Hood film
Years active | 1990s |
---|---|
Location | United States |
Major figures | Hughes Brothers, Ernest Dickerson, F. Gary Gray, Spike Lee, John Singleton, Mario Van Peebles |
Influences | Blaxploitation, L.A. Rebellion, Mexploitation, Race film |
Hood film is a 1990s film genre originating in the United States, which features aspects of urban African American or Hispanic American culture. John Singleton, Mario Van Peebles, F. Gary Gray, Hughes Brothers, and Spike Lee are all directors who have created work typically classified as part of this genre.[1] The genre has been identified as a sub-genre of the gangster film genre.[2]
The genre has since spread outside the US, to places such as the UK and Canada.[3][4]
Hood films have been variously described under a wide-array of names by critics, such as 'street-gang', 'ghetto-centric', 'action-crime-adventure', 'gangsta rap films', 'black action films', 'new black realism', 'new jack cinema', and 'black urban cinema'. Spike Lee disparagingly referred to the genre as 'hiphop, urban drama, ghetto film'.[5][6][7][8]
Criteria
Characteristics include hip hop music (including gangsta rap), street gangs, racial discrimination, organized crime, gangster, gang affiliation scenes, broken families, drug use and trafficking, and the problems of young people coming of age or struggling amid the relative poverty and violent gang activity within such neighborhoods.[9][6] Hood films tell predominantly masculine stories, however some films within the genre (such as Set It Off) have women-focused stories.[2]
Hood films often have low production costs.[6]
British hood films also use music genres such as grime, and generally depict aspects of urban Black British culture, particularly within inner-city London.[3]
Critical definitions
Critic Murray Forman notes that the "spatial logic" of hip-hop culture, with heavy emphasis on place-based identity, locates "black youth urban experience within an environment of continual proximate danger," and this quality defines the hood film.[1] In a 1992 essay in Cineaction, Canadian critic Rinaldo Walcott identified the hood film's primary concerns as issues of masculinity and "(re)gaining manhood for black men."[10]
History
Early notable releases in the hood film genre include Colors (1988) and Do the Right Thing (1989).[11][9] The latter in particular has been credited with ushering in the hood film zeitgeist in the 90s due to its popular success.[6]
Critics such as Murray Forman have credited the popular emergence of hood-films with the simultaneous emergence of gangsta rap as a popular music genre in the 1990s, wherein the hood film genre reached the height of its popularity due to the acclaim of the films New Jack City, Boyz n the Hood, Juice, the Sundance-winning Straight Out of Brooklyn and Menace II Society.[12] Gangsta rap and hood films formed a symbiotic relationship, and many rappers of the era appeared in popular hood films at the time.[9][13][14] With the plethora of films both dramas and comedies, hood films of the 1990s are in a sense neo-Blaxploitation films and Mexploitation films.[15][16][17] The genre has also been parodied with such films as Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood[18] and Friday.
By the mid-1990s, the hood film popular zeitgeist largely came to an end,[7][14][19] however, hood films would continue to be released through the late 90s and 2000s, albeit on a smaller scale and poorer box-office results. Celeste A. Fisher credited this decline to general fatigue felt towards the genre, due to the lack of diversity in "images, settings, and themes".[2] Many low-budget, straight-to-dvd hood films were released in the late 90s and through the 2000s, such as I'm Bout It. Many of these films stripped back the social and political messaging that was present in their 90s forebears, while continuing to capitalise on the 'hood film' formula.[20][21]
On the contrary, while hood films were falling out of popularity in the United States, it would experience a brief popular emergence in the UK led by British filmmakers such as Noel Clarke. Bullet Boy, released in 2004, is generally recognised to be the first notable example of a British hood film. Kidulthood, released in 2006, is credited with popularising the British hood film genre, leading to a swathe of imitators in the years following. By the mid-2010s, the British hood film genre largely faded out of mainstream popularity, however, a TV series which carried heavy influences from the genre, Top Boy, gained international acclaim during this period.[3]
The mid-2010s saw a small revival of the genre, with popular releases such as Girlhood and Straight Outta Compton. This wave of hood films was dubbed a 'rebirth' of the genre by Dazed.[19]
Criticism
Hood films have received criticism for alleged glorification of criminality and gangsterism. The genre has also been criticised for perpetuating the idea that young, black males are violent, sexist, or gangsters, despite the well-meaning intent behind some films within the genre to bring awareness to issues such as poverty, political alienation and the varying effects of institutional racism.[9][22][23] Norman K. Denzin explained:[6]
These realistic social-problem texts fuelled conservative racist discourse. They helped fearful white Americans blame blacks for the problems of the inner city. They suggested that blacks caused their own problems. The problems of the ghetto were not shared by the larger society.
Research findings have noted that positive representations of women in the genre are almost non-existent, and women are often depicted in degrading roles.[23]
Legacy
The Academy Award-nominated classics Do the Right Thing and Boyz n the Hood were each inducted into the National Film Registry.[24]
The latter film topped the "Top Black Films of All Times" poll from the November 1998 edition of Ebony magazine.[25]
Non American Hood films
A Jamaican film of this genre has been made, such as Shottas. British films of this genre have also been made, such as Bullet Boy, Kidulthood, Adulthood and the parody Anuvahood. The French films La Haine and Ma 6-T va crack-er are also examples of this genre. John Singleton, Mario Van Peebles, Hughes Brothers and Spike Lee are examples of directors in this genre.
List of hood films
1950s
- Los Olvidados, 1950
1960s
- The Cool World, 1963
1970s
- The Harder They Come, 1972
- The Education of Sonny Carson, 1974
- Cooley High, 1975
- Cornbread, Earl and Me, 1975
- Brothers, 1977
- Youngblood, 1978
- The Warriors, 1979
- Boulevard Nights, 1979
- Over the Edge, 1979
- Walk Proud, 1979
- The Wanderers, 1979
- Duke of Earl The Movie, 1979
1980s
- Babylon, 1980
- Bad Boys, 1983
- The Outsiders, 1983
- Rumble Fish, 1983
- Colors, 1988
- Stand and Deliver, 1988
- Last Exit To Brooklyn, 1989
- Lean on Me, 1989
- Do the Right Thing, 1989
1990s
- Love Your Mama, 1990
- King of New York, 1990
- New Jack City, 1991
- Boyz N the Hood, 1991
- Jungle Fever, 1991
- Straight Out of Brooklyn, 1991
- American Me, 1992
- Trespass, 1992
- Deep Cover, 1992
- Juice, 1992
- South Central, 1992
- Menace II Society, 1993
- Blood In, Blood Out, 1993
- Strapped, 1993
- Poetic Justice, 1993
- True Romance, 1993
- Sugar Hill, 1994
- Mi Vida Loca, 1994
- Fresh, 1994
- Jason's Lyric, 1994
- My Family, 1995
- Higher Learning, 1995
- Tales from the Hood, 1995
- Clockers, 1995
- Dangerous Minds, 1995
- Dead Presidents, 1995
- Kids, 1995
- Friday, 1995
- New Jersey Drive, 1995
- La Haine, 1995
- Sunset Park, 1996
- Bullet, 1996
- Set It Off, 1996
- Swallowtail Butterfly, 1996
- The Substitute, 1996
- One Eight Seven, 1997
- Ma 6-T va crack-er, 1997
- Squeeze, 1997
- First Time Felon, 1997
- Fifth Ward, 1997
- I'm Bout It, 1997
- Gummo, 1997
- Always Outnumbered, 1998
- He Got Game, 1998
- Streetwise, 1998
- Caught Up, 1998
- Belly, 1998
- Slam, 1998
- In Too Deep, 1999
- Colorz of Rage, 1999
- Light It Up, 1999
- The Wood, 1999
- Hot Boyz, 1999
- Whiteboyz, 1999
2000s
- Baller Blockin', 2000
- Turn It up, 2000
- Tha Eastsidaz, 2000
- Sexy Beast, 2000
- Baby Boy, 2001
- Gang Tapes, 2001
- Prison Song, 2001
- Snipes, 2001
- Blue Hill Avenue, 2001
- Hardball, 2001
- Training Day, 2001
- Shottas, 2002
- Paper Soldiers, 2002
- Barbershop, 2002
- City of God, 2002
- 8 Mile, 2002
- State Property, 2002
- 25th Hour, 2002
- Empire, 2002
- Paid in Full, 2002
- The Job, 2003
- Crime Partners, 2003
- Ride or Die, 2003
- Black Listed, 2003
- Doing Hard Time, 2004
- Never Die Alone, 2004
- Bullet Boy, 2004
- On the Outs, 2004
- Divided City, 2004
- Murda Muzik, 2004
- Still Bout It, 2004
- Layer Cake, 2004
- Shooting Gallery, 2005
- Harsh Times, 2005
- Back in the Day, 2005
- Hustle & Flow, 2005
- Coach Carter, 2005
- State Property 2, 2005
- Four Brothers, 2005
- Get Rich or Die Tryin', 2005
- Dirty, 2005
- ATL, 2006
- Gridiron Gang, 2006
- Waist Deep, 2006
- Belly 2: Millionaire Boyz Club, 2006
- Killa Season, 2006
- Quinceanera, 2006
- Alpha Dog, 2006
- Freedom Writers, 2007
- The American Dream, 2007
- Tournament of Dreams, 2007
- Weapons, 2007
- Illegal Tender, 2007
- City of Men, 2007
- I Tried, 2007
- Death Toll, 2008
- The Next Hit, 2008
- Adulthood, 2008
- Street Kings, 2008
- Gran Torino, 2008
- Talento de Barrio, 2008
- Streets of Blood, 2008
- Baby, 2008
- Fallout, 2008
- Before I Self Destruct, 2009
- Sin Nombre, 2009
- Notorious, 2009
- Brooklyn's Finest, 2009
- A Day in the Life, 2009
- Dough Boys, 2009
- La Mission, 2009
2010s
- Lottery Ticket, 2010
- Gun, 2010
- Ghetto Stories: The Movie, 2010
- King Of Paper Chasin, 2010
- The Town, 2010
- 13, 2010
- Gun Hill Road, 2011
- Street Kings 2: Motor City, 2011
- Snow on tha Bluff, 2012
- Ill Manors, 2012
- End of Watch, 2012
- Spring Breakers, 2012
- LUV, 2012
- Snitch, 2013
- Fruitvale Station, 2013
- The Inevitable Defeat of Mister and Pete, 2013
- Out of the Furnace, 2013
- Percentage, 2013
- Crossed the Line, 2014
- Girlhood, 2014
- The Guvnors, 2014
- Imperial Dreams, 2014
- Dope, 2015
- Brotherly Love, 2015
- Snow on the Bluff 2, 2015
- Straight Outta Compton, 2015
- Chi-Raq, 2015
- Kicks, 2016
- The Intent, 2016
- Barbershop: The Next Cut, 2016
- King of the Dancehall, 2016
- Brotherhood, 2016
- Moonlight, 2016
- Deuces, 2017
- Lowriders, 2017
- All Eyez on Me, 2017
- Plug Love, 2017
- Avenge the Crows, 2017
- Brawl in Cell Block 99, 2017
- True to the Game, 2017
- Dayveon, 2017
- Gook, 2017
- Kings, 2017
- Honor Up, 2018
- White Boy Rick, 2018
- Yardie, 2018
- City of Lies, 2018
- The Hate U Give, 2018
- Tales from the Hood 2, 2018
- Blindspotting, 2018
- Pimp, 2018
- Blood Brother, 2018
- Blue Story, 2019
- Foster Boy, 2019
- Canal Street, 2019
- We Die Young, 2019
- Brian Banks, 2019
- Dead End, 2019
- Knuckle City, 2019
- Street Flow, 2019
- Gully, 2019
2020s
- Equal Standard, 2020
- Charm City Kings, 2020
- All Day and Night, 2020
- She Ball, 2020
- Bompton Had a Dream, 2020
- True to the Game 2, 2020
- Cut Throat City, 2020
- The Tax Collector, 2020
- Tales from the Hood 3, 2020
- Boogie, 2021
- Blue Bayou, 2021
- My Stuggle, 2021
- Dutch, 2021
- Monster, 2021
- True to the Game 3, 2021
- Respect the Jux, 2022
- On the Come Up, 2022
- On the Count of Three, 2022
- Sons 2 the Grave, 2022
Parodies
- House Party
- CB4
- Fear of a Black Hat
- Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood
- High School High
- Malibu's Most Wanted
- Death of a Dynasty
- Anuvahood
- School Dance
- Grow House
- Bodied
- Compton's Finest
See also
- African American cinema
- African-American neighborhood
- L.A. Rebellion-alternative independent black cinema during the 70s-90s
- List of Hood films
References
- ^ a b Murray Forman (2002). The 'Hood Comes First: race, space, and place in rap and hip-hop. Wesleyan University Press.
- ^ a b c "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-07-31. Retrieved 2022-07-31.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ a b c "An Introduction To UK Hood Movies". Complex. Retrieved 2022-06-04.
- ^ Working on screen : representations of the working class in Canadian cinema. Malek Khouri, Darrell Varga. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. 2006. ISBN 978-1-4426-8368-6. OCLC 666901575.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ deWaard, Andrew (2012). Richardson, Chris; Skott-Myhre, Hans A. (eds.). "The Hood is Where the Heart is: Melodrama, Habitus, and the Hood Film" (PDF). Intellect. ISBN 978-1-84150-479-7. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2020-09-20. Retrieved 2022-07-30.
- ^ a b c d e Munby, Jonathan (2007), Chapman, James; Glancy, Mark; Harper, Sue (eds.), "From Gangsta to Gangster: The Hood Film's Criminal Allegiance with Hollywood", The New Film History: Sources, Methods, Approaches, London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, pp. 166–179, doi:10.1007/9780230206229_12, ISBN 978-0-230-20622-9, retrieved 2022-08-01
- ^ a b Fisher, Celeste A. (2006). Black on black : urban youth films and the multicultural audience. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-1-4616-5688-3. OCLC 834500673.
- ^ Screening the city. Mark Shiel, Tony Fitzmaurice. London: Verso. 2003. ISBN 978-1-85984-690-2. OCLC 51068449.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ a b c d Przemieniecki, Christopher J. (2012). "'reel' Gangs Or 'real' Gangs: A Qualitative Media Analysis Of Street Gangs Portrayed In Hollywood Films, 1960-2009". Theses and Dissertations.
- ^ John McCullough (2006). "Rude and the Representation of Class Relations in Canadian Film". Working on Screen: Representations of the Working Class in Canadian Cinema. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802093882. Archived from the original on 2022-06-04. Retrieved 2020-12-11.
- ^ Schultz, Ian (2015-08-18). "Blu-Ray Review - Colors (1988)". Retrieved 2022-08-01.
- ^ Menace II Society: The Truth Hurts|Current|The Criterion Collection
- ^ From The Harder They Come to Yardie
- ^ a b Donalson, Melvin; Donalson, Melvin Burke; Donalson, Professor Melvin (2007). Hip Hop in American Cinema. Peter Lang. ISBN 978-0-82 Trying04-6345-2.
{{cite book}}
: Check|isbn=
value: invalid character (help) - ^ ""Menace II Society" – Cineaste". Archived from the original on 2006-09-08. Retrieved 2006-08-17.
- ^ Which Way to the Promised Land?: Spike Lee's Clockers and the Legacy of the African American City Archived 2006-06-25 at the Wayback Machine, Paula J. Massood, African American Review, Summer 2001
- ^ "Lowering the bar: State of black film at the moment". Archived from the original on 2006-10-26. Retrieved 2007-02-17.
- ^ Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood | 10 Movies With Very Long Titles | TIME.com
- ^ a b Dazed (2015-06-11). "The rebirth of the hood film". Dazed. Retrieved 2022-08-01.
- ^ African Americans and popular culture. Todd Boyd. Westport, Conn.: Praeger. 2008. ISBN 978-0-313-06408-1. OCLC 428541452.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ Metcalf, Josephine (2014). Rapper, writer, pop-cultural player : ice-T and the politics of Black cultural production. Will Turner. Burlington. ISBN 978-1-4724-1835-7. OCLC 877868409.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Pierson, Eric (1997). "Black on Black Crime: Hollywood's Construction of the Hood" (PDF). University of Illinois at Urbana. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2020-12-04. Retrieved 2022-07-30.
- ^ a b REPRESENTATIONS OF AFRICAN AMERICAN YOUTH IN MENACE TO SOCIETY
- ^ Brief Prescription and Expanded Essays of National Film Registry Titles|Library of Congress
- ^ Ebony. Johnson Publishing Company. November 1998. pp. 154–162.