Minus the three defining entries of the black themed, or blaxploitation films of the 70s, this is a list of others that are either well known in their own right, or barely discussed, but worth re-discovery. This is a SHAFTless list with no SWEET SWEETBACK, nor a SUPER FLY in sight. Dig in, get down, and bring on the funk for these 20 hit picks for a Soul Cinema Sojourn.
1. ...TICK... TICK... TICK... 1970
2. ACROSS 110TH STREET 1972
ACROSS 110TH STREET is an angry, relentless mob movie saturated in a grim miasma of corruption, hopelessness, greed, and murder. It's from Barry Shear, a director who worked primarily in television. Rich in ultra-violent content and racial context, this hard-boiled crime film revolves around an alcoholic, corrupt white cop and his partner, a greenhorn, by the book black detective tracking the men responsible for ripping off a $300,000 stash of mob money in Harlem's criminal underworld. Everybody hates everybody equally in this movie--black and white--and everybody is either on the take, or on their way. Not a blaxploitation picture, this is a deadly serious crime picture with some of the strongest scenes of violence you'll ever see. Raspy voiced Richard Ward is memorable as Doc "Muthafuckin" Johnson. DETROIT 9000 (1973) mines the same territory and is just as good if edging a bit more on the exploitation side. The popular title tune was by Bobby Womack and Peace.
3. BLACK CAESAR 1972
4. HIT MAN 1972
5. BLACULA 1972
Robert Hooks is Mr. T (that's T for Trouble, man), an infectiously confident private investigator with an affinity for the high life. T is the epitome of self-assurance, suave with the ladies, and always one step ahead of the bad guys. T has friends on both sides of the block. He's hired by some gangsters to lay his hands on the masked crooks who've been robbing their crap games. It's all an elaborate plot to rub out a rival mobster named Big (played by Julius Harris) and T is set up to take the fall. What starts out as a simplistic crime caper, turns violent with confrontations and bloody shootouts. Paul Winfield is Chalky, the shady cat who isn't looking out for T's best interests. Ivan Dixon's direction is as confident as his main character. Dixon would direct the visceral THE SPOOK WHO SAT BY THE DOOR in 1973. Marvin Gaye did the soundtrack.
Jim Brown, star of some major league action and dramatic productions, climbed aboard the Soul Cinema train with his own Tough Guy series playing a 'Nam Vet, ex Green Beret known simply as Slaughter. A commercial entry in the black action genre, SLAUGHTER had noted Drive-in specialist Jack Starrett (CLEOPATRA JONES) at the helm. As the title character, Brown barely moves his lips when he talks, but he makes a fantastic hero and Rip Torn the slimiest of movie villains as Dominic Hoffo. Basically an underworld actioner, Slaughter is hellbent on avenging his parents death at the hands of the Mafia. Lots of violence, some impressive stunt work, and South American locations add up to 90 minutes of exploitation exuberance. Billy Preston did the theme song. Brown returned in 1973 for SLAUGHTER'S BIG RIP-OFF.
8. TOP OF THE HEAP 1972
9. THE FINAL COMEDOWN 1972
Back when black cinema was at its peak, a frequent topic was race relations. It made sense with the genre exploding in the wake of the Civil Rights Movement. Nowadays the far left and the media are doing their best to recreate those times for political reasons by manufacturing and orchestrating racism. Oscar Williams wrote and directed this provocative, extremist tale of inner city relations between militant black youths, naive white society, and an oppressive establishment--particularly authority figures. Billy Dee Williams is Johnny Johnson, the disillusioned man whose driving force is aggression and violence. Told in flashback, Johnson and his radical bunch clash with cops in a western style shootout. He's shot, and as he contemplates his next move, he remembers how he came to his current predicament. Other characters--middle aged and of the older generation--provide the moral center to Johnson's anger and thirst for violence. A topical, highly propagandized, angry little movie that, to have cost $27,000 to make, gives viewers a lot of bellicosity for the buck. Critically and financially unpopular, Roger Corman re-released it in a new edit, with new scenes added, but audiences were still turned off; the incendiary approach leaving a bad taste in a lot of people's mouths including star Billy Dee Williams.
10. THE SPOOK WHO SAT BY THE DOOR 1973
Ivan Dixon's fiery, cautionary film version of Sam Greenlee's controversial novel is about Dan Freeman (Free Man), a token, the first black man to get into the CIA, and given a desk job closest to the door (hence the title). Secretly a militant, he takes all he learned and teaches guerrilla warfare tactics to young black men in Chicago, leading to nationwide uprisings. Its nationalist message is far less negative than the abrasiveness of Williams's THE FINAL COMEDOWN, but just as intense in its effectiveness. Allegedly pulled from release for fear of violence, the picture nonetheless preaches individualism amidst a possible, drastic future. It's potent stuff, and resonant today in its message. History has certainly repeated itself even if this time it's been designed that way.
11. GORDON'S WAR 1973
12. COFFY 1973
Pam Grier
left the Filipino jungle actioners behind her and solidified herself as
the Sweet Brown Sugar of Soul Cinema with Coffy, a traditional revenge
thriller about the title gal seeking out the drug lords who have caused
her family a whole lotta misery. Trashy to its core, this female DEATH
WISH uses guns and sex to lure her targets to their doom; although she,
too, finds herself in some precarious positions. At one point she even
puts razor blades in her hair prior to a cat fight! One of the films
most egregious sequences is where King George (played by Robert DoQui) loses his crown, to put it mildly.
Packed with brutality, the Shaw Brothers of Hong Kong out-sleazed it
with their own version of the story entitled THE SEXY KILLER in 1976.
13. FOXY BROWN 1974
14. THREE THE HARD WAY 1974
Three big guns of black action got together for the first time to take on Jay Robinson and his Hitlerian plan of global black genocide. It's Jim Brown, Fred Williamson, and Jim Kelly to the rescue in Gordon Parks, Jr's comic book action favorite that consistently delivers the goods and then some. An essential title for Brown, Hammer, and Kelly fans, and action movie lovers in general. A genre heavyweight, THREE THE HARD WAY should have been a franchise. This team of heroes got together again in the lively western TAKE A HARD RIDE (1974) and the pedestrian ONE DOWN, TWO TO GO (1982).
Rockne Tarkington is Samson, the flamboyant, yet passive strip club owner with a pet lion as his bouncer. Samson stands up to the black and white criminal element, wanting his neighborhood safe and free of crime. Psychotic gangster Johnny Nappa (William Smith) has other ideas, and plots to retire Samson... permanently. Thoroughly underrated, BLACK SAMSON's strength lies mostly in the hands of Smith's unpredictably sadistic villain. A familiar face to the Drive-in crowd, Carol Speed (THE BIG BIRD CAGE, ABBY) is Leslie, Samson's Delilah. Her exaggerated line readings and facial expressions are a distraction, but in a good way. Chuck Bail's debut was followed up with...
Tamara Dobson returns in this even bigger, blatantly Bond-styled sequel that takes her to Hong Kong to rescue her two agent friends from Bianca Javan (Stella Stevens), the formidable lesbian leader of a powerful HK based drug empire. Co-produced by the Warner and Shaw Brothers, CLEOPATRA JONES & THE CASINO OF GOLD is a lavish adventure chock full of familiar faces to kung fu fanatics. This glossy, high-dollar bet lost out at the box office, but has since become worth its weight in gold over the years. Surpassing the first movie in action and excitement, Cleo retired, unfortunately, after two films.
One
of the crowning achievements of black action is DOLEMITE. Breathin' down yo' neck with every bit the $90,000 spent on it, the application of 'best' in relation to this list is in accordance with just how good at being a bad movie DOLEMITE truly is. Its
star, Rudy Ray Moore (literally playing himself), makes a memorable
leading man in spite of flagrant production inadequacies. Dolemite (Rudy pronounces it Dole-A-Mite) is a pimp framed
by both rival crook and club owner Willie Green (played by director D'Urville Martin) and corrupt cops. Once he's out of the slammer, Dolemite lays down the hammer, pickin' off slick Willie's goons with a fist and kick typhoon, unleashin' a thrilla' with his all girl army of kung fu killas'. A terrible
movie, but terribly fun at the same time. The martial arts choreo is
blisteringly bad, but enacted with an undeniable energy that other exploitation movies cannot match. If you want to see something that captures a similar vibe check out the awful FORCE FOUR (1974) or DARKTOWN STRUTTERS (1975).
Ken Norton was all the rage after defeating Muhammad Ali March 31st, 1973 via split decision, breaking the jaw of 'The Greatest' in round two. The two heavyweights fought again in September of that year, and for the third and final time in 1976. In between Norton's boxing run, he made two movies, MANDINGO and DRUM. The former caused quite an uproar during its original theatrical run for its offensive imagery and language. Based on Kyle Onstott's novel of the same name, Norton is the title buck bought by James Mason. Lots of interracial sex and violence ensues. Over the years the film has garnered more respect as a serious piece of cinema as opposed to the crass exploitation assigned to it; a label that fits the gloriously outrageous sequel like a glove.
18. DOLEMITE 1975
One
of the crowning achievements of black action is DOLEMITE. Breathin' down yo' neck with every bit the $90,000 spent on it, the application of 'best' in relation to this list is in accordance with just how good at being a bad movie DOLEMITE truly is. Its
star, Rudy Ray Moore (literally playing himself), makes a memorable
leading man in spite of flagrant production inadequacies. Dolemite (Rudy pronounces it Dole-A-Mite) is a pimp framed
by both rival crook and club owner Willie Green (played by director D'Urville Martin) and corrupt cops. Once he's out of the slammer, Dolemite lays down the hammer, pickin' off slick Willie's goons with a fist and kick typhoon, unleashin' a thrilla' with his all girl army of kung fu killas'. A terrible
movie, but terribly fun at the same time. The martial arts choreo is
blisteringly bad, but enacted with an undeniable energy that other exploitation movies cannot match. If you want to see something that captures a similar vibe check out the awful FORCE FOUR (1974) or DARKTOWN STRUTTERS (1975).Ken Norton was all the rage after defeating Muhammad Ali March 31st, 1973 via split decision, breaking the jaw of 'The Greatest' in round two. The two heavyweights fought again in September of that year, and for the third and final time in 1976. In between Norton's boxing run, he made two movies, MANDINGO and DRUM. The former caused quite an uproar during its original theatrical run for its offensive imagery and language. Based on Kyle Onstott's novel of the same name, Norton is the title buck bought by James Mason. Lots of interracial sex and violence ensues. Over the years the film has garnered more respect as a serious piece of cinema as opposed to the crass exploitation assigned to it; a label that fits the gloriously outrageous sequel like a glove.
20. J.D.s REVENGE 1976
J.D.'s REVENGE is probably the only psychological horror film in the black themed canon. Straddling the line between typical blaxploitation tropes and a serious quasi-horror picture, it tells the tale of Ike Hendricks being possessed by the spirit of infamous gangster J.D. Walker; using him to exact revenge on those who murdered him and his sister. Glynn Turman is fabulously over the top in what amounts to a dual role--one as the level-headed romantic Ike and the other as the dementedly predatory J.D. Walker. If you like standard horror fare like SUGAR HILL and ABBY (both 1974), give this underrated gem a shot. An incredibly gifted actor, an early black themed movie featuring Turman is CARTER'S ARMY (1970), aka BLACK BRIGADE a Made For TV movie featuring the likes of Robert Hooks, Rosey Grier, Moses Gunn, Richard Pryor, and Billy Dee Williams.





5 comments:
Great write up, awesome list, did you see June 9th Olive Films is releasing Coffy, Friday Foster, Foxy Brown and Hammer on Blu-ray: https://twitter.com/abucketofcorn/status/602266804799549440
No I didn't, and thank you for bringing it to my attention, Abraham. Those are four essentials right there.
I would like to make a case that while still solidly falling into the incompetent filmmaking category, Dolemite's sequel, The Human Tornado, is the film that deserves all of the cult adulation that Dolemite receives. It's way more entertaining to sit through in one shot, is genuinely hilarious (if incompetently realized), and is strange/insane in ways that its predecessor only wishes it was. If you haven't seen it, please give it a serious look.
By the way, I love this site. I read it all the time and have made sure to pass it on to all of my like-minded film-freak friends. Please keep it coming!
A great little film that could and should have easily made the list is "Trick Baby". A film about con men in the vein of "The Sting". I think it's better than The Sting". Yeah I said better! It is certainly more interesting and deeper. Two Philly con men "Folks" O'Brien(a white man who claims to be black)played by the late great Kiel Martin and "Blue" Howard(black) played by the late great Mel Stewart. The film gets it name because "Folks" is the son of a white prostitute and a black john. Supposedly. "Blue" basically raised his young pupil in the hood teaching him scams along the way. It came out in 72 and doesn't play like a typical Blaxploitation film at all. Discovered this gem while going through the going out of business bins at a video store(remember them?)Oh and it's based on the novel of the same name by Iceberg Slim.
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