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Thread started 02/05/03 10:50am

DigitalLisa

It's Black History Month (Blakploitation films)

This is in no intention trying 2 start any racial flurries
So if u have something racist 2 say stay off this thread, black or white smile


I would like 2 start black history month with a brief introduction of Blackspoitation Films. Before They Guess who came 2 dinner with Sydney Poiter , Spike Lee became or Denzel Washington won his first Oscar, U didn't really see alot of postive roles played by black female actresses or actors. The roles where very limited and unless u could dance or sing it was really hard 2 get any roles at all. We all know about the legacy of the black face and how it was demeaning 2 one's culture and at the time there werent any films targeted towards black audience, until the late 60's and the 70's came along (read on)...

In the early '70s, blaxploitation upended Hollywood stereotypes

By Nicky Baxter


Melvin Van Peebles, director of the controversial ghetto epic Sweet Sweetback's Baadasss Song in 1971, gets credit, willing or not, for inaugurating the blaxploitation genre--low-budget action movies aimed at black audiences. This period marked the first time in American film history that Hollywood had welcomed black talent with anything resembling enthusiasm.

Capitalizing on the brief moment when black was beautiful, Hollywood cannily seized the opportunity to make a quick buck, churning out scores of action-packed cheapies. Significantly, this phenomenon was accomplished by reintroducing the Big Black Buck stereotype first seen in D.W. Griffith's Birth of a Nation. Only this time around, that dark, ominous figure was transmogrified into the Great Ghetto Hero. Though the blaxploitation era, was brief, running roughly from 1971 to 1975, its impact would range far and wide.

Sweet Sweetback introduced the biggest and baddest buck of the bunch. Warts and all, the film is perhaps the closest analogy to the progressive aims of the then-flourishing Black Arts movement. Indeed, it can be argued that because it was written, produced and directed by an American-born African outside of Hollywood, the film is not truly part of the blaxploitation genre, yet it cannot be denied that it shares certain thematic similarities.

The film centers on a slick, sly and wicked stud who, after witnessing a police beat-down of an innocent black youth, splits the cops' heads open with their own handcuffs and flees. Sweetback is, at first, hardly a revolutionary figure. Raised in a whorehouse, he has been tutored in the fine art of lovemaking, but his encounter with the police becomes the first step in a series of events that pricks his amoral conscience. Borrowing elements from film noir, Van Peebles takes us through the dimly lighted streets of the black ghetto where pimps, hustlers and cutthroats rule.

The film works best when it follows Sweetback's odyssey from stud boy to proto-nationalist consciousness. Unlike the Horatio Alger-style integrationism propagated in past films about blacks, here we see an outlaw among outlaws, nourished by a community segregated from the mainstream. It is in this disenfranchised community--and not the sterile offices of the NAACP--that he seeks and finds refuge. The sordid sexual trysts, the faux fantasies in the desert are, finally, less interesting than Sweetback's quest for self-realization.

Though lambasted by critics when it was released, Sweet Sweetback is now considered a marred masterpiece by some. The fact that a black man met violence with violence, was openly sexual, and triumphed over a corrupt white system was a signal event in film. Yet perhaps its most "revolutionary" aspect is that Sweet Sweetback was an uncompromising effort made outside Hollywood's stultifying good-old-white-boys' system, setting an example for future auteurs like Spike Lee and Robert Townsend. The blaxploitation films that followed, such as Superfly (1972), Coffy (1973), Foxy Brown (1974) and Friday Foster (1975), were colorful if less successful takeoffs on the superbad ghetto rebel theme.

In Gordon Parks' Superfly, Van Peebles' stud-buck radical is transformed into a cocaine dealer named Priest who lacks even the pretense of social consciousness--an incorrigible hedonist who uses then discards women like they were born for that purpose. Yet there is something alluring in Ron O'Neal's protagonist.

With his shoulder-length waved hair, long, flowing trench coats, and flamboyantly outsized hats, Priest epitomizes the coolly self-contained Harlem mack daddy. Parks' slummy setting looks authentic. The streets bustle with seedy activity; the run-down tenements and piss-stained alleyways paint a picture of urban decay. In this war zone where drug lords and pushermen battle for control, the protagonist reigns supreme. Operating outside the law--and indeed, the law is itself corrupt--Priest has created his own rules.

Although Priest finally takes the money and runs, leaving the cocaine business behind, the picture was criticized for sending mixed messages. One is both attracted and repelled by the hero's illegally acquired opulence. It's as if the filmmakers were saying it's OK to sell dope as long as you eventually get out of the game. Curtis Mayfield's superb soundtrack certainly doesn't help matters; seductive as all get-out, like the movie itself, the music is a maddening confluence of dread, desire and hopelessness. Yet in the end, it is impossible to resist its evil temptations.

Coffy, Foxy Brown and Friday Foster (1975) represent the feminization of nihilistic studliness. As noted in Donald Bogle's compelling interpretation of black film history, Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammys and Bucks, Hollywood had for decades marginalized and distorted the portrayal of African women.

In film after film, black women were depicted as either stout, obsequiously devoted appendages to flighty white women (e.g. Hattie McDaniel in Gone With the Wind) with no discernible lives of their own, or tragic figures, doomed by their mixed racial heritage (Lena Horne in Stormy Weather). With the arrival of blaxploitation, black women traded in the old stereotypes for a set of new ones. Gone were the girthy, saucer-eyed asexual creatures of yore; the new stars were curvaceous and statuesque women who flaunted their sexuality and took shit from no one.

In her starring roles in Coffy, Foxy Brown and Friday Foster, Pam Grier proved to be the most durable queen of colored B-movies. Unlike her buckish counterparts, Grier's characters were motivated by high-minded moralism. Running the neighborhood like it was her private domain, Grier's women feared no man, and were thus interpreted by some as a beacon of proto-feminism.

And indeed, there is something exhilarating about seeing a superfine sister track down and smoke a gang of dope pushers. As Foxy Brown, Grier cuts a memorable figure as a revenge-seeking vigilante. In one particularly gruesome scene, she castrates a bad guy and then delivers the prize to the victim's girlfriend! And if Grier's undeniable sexuality is exploited, she does manage to turn the tables on occasion, preceding Madonna by more than a decade.

Yet, taken as a whole, these roles reified a stereotypical image that preceded Hollywood, that of the sexually insatiable black mama. More white male fantasy than anything else, it is little wonder that few if any U.S. African women identified with these roles.

In the end, it became apparent that U.S. Africans as a group found the limitations of the genre too obvious to ignore; the price for cheering on putative black heroes was simply too high. Almost as suddenly as they arrived, blaxploitation's supervixens and bucks would soon limp off the set, gone but not forgotten.
[This message was edited Wed Feb 5 11:21:01 PST 2003 by DigitalLisa]
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Reply #1 posted 02/05/03 10:52am

DrEverythingWi
llBeAlright

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why did they pick the shortest month in the year to be "black history month??
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Reply #2 posted 02/05/03 10:55am

Starmist7

Okay, Blaxploitation films, I was in the video store today and I didn't realize they had such a wide selection besides Foxy and Melvin Van Peebles we hear so much about...will watch this summer, but Foxy...when they give her films on cable, I'm watching!
[This message was edited Wed Feb 5 10:57:52 PST 2003 by Starmist7]
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Reply #3 posted 02/05/03 10:56am

Marrk

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DrEverythingWillBeAlright said:

why did they pick the shortest month in the year to be "black history month??


what about 'May'? that's shorter than 'February'.
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Reply #4 posted 02/05/03 11:04am

DigitalLisa

Here r some of my fav movies...





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Reply #5 posted 02/05/03 11:13am

Jasziah

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DrEverythingWillBeAlright said:

why did they pick the shortest month in the year to be "black history month??

Sad thing is, half the people that say this are dead serious. Instead of us thinking everyone's against us, we need to start thinking of the One who is for us.
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Reply #6 posted 02/05/03 12:35pm

UptownDeb

A few years ago I went to a Blaxploitation expo at the Film Forum in NYC to do some catching up. When these flix came out I was underaged. Back in the day I got all my info second hand, that's how I found out about the penis in the pickle jar scene in Foxy Brown. lol Like Antonio Fargas said, Foxy's a "whole lotta woman!"

btw, Melvin Van Peebles "Sweet Sweetback's Baadasss Song" is the movie that started the genre. (I've never seen it.) One other thing, didn't these movies have slammin' soundtrax?
[This message was edited Wed Feb 5 12:36:03 PST 2003 by UptownDeb]
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Reply #7 posted 02/05/03 12:39pm

soulpower

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I dig, of course, the all-time favorites:
- Sweet Sweetback
- Superfly
- Shaft
- Coffy
- Foxy Brown.

However, the obscure ones like

- Cleopatra Jones
- Scream, Blackula, scream
- Cool Breeze
- Shaft in Africa

are funky as hell!
"Peace and Benz -- The future, made in Germany" peace
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Reply #8 posted 02/05/03 12:40pm

NuPwrSoul

My favorite has always been "The Spook Who Sat By The Door" based on the book of the same name.
"That...magic, the start of something revolutionary-the Minneapolis Sound, we should cherish it and not punish prince for not being able to replicate it."-Dreamshaman32
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Reply #9 posted 02/05/03 12:43pm

UptownDeb

NuPwrSoul said:

My favorite has always been "The Spook Who Sat By The Door" based on the book of the same name.


I actually saw this movie, but I don't remember a single thing. I was sort of young. I think it was about a brother who goes undercover for the CIA?
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Reply #10 posted 02/05/03 12:46pm

NuPwrSoul

UptownDeb said:

NuPwrSoul said:

My favorite has always been "The Spook Who Sat By The Door" based on the book of the same name.


I actually saw this movie, but I don't remember a single thing. I was sort of young. I think it was about a brother who goes undercover for the CIA?


It's been awhile, but from what I recall he's in the FBI I think... and learns all he can to go back into the streets of Chicago and organize them for guerilla warfare.
"That...magic, the start of something revolutionary-the Minneapolis Sound, we should cherish it and not punish prince for not being able to replicate it."-Dreamshaman32
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Reply #11 posted 02/05/03 1:00pm

00769BAD

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WILLY DYNOMITE:
"SHIT...
whut i look like tryin to tell my Hos that they can only
go in certain parts of the JUNGLE...
THEY THE WILDEST BEATS IN THE JUNGLE" or somethin to that affect
I AM King BAD a.k.a. BAD,
YOU EITHER WANNA BE ME, OR BE JUST LIKE ME

evilking
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Reply #12 posted 02/05/03 1:07pm

00769BAD

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NuPwrSoul said:

UptownDeb said:

NuPwrSoul said:

My favorite has always been "The Spook Who Sat By The Door" based on the book of the same name.


I actually saw this movie, but I don't remember a single thing. I was sort of young. I think it was about a brother who goes undercover for the CIA?


It's been awhile, but from what I recall he's in the FBI I think... and learns all he can to go back into the streets of Chicago and organize them for guerilla warfare.

you're rite... and that movie was THE SHIT!!!
then too the was UPTIGHT in 67...
where a young black militant brother ( MAX JULIAN? )
is sold out by an drunk and a sellout counsulman

Uptight



Category: Drama
Director: Jules Dassin
Cast: Roscoe Lee Browne, Ruby Dee, Max Julien, Frank Silvera, Raymond St. Jacques

Running Time: 1 hr 44 mins
Rating: PG
Summary:
Black militants building up an arsenal of weapons in preparation for a race war are betrayed by one of their own
I AM King BAD a.k.a. BAD,
YOU EITHER WANNA BE ME, OR BE JUST LIKE ME

evilking
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Reply #13 posted 02/05/03 1:29pm

soulpower

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I actually forgot two of my favorites:

- Space is the Place (feat. Sun Ra)
- Slaughter's Big Rip-Off (feat. Jim Brown)
"Peace and Benz -- The future, made in Germany" peace
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Reply #14 posted 02/05/03 1:46pm

NuPwrSoul

Other films outside of the Blaxploitation genre that should still get peeped:

Oscar Micheaux's "Within Our Gates" (1920) which was a response to D.W. Griffith's "Birth of a Nation" that flipped the scripped on that racist garbage.

Then "Nothing But a Man" with Ivan Dixon and Abbey Lincoln drool one of the soulfullest bluesiest ladies around.

The of course "Lady Sings the Blues" and "Mahogany."
"That...magic, the start of something revolutionary-the Minneapolis Sound, we should cherish it and not punish prince for not being able to replicate it."-Dreamshaman32
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Reply #15 posted 02/05/03 2:19pm

Starmist7

A movie that was pointed out to me today was "Get Christie love" if that's the right title...she looked liked the Foxy Brown type too!!!
[This message was edited Wed Feb 5 14:19:41 PST 2003 by Starmist7]
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Reply #16 posted 02/05/03 2:35pm

Rumpofsteelski
n

I'm trying to get my collection going on DVD, I've got most of the majors (i.e. Foxy Brown, The Mack, Cleopatra Jones, Dolemite's) What I want to know is when the f*ck is Superfly going to be put on DVD. That was the practically the mother of all blaxploitation.
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Reply #17 posted 02/05/03 2:40pm

sparxxxtresss

Starmist7 said:

A movie that was pointed out to me today was "Get Christie love" if that's the right title...she looked liked the Foxy Brown type too!!!
[This message was edited Wed Feb 5 14:19:41 PST 2003 by Starmist7]



that was a good movie!

my all time fav, besides the one already mentioned, is claudine(sp?) with diann carroll and james earl jones. the soundtrack, by gladys knight and the pips, was the bomb!
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Reply #18 posted 02/05/03 2:42pm

Essence

NuPwrSoul said:

Other films outside of the Blaxploitation genre that should still get peeped:

Oscar Micheaux's "Within Our Gates" (1920) which was a response to D.W. Griffith's "Birth of a Nation" that flipped the scripped on that racist garbage.

Then "Nothing But a Man" with Ivan Dixon and Abbey Lincoln drool one of the soulfullest bluesiest ladies around.

The of course "Lady Sings the Blues" and "Mahogany."


The films your listing shouldn't really be classed as blaxploitation IMO. It's the pimp/ho/drug dealer/gangster films which literally exploit the black experience and suffering of the day which fall under the label "Blaxploitation". Yours are simply films with a black core cast.
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Reply #19 posted 02/05/03 2:45pm

yamomma

Moderator

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DOLEMITE!!!


[This message was edited Wed Feb 5 14:47:13 PST 2003 by yamomma]
© 2015 Yamomma®
All Rights Reserved.
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Reply #20 posted 02/05/03 2:45pm

Starmist7

sparxxxtresss said:

my all time fav, besides the one already mentioned, is claudine(sp?) with diann carroll and james earl jones. the soundtrack, by gladys knight and the pips, was the bomb!


Another one I spotted was titled "Honky", it looked something about an interracial relationship...
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Reply #21 posted 02/05/03 2:46pm

NuPwrSoul

Essence said:

NuPwrSoul said:

Other films outside of the Blaxploitation genre that should still get peeped:

Oscar Micheaux's "Within Our Gates" (1920) which was a response to D.W. Griffith's "Birth of a Nation" that flipped the scripped on that racist garbage.

Then "Nothing But a Man" with Ivan Dixon and Abbey Lincoln drool one of the soulfullest bluesiest ladies around.

The of course "Lady Sings the Blues" and "Mahogany."


The films your listing shouldn't really be classed as blaxploitation IMO. It's the pimp/ho/drug dealer/gangster films which literally exploit the black experience and suffering of the day which fall under the label "Blaxploitation". Yours are simply films with a black core cast.


Um I knew this hence the very first line of my post:

"Other films outside of the Blaxploitation genre that should still get peeped:"
"That...magic, the start of something revolutionary-the Minneapolis Sound, we should cherish it and not punish prince for not being able to replicate it."-Dreamshaman32
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Reply #22 posted 02/05/03 2:49pm

yamomma

Moderator

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© 2015 Yamomma®
All Rights Reserved.
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Reply #23 posted 02/05/03 2:53pm

rdhull

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Christy Love was a tv movie made into a series.."u under arrest suga"

Blackula

Three The Hard Way

Cleopatyra and Black Belt Jones
"Climb in my fur."
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Reply #24 posted 02/05/03 2:56pm

IceNine

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I always thought that "Black Caesar" was an overlooked masterpiece.
SUPERJOINT RITUAL - http://www.superjointritual.com
A Lethal Dose of American Hatred
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Reply #25 posted 02/05/03 3:40pm

00769BAD

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IceNine said:

I always thought that "Black Caesar" was an overlooked masterpiece.



A compilation of some of the very best Black Action films of the 70's! Great Black trailers to put yo' ass in traction! You'll see Foxy Brown, Cleopatra Jones and Fred "The Hammer" Williamson. You'll visit Mack, Super-Fly, and Blacula. If you crave satisfaction, light the incense, turn on your black-light, sit back and dig this compilation of Black Action. See Blacula, Monkey Hustle, The Mack, Dr. Black & Mr. Hyde, Dolemite, Cleopatra Jones, Foxy Brown, Ebony Ivory and Jade, Black Belt Jones, Shaft, Super Dude, Cotton Comes To Harlem, Trouble Man, Super Fly, Let's Do It Again, Which Way is Up?, Black Caeser, Hell Up In Harlem, Cool Breeze, The Human Tornado, Disco Godfather, Sheba Baby, Black Mama White Mama, Cleopatra Jones and the Casino of Gold, Scream Blacula Scream, Soul to Soul, That Man Bolt, The Soul of Nigger Charlie, Across 110th Street, The Big Bird Cage, Book Of Numbers, Trick Baby, Truck Turner and more!


yoou're rite...
I AM King BAD a.k.a. BAD,
YOU EITHER WANNA BE ME, OR BE JUST LIKE ME

evilking
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Reply #26 posted 02/05/03 3:43pm

00769BAD

avatar

ABBY
Here it is, the long out-of-print black exorcist rip-off.
"I DON'T NEED YOU... I GOT ABBY"
I AM King BAD a.k.a. BAD,
YOU EITHER WANNA BE ME, OR BE JUST LIKE ME

evilking
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Reply #27 posted 02/05/03 3:47pm

rdhull

avatar

00769BAD said:

IceNine said:

I always thought that "Black Caesar" was an overlooked masterpiece.



A compilation of some of the very best Black Action films of the 70's! Great Black trailers to put yo' ass in traction! You'll see Foxy Brown, Cleopatra Jones and Fred "The Hammer" Williamson. You'll visit Mack, Super-Fly, and Blacula. If you crave satisfaction, light the incense, turn on your black-light, sit back and dig this compilation of Black Action. See Blacula, Monkey Hustle, The Mack, Dr. Black & Mr. Hyde, Dolemite, Cleopatra Jones, Foxy Brown, Ebony Ivory and Jade, Black Belt Jones, Shaft, Super Dude, Cotton Comes To Harlem, Trouble Man, Super Fly, Let's Do It Again, Which Way is Up?, Black Caeser, Hell Up In Harlem, Cool Breeze, The Human Tornado, Disco Godfather, Sheba Baby, Black Mama White Mama, Cleopatra Jones and the Casino of Gold, Scream Blacula Scream, Soul to Soul, That Man Bolt, The Soul of Nigger Charlie, Across 110th Street, The Big Bird Cage, Book Of Numbers, Trick Baby, Truck Turner and more!


yoou're rite...



I got Cotton Comes To Harlem on dvd--Godfrey! Across 110th St is out too though. Yaphett and Tony Quin with Bobby Womacks music worship I remmeber my mom being troubled by that movie lol
"Climb in my fur."
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Reply #28 posted 02/05/03 4:42pm

00769BAD

avatar

rdhull said:

00769BAD said:

IceNine said:

I always thought that "Black Caesar" was an overlooked masterpiece.



A compilation of some of the very best Black Action films of the 70's! Great Black trailers to put yo' ass in traction! You'll see Foxy Brown, Cleopatra Jones and Fred "The Hammer" Williamson. You'll visit Mack, Super-Fly, and Blacula. If you crave satisfaction, light the incense, turn on your black-light, sit back and dig this compilation of Black Action. See Blacula, Monkey Hustle, The Mack, Dr. Black & Mr. Hyde, Dolemite, Cleopatra Jones, Foxy Brown, Ebony Ivory and Jade, Black Belt Jones, Shaft, Super Dude, Cotton Comes To Harlem, Trouble Man, Super Fly, Let's Do It Again, Which Way is Up?, Black Caeser, Hell Up In Harlem, Cool Breeze, The Human Tornado, Disco Godfather, Sheba Baby, Black Mama White Mama, Cleopatra Jones and the Casino of Gold, Scream Blacula Scream, Soul to Soul, That Man Bolt, The Soul of Nigger Charlie, Across 110th Street, The Big Bird Cage, Book Of Numbers, Trick Baby, Truck Turner and more!


yoou're rite...



I got Cotton Comes To Harlem on dvd--Godfrey! Across 110th St is out too though. Yaphett and Tony Quin with Bobby Womacks music worship I remmeber my mom being troubled by that movie lol

TROUBLE MAN!!!
marvin gaye soundtrack
I AM King BAD a.k.a. BAD,
YOU EITHER WANNA BE ME, OR BE JUST LIKE ME

evilking
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Reply #29 posted 02/05/03 6:23pm

Essence

NuPwrSoul said:

Essence said:

NuPwrSoul said:

Other films outside of the Blaxploitation genre that should still get peeped:

Oscar Micheaux's "Within Our Gates" (1920) which was a response to D.W. Griffith's "Birth of a Nation" that flipped the scripped on that racist garbage.

Then "Nothing But a Man" with Ivan Dixon and Abbey Lincoln drool one of the soulfullest bluesiest ladies around.

The of course "Lady Sings the Blues" and "Mahogany."


The films your listing shouldn't really be classed as blaxploitation IMO. It's the pimp/ho/drug dealer/gangster films which literally exploit the black experience and suffering of the day which fall under the label "Blaxploitation". Yours are simply films with a black core cast.


Um I knew this hence the very first line of my post:

"Other films outside of the Blaxploitation genre that should still get peeped:"


That'll teach me to skip right to the titles, this said I wouldn't class "Spook" as such either and you didn't use a disclaimer on that one. razz
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