It's nice knowing the source material, but having no devotion to it, because then I can kick back and crituque unemotionally. Which is my favourite sort of carping.
Yeah, you're right. It becomes an academic process.
"You have an experience when you read the book that is unlike any other."
Except any late Coupland book...
movie New Jack City inspired his Hollywood career by proving black actors are not limited to stereotypical roles.
He's a fucking crack-dealer! He drives around in a jeep wearing rope gold and listening to Bel Biv Devoe while toting an Uzi! Since when is that not a stereotype?
Since when is that not a stereotype?
No shit. Van Peebles is not playing a stereotype, but Snipes wasn't blazing new paths for black identity.
No shit. Van Peebles is not playing a stereotype, but Snipes wasn't blazing new paths for black identity.
nods in agreement.
Snipes in KING OF NEW YORK, now, would have been a decent example, although a much smaller role.
I love the quote from Ryan Reynolds about Blade 3 when asked about working with Wesley Snipes -- he says he never worked with Wes, just Blade.
Every anecdote paints that man a nutcase.
Every anecdote paints that man a nutcase.
I'm just sad that he seems to have given up on any attempts at non-action roles. He was doing a good balancing act ala Denzel of alternating serious dramatic roles with straight-up action roles for a while there, but it looks like those days are over.
My favorite "mess with the stereotype" part of
New Jack City
was Ice-T as a cop. Little did we know, back then, that he was embarking on a long career of playing cops; clearly, he found the uniform so fetching in the video for "Fuck The Police" that he decided to wear it always.
Also, there was skinny young Chris Rock! As a baby crack addict!
clearly, he found the uniform so fetching in the video for "Fuck The Police" that he decided to wear it always.
Uh, that was Ice Cube. Ice T was Cop Killer.
Wait, wasn't that Vanilla Ice?