Had a good message:
CLASSIC!!
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Had a good message:
“Who is that?”
“That’s Jesus.”
“I know who Jesus is, who’s in the other picture?”
“That’s his mama.”
“Got Damn!”
Lmao! I think i remembered that correctly.
A Murder of Crows (1999) - In the wake of a career-ending scandal, disgraced lawyer Lawson Russell (Cuba Gooding Jr.) moves to Key West, Fla., where he befriends aging novelist Christopher Marlowe (Mark Pellegrino). After letting Russell borrow his latest manuscript, "A Murder of Crows," Marlowe dies of a heart attack. When Russell publishes the dead man's manuscript under his own name, he makes the best-seller list -- and unwittingly becomes the prime suspect in the investigation of a grisly multiple homicide.
Light It Up (1999) - The topical story of a group of high school students who form a protest when they become fed up with their school's poor conditions. After a shot is accidentally fired and a police officer is wounded, the resulting stand-off results in a media frenzy that pits the dirt-digging media against the well-intentioned students.
Gladiator (1992) - After whipping a rival in a brawl, Chicago teen Tommy Riley (James Marshall) is asked to box in the illegal fights organized by Jimmy Horn (Brian Dennehy). Tommy has bigger aspirations, but when Jimmy agrees to cover the betting debts his father (John Heard) incurred, Tommy agrees. He soon befriends Abraham Lincoln Haines (Cuba Gooding Jr.), a black boxer helping to support his family. When Jimmy realizes that the friends are his two top draws, he matches them in a bout neither wants.
Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai (1999) - Ghost Dog (Forest Whitaker) is a contract killer, a master of his trade who can whirl a gun at warp speed and moves through this world like a phantom -- stealthy and evanescent. In the spirit of the samurai, he has pledged his loyalty to a small time mobster named Louie (John Tormey) who saved his life many years before.
Since I see one from 2000, I will go ahead and say "3 Strikes" from 2000 as well...classic comedy that was almost as good as Friday but never gets mentioned for some reason
???????Never felt so bad for a cat as I did for Larenz Tate when he saw Jada Pickett getting smutted out by the other cat, after he'd spent half the summer simpin to curry her favor.
I forget nothingDamn forgot about this thread.
Hands down the 90s were the shit when it came to movies. Back then it wasn't nothing to go to the theater and be in that motherfucka for 6-8 hours because you stayed and watched every movie they had that day.
Post some black movies that you feel were slept on back then.
Phat Beach - 1996
I don't give a fuck what any of you niggas say, I loved this goddamn movie!
Jermaine "Huggy" Hopkins (Steel from Juice) holds it down as a fast food cook who, against his parents' wishes, heads to a Southern California beach to pick up chicks alongside his wise-cracking boy Brian Hicks (Whatever happened to dude?).
This is beach movie (popular in the 60's) but the difference is, it is a BLACK beach movie and the shit was funny as hell. Check it out if you never saw it...smoke some green and drink some Yak before though.
Very True, but in 1994, the 2 highest grossing movies were Forrest Gump & The Lion King.Hoop Dreams really wasn't slept on..i believe it was nominated for an Academy Award
Very True, but in 1994, the 2 highest grossing movies were Forrest Gump & The Lion King.
Both made over $300+ million in USA theaters alone.
By comparison, in 1994 Hoop Dreams only made $7 million dollars at the US (domestic) box office... and $11 million total, worldwide.
- The Lion King made over $ 900 million, worldwide.
- Forrest Gump made over $600 million, worldwide.
So it got major Oscar recognition several months AFTER it left theaters.
It was very 'slept on' when it was in theaters... but the movie critics remembered it when Award Season came around... beacuse the 1994 Oscar nominees did not get announced until February 1995. (So most people probably saw it 'outside' of a movie theater, later on.)
That's why i posted it.
Just saying.
Nothing But Trouble (1991)
Not a Black movie but Digital Underground made me go see this movie when it came out. Shit even 2pac had a cameo in there but at that time I didn't even know who he was.
I don't know if people liked the movie back then but I use to binge watch it when it use to come on HBO (remember they played the same movies over and over again?)
Dope ass movie and would be tight to see a remake with the technology that they have now.