Features:
 - Color
 - Closed-captioned
 - Box set
 
  
 Description:
  Friday  Friday is the rarest specimen of African American cinema: a 'hood movie  refreshingly free of the semiseriousness and moralism of shoot 'em up soaps such  as Boyz N the Hood, yet still true to the inner-city experience. Scripted  by rapper Ice Cube, Friday is a no-frills tale of a day in the life of a  pair of young blacks in South Central. Cube plays Craig, a frustrated teen who  endures the ultimate humiliation: getting fired on his day off. Then unknown  Chris Tucker plays Smokey, a marijuana-worshipping homeboy whose love for the  green stuff lands him in predicament after predicament. Sitting on the stoop of  Craig's rundown home, the two hilariously confront a kaleidoscopic array of  gangbangers, weed dealers, crack heads, prostitutes, scheming girlfriends, and  neighborhood bullies--all of whom, it should be noted, come off as sympathetic  even as they are being caricatured, a true achievement in the crass, "booty  call" environment of '90s African American comedy. --Ethan Brown   Next Friday  Ice Cube wrote and stars as Craig in this sequel to Friday, which he also  wrote. His nemesis from that film, neighborhood bully Debo (Tommy "Tiny" Lister  Jr.), has just escaped from county jail and is out to get revenge. To protect  Craig, Craig's father (John Witherspoon) sends his son to stay with his Uncle  Elroy (Don "D.C." Curry), who won the lottery and bought a house in Rancho  Cucamonga. Craig expects the suburbs to be dull, but no sooner has he arrived  than conflicts arise: The neighbors are hostile hoods, his cousin's girlfriend  is out for blood and child support, and the house is about to be seized because  of unpaid taxes. It's up to Craig and his cousin Day-Day (Mike Epps) to solve  these problems before the day is over. It's a rambling, loose movie, but a  genuinely entertaining one. Ice Cube doesn't write punch lines--though funny  lines abound. He writes richly comic characters that speak in virtual arias of  bragging, complaining, and scamming. Sure, some of the characters are  stereotypes and many of the jokes are about drugs and scatology--but that's been  the basis of humor since Plautus and Molière. The rhythmic energy of Ice Cube's  dialogue and the easy charisma of his performance make Next Friday  thoroughly enjoyable. --Bret Fetzer 
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