Best Hood Movie Of The 90's?

Best Hood Movie Of The 90's?

  • Boyz n the Hood

    Votes: 52 29.9%
  • New Jack City

    Votes: 38 21.8%
  • Juice

    Votes: 13 7.5%
  • Menace II Society

    Votes: 63 36.2%
  • South Central

    Votes: 1 0.6%
  • Above the Rim

    Votes: 2 1.1%
  • Jason's Lyric

    Votes: 2 1.1%
  • Set It Off

    Votes: 3 1.7%

  • Total voters
    174

kes1111

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Which is the best (or your favorite) 'hood' movie of the 90's?
220px-Boyz_n_the_hood_poster.jpg

Boyz n the Hood is a 1991 American teen hood drama film written and directed by John Singleton in his directorial debut, and starring Ice Cube, Cuba Gooding, Jr., Morris Chestnut, Larry Fishburne, Nia Long and Angela Bassett, depicting life in South Central Los Angeles, California.

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Menace II Society is a 1993 American hooddrama film directed by Allen and Albert Hughes in their directorial debut, and starring Tyrin Turner, Jada Pinkett, Larenz Tate and Samuel L. Jackson. The film is set in South Central Los Angeles, California. The film follows the life of a young man named Kaydee "Caine" Lawson and his close friends. It gained notoriety for its scenes of violence, profanity, and drug-related content. It was released in May 1993 to critical acclaim for its gritty portrayal of urban violence and its powerful underlying messages.

220px-New_jack_city.jpg

New Jack City is a 1991 American crime thrilleraction film, based upon an original story and screenplay by Thomas Lee Wright, and directed by Mario Van Peebles in his directorial debut, who also co-stars in the film. The film starsWesley Snipes, Ice-T, Allen Payne, Chris Rock and Judd Nelson. The film was released in the United States on March 8, 1991.

220px-Juice_Poster.jpg

Juice is a 1992 American crime drama film directed by Ernest R. Dickerson and written by Ernest R. Dickerson and Gerard Brown. The film stars Omar Epps, Tupac Shakur, Jermaine "Huggy" Hopkins, Khalil Kain, and Samuel L. Jackson.

South_Central_1992_film.jpg

South Central is a 1992 American crimedrama film, written and directed by Stephen Milburn Anderson. This film is an adaptation of the 1987 novel Crips by Donald Bakeer,[1] a former high school teacher in South Central Los Angeles. The film stars Glenn Plummer, Byron Minns and Christian Coleman. South Central was produced by Oliver Stone and released by Warner Bros.

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Jason's Lyric is a 1994 eroticromanticdrama film, written by Bobby Smith, Jr, and directed by Doug McHenry, who co-produced the film with George Jackson and Marilla Lane Ross.

220px-Above_the_rim_poster.jpg

Above the Rim is a 1994 American sports film co-written, storied and directed by Jeff Pollack in his directorial debut.The screenplay was written by Barry Michael Cooper, from a story by Benny Medina.

220px-Set_it_off_poster.jpg

Set It Off is a 1996 American crimeaction film directed by F. Gary Gray, and written by Kate Lanier and Takashi Bufford. The film stars Jada Pinkett Smith, Queen Latifah, Vivica A. Fox and Kimberly Elise (in her theatrical acting debut). It follows four close friends in Los Angeles, California, who decide to plan and execute a bank robbery. They decide to do so for different reasons, although all four want better for themselves and their families. The film became a critical and box office success, grossing over $41 million against a budget of $9 million.
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'Hood film is a film genre originating in the United States, which features aspects of urban African-American or Hispanic-American culture such as hip hop music, street gangs, maras, racial discrimination, broken families, drug use and trafficking, illegal immigration into the United States and the problems of young men coming of age or struggling amid the relative poverty and violent gang activity within such neighborhoods.
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".[2]

Films that fit these criteria include Boyz n the Hood and Menace II Society. Among the directors who have made films in this genre are John Singleton, Mario Van Peebles, F. Gary Gray, Hughes Brothers, and Spike Lee.
 
Menace all day. New jack City was good as hell. But it was kind of unrealistic. Menace, South Central, and Boyz in The Hood were more real. And Menace was the best of the 3 if you ask me.
 
Hooping in Sunset Park. I normally don't enjoy care for movies that don't represent my culture but hopping in sunset park was good.
 
NJC. And the best soundtrack too.

One can look back on it like this was corny, that was corny, but that's a hood classic of hood classics. Quotes for days. And broads.
 
new jack city was our version of scarface

boyz in the hood was some realistic true to life shit

menace to society was some knucklehead comedy shit

juice was some cool crew shit turn psycopath agenda
 
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peace

I was living in Newark, N.J. in the early to mid 90's.

New Jersey Drive needs to be on that list.
After that Hillside shit in '90/1 that the movie covered,
the way it was shot with the actors, the footage plus the way the Bricks & surrounding area was '90-3 when I went to school, lived & came through there {cc ph#s, mahfuggas running tolls with no fucks give pre cameras, not stopping @ lights for your own good, being wary of 'pedestrians' trying to get $, etc}, that shit was like a doc.
Flick was ill...
 
I chose Menace.
New Jack Was not realistic. At the time it came out, it was an excellent movie. Watch it now and you will see so many things that just dont make sense, knowing what you now know.
New Jersey Drive was good, i watch it whenever i see it on. Underrated movie.
Belly....the first half was great, second half, meh.
 
Damn good list. Hard to choose.

I'll go with NJC for the win. Boyz In the Hood first runner up. Juice and Menace can go either way.
 
Charles S Dutton was right "THE HUNT IS ON AND WE ARE THE PREY". I wonder if I try to start back on the movie I tried to make "ON THE COME UP" would I be able to make any real money. At this point the money is the only thing that matters. My movie was to be about a hobbo that came across some hidden weed plants in the woods. He went from rags to riches without forgetting where he came from. The money is needed but needed for what. Larry Hoover was right, when it comes to growth and development we are not getting any unless you become carbon copies of the oppressor. And we are almost at the point of no return. I was surprised to find out about a lot of the hidden places on earth such as area 51, the Vatican, the state of Israel, etc. And area 51 is a big joke when you can put out that area 51 is housing aliens and that was built with tax payers money and yet you will kill them if they see things you do not want them to see. About like Alabama building casinos for Indians yet they told the Indians that they will not classify them as savages if they get them some black slaves. Everybody is civilized when they help whites to dominate. Movies,schools,radio, etc. are all part of programming.
I cannot say which one of those movies was the best one. All of them were good. I wonder if they will ever make a movie about the book "BLACK IN SELMA". We know that the movie Mandela was made off the information they wanted to put out. They got the movie "BIRTH OF A NATION" coming out. To me the movie "MALCOLM X" was a lot of propaganda. The movie "BROTHERLY LOVE" did mention about the private prisons and the fact that it is definitely slavery.
5cer9t.jpg
 
Menace......followed by New Jack

Boys N The Hood had some funny/unrealistic parts that people didnt grasp.
Like the nigga raking up bags and bags of leaves in the front yard,....yet they had no
trees in their yard.
Where the fuck the leaves come from??
:roflmao::roflmao::roflmao:
 
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peace

Other than Menace, HAD to have these in my lil stereoVHS collection through the 90s






Fresh was highly slept on.

That movie best introduced pit bull fighting that often occurs in the hood.
 
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