeighbourhoodFriendlyGangsters.
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27Compare WretchedHive and TotalitarianGangsterism (the latter is GangsterLand, but the gangsters also oppress the civilians). Can overlap with CityNoir in PeriodPiece settings such as [[RoaringTwenties the Roaring 20s]] and TheGreatDepression.
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30!!Examples
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32[[foldercontrol]]
33
34[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
35* Referenced in ''Manga/AzumangaDaioh'' when Chiyo announces that she will be going to America. Osaka puts on her NightmareFuelStationAttendant hat and suggests that Chiyo will be kidnapped and killed there.
36* ''Literature/{{Baccano}}'' fits in so far as its milieu is a gangster-ridden 1930s [[BigApplesauce New York]]. However, it also involves ''alchemy'', and the mobster characters tend not to fit stereotype.
37* ''Manga/SoulEater'' basically combines old and new versions of this as well as {{Eagleland}} with the Thompson twins who were formerly muggers in America until they tried to [[MuggingTheMonster mug Death the Kidd]]
38** This trope is directly invoked by Tsugumi in ''Manga/SoulEaterNot'' when she and Anya get in a fight with Liz and Patti. Tsugumi [[EquippableAlly turns into]] a halberd, then Patti [[NeverBringAKnifeToAGunFight turns into a gun.]]
39--->'''Tsugumi''': A handgun!? Now that's American... in the worst possible way!
40[[/folder]]
41
42[[folder:Comic Books]]
43* ''ComicBook/ThePunisherMAX'' depicts New York City as a haven for every criminal organization in existence, be it the Italian Mafia, the Russian Bratva, the Irish Mob, the Chinese Triads, Eastern European sex traffickers, Gangbangers, and even the Armenian Mob. Chances are if you think of any real-life criminal gangs, they're bound to show up in the Big Apple.
44* ''Comicbook/SinCity'', as the name implies, is a crime-filled cesspool where even the heroes aren't the most law-abiding.
45* ''ComicBook/{{Tintin}}'': ''[[Recap/TintinTintinInAmerica Tintin in America]]'' pits Tintin against Chicago gangsters, including an undisguised Al Capone.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:Fan Works]]
49* ''Fanfic/LaterTraitor'': Maloof's mental world is a big city run by mafia members represented as [[LivingClothes animate articles of clothing.]]
50[[/folder]]
51
52[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
53* The setting of ''Slaughter Race'' in ''WesternAnimation/RalphBreaksTheInternet'' is the Los Angeles variant of this trope, where street thugs race each other in expensive cars, there is no law enforcement whatsoever, everything is dirty and run down, and it's perpetually sunset. This is paradise to Vanellope.
54* The French animated film ''WesternAnimation/TheTripletsOfBelleville'' has American gangsters as villains. It also invokes {{Eagleland}} in depicting the Statue of Liberty and Americans as obese in contrast to the svelte (if equally unattractively drawn) French characters. Well, according to a newspaper the gangsters are apparently the (nonexistent?) French Mafia, and insofar as Belleville was a parody of America, the actual geography of the city, besides the statue, seems to be inspired by Montreal.
55[[/folder]]
56
57[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
58* Any [[HoodFilm "coming of age hood movie"]] from the early 90s, especially ''Film/{{Juice}}'', ''Film/BoyzNTheHood'', ''Film/MenaceIISociety'', and of course ''Film/DontBeAMenaceToSouthCentralWhileDrinkingYourJuiceInTheHood''. Also pretty most anything involving Mexican Americans, such as ''Film/BloodInBloodOut'', ''Film/{{Colors}}'', ''Film/AmericanMe''.
59* The unnamed city that ''Film/AngelsWithDirtyFaces'' takes place in.
60* ''Film/GangsOfNewYork'' portrays the 1860s equivalent, appearing to be a WretchedHive.
61* In ''Film/{{Hoodlum}}'', in Harlem everybody is affliated with either the Black Mafia, or the Jewish mafia, or the Italian mafia...you get the idea.
62* A more upscale version in the ''Franchise/JohnWick'' series. Every character is somehow involved in organized crime, with huge five-star hotels catering exclusively to mob hit-men, and civilians in the background take it totally in stride.
63* ''Film/KungFuHustle'' features a Chinese equivalent, though its laws of physics overlap with typical kung fu movies and ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes''.
64* NYC's Brighton Beach in ''Film/LittleOdessa'': TheMafiya is everywhere, all young men are wannabe hitmen, and nobody bats an eye when a murder occurs in broad daylight.
65* Creator/TheCoenBrothers' ''Film/MillersCrossing'', where just about everybody (including the non-speaking bit characters) seems to be a gangster or an associate of gangsters.
66* ''Film/RoadToPerdition'' is set in Illinois in 1931. Most of the characters are gangsters or the family members of gangsters, working either for [[TheIrishMob the Rooney Family]] or Al Capone himself.
67* The unnamed city in ''Film/StreetsOfFire'' is this.
68* ''Film/TheWarriors'': Nearly every character is a gangbanger.
69[[/folder]]
70
71[[folder:Literature]]
72* [[DiscussedTrope Discussed]] in ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'' novel ''Death Masks'', where a Catholic priest from Italy says that he is hiring Harry Dresden because he does not trust the police in Chicago, thanks to Chicago's reputation as a Mafia hotbed. While Harry is quick to point out that there is a lot of Mafia activity in Chicago, the level of corruption that said priest suspects is mostly fictional since the Capone days ended.
73* Visible in the ''Literature/JamesBond'' series (novels and early movies) in that while non-American villains were more of the megalomaniacal type, when American villains appeared, they were zoot-suited members of organized crime families.
74* In ''Literature/MaximumRide'', Fang, Iggy, and Gazzy visit California. They meet a street gang there called "The Ghosts" who offer them a safehouse. Said gang also helps them out by scaring a hot dog vendor into giving free hot dogs to the mini-Flock and helps them fight the Flyboys.
75* For a British GentlemanAdventurer, ''Literature/TheSaint'' seems to bump into a lot of gangsters when he goes to America. Of course, since this is [[VigilanteMan the Saint]] we're talking about...
76[[/folder]]
77
78[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
79* ''Series/BoardwalkEmpire'', takes place in Atlantic City and the surrounding areas during the 20's.
80* ''Series/PeakyBlinders'' dives into the British gangland of the interbellum period, although American gangsters - so far, mostly of the Italian-American [[TheMafia Mafia]] - occasionally show up. Series 4 saw a major vendetta against a Mafia boss played by Creator/AdrienBrody.
81* ''Series/RemingtonSteele'' seems to invoke this trope in having Steele obsessed with hard-boiled detective stories. He seemingly believed that they presented as accurate a picture of contemporary America and its slang as they did in the 1920s-1940s, when most of them were written.
82* ''Series/TheSopranos'': New Jersey is portrayed as this in the series. It's a city filled with drug dealers, {{Loan Shark}}s, [[TheCartel drug cartels]], contract killers, criminal organizations, illegal business, corruption, illegal gambling, and [[TheMafia mobsters]].
83* ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'': This is Sigma Iota's [[PlanetOfHats hat]] in "A Piece of the Action."
84[[/folder]]
85
86[[folder:Pinball]]
87* Creator/{{Capcom}}'s unreleased ''Pinball/{{Kingpin}}'' takes place in one of these. It's never named, but only referred to as "the Big City".
88[[/folder]]
89
90[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
91* ''TabletopGame/{{Necromunda}}'' the under hive of the planet are ruled by several gangs who are in constant war with each other over supremacy.
92* Pretty much the main point of White Wolf's ''Franchise/TheWorldOfDarkness'' setting is that it's like this - the darkest rumours and fears are all true, and then some.
93[[/folder]]
94
95[[folder:Theater]]
96* ''Theatre/HappyEnd'', Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill's SpiritualSuccessor to ''Theatre/TheThreepennyOpera'', was also set in {{Gangsterland}} Chicago.
97* Creator/BertoltBrecht's play ''Theatre/TheResistibleRiseOfArturoUi'' uses organized crime in Chicago and its environs as a metaphor for the rise of Hitler.
98[[/folder]]
99
100[[folder:Video Games]]
101* ''VideoGame/EarthboundBeginnings'' has the gang-ruled city of [[UsefulNotes/LosAngeles Ellay]]. In the original Japanese version, the city is called [[UsefulNotes/AlCapone Valentine]].
102* The ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAuto'' series, given that it is produced by a Scottish company, is a perfect illustration of the trope. No matter that state, they all share one common setting, they are run by gangs and gang warfare is considered a common sight.
103* ''VideoGame/TheKingOfChicago'', a Creator/{{Cinemaware}} game in which you play an ambitious gangster trying to take over the city after Al Capone is busted.
104* ''VideoGame/LANoire'', to an extent.
105* The ''Mafia'' series, obviously. Lost Heaven in [[VideoGame/MafiaTheCityOfLostHeaven the first game]] and Empire Bay in [[VideoGame/MafiaII the second game]] are loosely based on some combination of UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity, UsefulNotes/{{Philadelphia}}, UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}}, UsefulNotes/SanFrancisco, and UsefulNotes/{{Detroit}}, while New Bordeaux in ''VideoGame/MafiaIII'' is based on [[UsefulNotes/TheSixties 1960s-era]] UsefulNotes/NewOrleans.
106* ''VideoGame/SaintsRow'' is another straight up example of the trope. Stillwater, Steelport, and Santo Ileso feature powerful gangs that run the district and often wage wars with one another, leaving pedestrians (and local law enforcement) in the crossfire. To show how bad the gang activities are, the US Government, after the events of the second game, has formed a military task force to combat powerful gangs using military grade, space-tech hardware.
107* ''VideoGame/ShadowHeartsFromTheNewWorld'' takes place in the late 20's, and there's a subplot that involves the party visiting Chicago while the city is recovering from a vicious gang war that ended up with Al Capone in Alcatraz and a new hotshot Irish gangster called Roy [=MacManus=] in charge of the place.
108[[/folder]]
109
110[[folder:Western Animation]]
111* The ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' short the Unmentionables shows a Chicago dominated by gangsters to the point of mobster shoot-outs being the main attraction in the streets. At least they are organised enough to have traffic lights telling them when to start and stop.
112[[/folder]]
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