- Bastards of the Party
Infobox Film
name = Bastards of the Party
caption =
director = Cle Sloan
producer =Antoine Fuqua
co-producer =Alex Alonso
narrator = Cle Sloan
music =Joong-Han Chung
editing =Keith Salmon
distributor =
released =
runtime = 95 min.
country =USA
language = English
website =http://www.hbo.com/docs/programs/bastardsoftheparty/index.html
amg_id =
imdb_id =0455913"Bastards of the Party" is a
2006 documentary film produced byAntoine Fuqua and directed by formerBloods gang-member Cle Sloan. The film explores the creation of two ofLos Angeles ’s most notorious gangs, theCrips and the Bloods, from the perspective of the Los Angeles community. The film also denounces gang violence and tries to present meaningful solutions from former gang-members to stop this problem.The documentary appeared at the 2005
Tribeca Film Festival and at the 2006Hollywood Black Film Festival . Thetelevision premiere aired on February 6th, 2007 onHBO .During a term in jail, Cle Sloan picked up a book titled, "
City of Quartz " by Mike Davis. While reading the book, Sloan found his neighborhood of Athens Park on a map depictingLAPD gang hot spots of 1972. The account in Davis' book fueled Sloan to ask questions of how the gangs got started, only to receive speculation and more questions from his fellow gang-members. Sloan decided to research the subject himself.The title of the movie, Bastards of the Party comes from a passage in "City of Quartz" that reads: "The Crips and the Bloods are the "bastard offspring" of the political parties of the 1960s. Most of the gangs were born out of the demise of those parties. Out of the ashes of the
Black Panther Party came the Crips and the Bloods and the other gangs."Content
Bastards of the Party begins to explore the history of African-American gangs in Los Angeles all the way back to the black migration from the south in order to escape racial discrimination. The first black gangs in the 1940s formed to combat racial discrimination, the LAPD (led by police chief William H. Parker), and the white gangs that terrorized the black community.
With the "
white flight " in the early 1960s, tension grew amongst the black gangs as they started to turn on each other until the Los Angeles riots of 1965. This was the beginning of radical black community politics and the spread of theBlack Panthers , led in LA byBunchy Carter . They were soon followed by the rise of the US Organization, led byRon Karenga . These two parties butted heads often in a competition for members but it wasn't untilCOINTELPRO (Counter Intelligence Programs) and theFBI got involved that the two parties fell apart.In the 1970s the movement and the people began to change. There was a larger push towards individuality and freedom and less of a push towards self sacrifice. This attitude is illustrated in the movie Superfly, where the main character is out for himself. In this atmosphere,
Raymond Washington created the concept of a gang of the new generation of youth that went from "the cradle to the grave" and was joined byStanley "Tookie" Williams andJamel Barnes in the formation of the Crips.Tupac Shakur 's song, "So Many Tears", is played at the end portion of the documentary.External links
* [http://www.bastardsoftheparty.net/ Official Site]
*imdb title|id=0455913|title=Bastards of the Party
* [http://www.streetgangs.com/movies/bastards.html View Trailer] atStreetgangs.com
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