- Boyz n the Hood
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This article is about the 1991 film. For the song by rapper Eazy-E, see Boyz-n-the-Hood. For the rap quartet, see Boyz n da Hood. For the TISM live VHS, see Boys in the Hoods.
Boyz n the Hood
Theatrical release posterDirected by John Singleton Produced by Steven Nicolaides Written by John Singleton Starring Cuba Gooding, Jr.
Ice Cube
Laurence Fishburne
Morris ChestnutMusic by Stanley Clarke Cinematography Charles Mills Editing by Bruce Cannon Distributed by Columbia Pictures Release date(s) July 12, 1991 Running time 112 minutes Country United States Language English Budget $6.5 million[1] Box office $57,504,069[1] Boyz n the Hood is a 1991 American hood film written and directed by John Singleton. Starring Cuba Gooding, Jr., Ice Cube, Laurence Fishburne, Morris Chestnut, Nia Long, Angela Bassett and Regina King, the film depicts life in poor South Central (now South) Los Angeles, California and was filmed and released in the summer of 1991. It was nominated for both Best Director and Original Screenplay during the 1991 Academy Awards, making Singleton the youngest person ever nominated for Best Director and the first African–American to be nominated for the award.
The film was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1991 Cannes Film Festival.[2]
In 2002, the United States Library of Congress deemed the film "culturally significant" and selected it for preservation in the National Film Registry.[3]
Contents
Plot
Before the opening scene of Boyz n the Hood, two messages flash across the screen: "One out of every twenty-one Black American males will be murdered in their lifetime." and "Most will die at the hands of another Black male."
- South Central, Los Angeles; October, 1984
The story opens in 1984 with ten-year-old Tré Styles (Desi Arnez Hines II) and three other youths heading to school, on the way stopping to inspect a crime scene they encounter. At school, Tré misbehaves in front of his teacher and receives a three-day suspension after fighting with another classmate. While discussing the issues with his teacher, Tré's mother, Reva (Angela Bassett), elicits surprise from the teacher when she references her education as well as Tré's father, who the teacher had not realized existed. Frustrated with her inability to curtail Tré's history of disobedience, Reva sends him to live in the Crenshaw neighborhood of South Central Los Angeles with his hard-nosed father, Furious Styles (Laurence Fishburne), from whom she hopes Tré will learn life lessons.
Upon Tré's arrival, his father instructs him to rake the entire front lawn and assigns other household responsibilities, which include cleaning and maintaining their home. Furious explains that, although these tasks may seem unfair and harsh, learning responsibility will make Tré a man and keep him from ending up dead or in jail. Later, during his first night living with his father, Tré hears his father firing at a burglar. The police arrive more than an hour later and decide the crime is unimportant because nothing was taken and the burglar escaped unharmed.
The following day, Tré reunites with childhood friends Ricky (Donovan McCrary) and Darrin "Doughboy" Baker (Baha Jackson), and Chris (Kenneth A. Brown), a quiet and shy boy also living in the neighborhood. Ricky and Doughboy, maternal half-brothers, live with their mother in a small house across the street. While Ricky is naïve and trusting, Doughboy is aggressive and street-smart. Later that day, while walking along train tracks to the site of a dead body, the three are harassed by a teenage gang, who steal Ricky's football. Doughboy picks a fight and is kicked in the stomach. The ball is later returned to Ricky by another older boy.
Furious, who appears to be the only father present in the neighborhood, takes Tré on a fishing trip, where he warns him about unprotected sex and discusses the responsibility of fatherhood. The pair then return to Crenshaw, where they find Doughboy and Chris being led by police officers into a squad car after having been caught stealing.
- 1991;
Seven years later, a "welcome home" party happens in the Baker home. Doughboy (Ice Cube), who had previously dropped out of high school, has just been released from prison, and sits at a table playing dominoes with his friends, Chris (Redge Green), (now in a wheelchair, presumably as the result of a gunshot wound), "Dookie", and "Monster". Ricky (Morris Chestnut), now a star running-back for Crenshaw High School, lives at home with his mother Brenda (Tyra Ferrell), girlfriend Shanice (Alysia Rogers), and his newborn son. Tré (Cuba Gooding Jr.) holds a steady job working at a store in the Fox Hills Mall, and has stayed away from gangs while excelling at school. He hopes to attend college as does his girlfriend Brandi (Nia Long), whose sexual abstinence is part of her Catholic faith.
A college football coach from USC visits Ricky one night for an interview and promises Ricky an athletic scholarship at USC if he earns a minimum SAT score of 700. Ricky struggles during the test, looking often at Tré for help, and seems unsure of passing. Later that day, Furious tells the boys that the English section of the test is culturally biased and only the math is fair.
Furious later takes the boys to Compton, discussing gentrification with them and a group of citizens, explaining how violence and drug use divide the black community by decreasing property values, allowing real estate companies to buy the land cheaply from black residents and sell it at a profit to developers. The influx of white investment money raises property values and taxes, pushing out the remaining old residents in the process. Furious tells the crowd that the rest of the nation will not help the urban poor because they are not personally affected by the violence, and that blacks must end the cycle of violence plaguing the neighborhoods themselves.
Later that night during a local street racing gathering, Ricky is provoked by a Blood gang member named Ferris (Raymond D. Turner). In defense of his brother, Doughboy (an opposing Crips gang member), brandishes a pistol, and the whole scene degenerates into gunfire (though no one is hurt). While speeding away from the scene, Tré and Ricky are pulled over by the LAPD. The lead officer is the same officer who responded to Furious' 911 burglary call in 1984. He is a stereotypical "self-hating" African-American cop who - enjoying fully the power his badge allows him - shoves a gun in Tré's face and asks him what he will do about it. On the verge of tears, Tré arrives late to Brandi's house and suffers a breakdown; later that night they have sex for the first time.
The next day, Ricky, annoyed when Shanice tells him to go get a box of cornmeal, provokes a fight with Doughboy. Brenda rushes to Ricky's aid while berating Doughboy, further indicating that she values Ricky and his impending scholarship more than she does Doughboy. Ricky and Tré later head to the grocery store, but on the way back run across Ferris and his friends. They take numerous shortcuts to escape temporarily. However, Ricky is gunned down as the pair walk home. Doughboy and his friends recover Ricky's body, with Brenda blaming Doughboy, who tries to comfort her but is rebuffed; he then attempts to remove Ricky's son from the room where his father lies dead. Later that night, Brenda sobs over Ricky's test results, discovering he earned a 710, just enough to qualify for the scholarship.
Doughboy, Dookie, Monster and Tré vow revenge on the enemy gang. Furious finds Tré holding his .357 Magnum pistol and convinces Tré to abandon his plans. Tré later sneaks out of his bedroom window to join Doughboy and the gang as they search for Ferris. Later that night, as the gang drives around the city, Tré realizes he is making a mistake and asks to be let out of the car. Doughboy pulls over and lets Tré out at a bus stop. Later, the gang finds Ferris and his friends outside a fast food restaurant, and gun them down with an AK-47 in a drive-by shooting, killing one and wounding the others. Doughboy hops out the lowrider and personally executes Ferris and the other Bloods with his .45, avenging his brother's death.
The next morning, Doughboy visits Tré, now understanding Tré's reasons for abandoning the gang. Doughboy - having killed three men - knows that he will soon face retaliation for Ferris' death, and accepts the consequences of his crime-ridden life. He plaintively questions why America "don't know, don't show, or don't care about what's going on in the Hood." He sorrowfully says that he has no brothers left now after Ricky's death, but is embraced by Tré, who says Doughboy still has "one brother left", referring to himself. The final scene plays, showing Doughboy crossing the road pouring out the remaining malt liquor from his bottle as a sign of respect for his dead brother, and then disappears on screen. His murder at the hands of the rival gang two weeks later is described in the epilogue. The epilogue goes on to state that both Tré and Brandi respectively go on to college at Morehouse and Spelman in Atlanta.
Cast
- Cuba Gooding, Jr. (Desi Arnez Hines II, young) as Tré Styles, son of Furious and Crenshaw High School senior
- Ice Cube (Baha Jackson young) as Darrin "Doughboy" Baker, maternal half-brother of Ricky
- Morris Chestnut (Donovan McCrary, young) as Ricky Baker, maternal half-brother of Doughboy and all-star football player at Crenshaw High School, Tré's best friend
- Laurence Fishburne as Jason "Furious" Styles, father of Tré
- Nia Long as Brandi, Tré's girlfriend
- Tyra Ferrell as Brenda Baker, mother of Doughboy and Ricky
- Angela Bassett as Reva Devereaux-Styles, mother of Tré
- Redge Green (Kenneth A. Brown, young) as Chris
- Dedrick D. Gobert as Dookie
- Baldwin C. Sykes as Monster
- Tracey Lewis-Sinclair as Shaniqua
- Alysia Rogers as Shanice, Ricky's girlfriend and the mother of his son.
- Regina King as Shalika
- Lexie Bigham as Mad Dog
- Mia Bell as female gang member
Reception
Since the film's release, Boyz n the Hood has received overwhelmingly positive reviews. Based on 45 reviews collected by Rotten Tomatoes, Boyz n the Hood has an overall approval rating of 96%, with a weighted average score of 8.3/10.[4] Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating to reviews from mainstream critics, calculated an average score of 73 out of 100 from the 18 reviews it collected.[5]
Cultural impact
- On July 12, 2011, on The Mo'Nique Show, Mo'Nique celebrated the 20th anniversary of the release of Boyz n the Hood with director John Singleton, Cuba Gooding Jr., Yo-Yo (rapper), and Regina King.
- The Game has mentioned it on some of his songs such as "LAX Files" "Ol' English" & "Ricky".
- Ice Cube has mentioned it on some of his songs on The Predator such as "When Will They Shoot?" and his son's rap name is "Doughboy".
Trivia
- It has been stated by John Singleton that all of N.W.A were supposed to play as Doughboy's friends in the movie but Ice Cube left N.W.A which caused tension between them.
- During the time of this movie Ice Cube was feuding with Eazy-E & N.W.A which is the reason why the crackhead that got beat up by Doughboy and his crew was wearing a shirt that says We Want Eazy.
- John Singleton was 23 when he directed the movie.
- The adult Doughboy and younger Doughboy wear Raiders hats, which is Ice Cube's favorite football team.
- This is the first of many films such as Friday & Are We There Yet? that Ice Cube & Nia Long have appeared in together.
Awards
- Nominee, Best Director, John Singleton
- Nominee, Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen, John Singleton
- AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition) - Nominated[6]
- AFI's 10 Top 10 - Nominated Gangster Film[7]
BMI Film Music Award: 1992
- Winner, Stanley Clarke
Image Award: 1993
- Winner, Outstanding Motion Picture, Boyz n the Hood
- Nominee, Best Movie, Boyz n the Hood
- Winner, Best New Filmmaker, John Singleton
National Film Preservation Board, USA: 2002
- National Film Registry, Boyz n the Hood
New York Film Critics Circle Award: 1991
- Winner, Best New Director, John Singleton
Political Film Society, USA: 1992
- Winner, PFS Award, Peace
- Nominee, PFS Award, Exposé
- Nominee, PFS Award, Human Rights
Writers Guild of America, USA: 1992
- Nominee, WGA Award (Screen), Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen, John Singleton
Young Artist Awards: 1992[8]
- Winner, Young Artist Award, Outstanding Young Ensemble Cast in a Motion Picture
In 2007, Boyz n the Hood was selected as one of the 50 Films To See in your lifetime Channel 4.
Soundtrack
Year Album Peak chart positions Certifications U.S. U.S. R&B 1991 Boyz n the Hood - Released: July 9, 1991
- Label: Qwest/Columbia Records
12 1 - US: Gold
References
- ^ a b "Boyz n the Hood (1991)". Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=boyznthehood.htm.
- ^ "Festival de Cannes: Boyz n the Hood". festival-cannes.com. http://www.festival-cannes.com/en/archives/ficheFilm/id/133/year/1991.html. Retrieved 2009-08-09.
- ^ "Films Selected to The National Film Registry, Library of Congress 1989–2008". Loc. http://www.loc.gov/film/titles.html. Retrieved July 17, 2009.
- ^ "Boyz n the Hood". Rotten Tomatoes. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/boyz_n_the_hood/.
- ^ "Boyz n the Hood (1992): Reviews". Metacritic. http://www.metacritic.com/movie/boyz-n-the-hood.
- ^ AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition) Ballot
- ^ AFI's 10 Top 10 Ballot
- ^ "13th Annual Awards". Youngartistawards.org. http://www.youngartistawards.org/pastnoms13.htm. Retrieved 2010-10-06.
External links
- Boyz n the Hood at the Internet Movie Database
- Boyz n the Hood at AllRovi
- Boyz n the Hood at Box Office Mojo
- Boyz n the Hood at Rotten Tomatoes
- Boyz n the Hood at Metacritic
Films directed by John Singleton 1990s 2000s 2010s Abduction (2011)Categories:- English-language films
- 1991 films
- 1990s drama films
- African American films
- American coming-of-age films
- American crime drama films
- American teen romance films
- Columbia Pictures films
- Directorial debut films
- Films directed by John Singleton
- Films set in Los Angeles, California
- Gang films
- Hip hop films
- Hood films
- United States National Film Registry films
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