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Wild Style

Wild Style

List Price: $19.95
Your Price: $15.96
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: HERE'S A LIL' STORY THAT MUST BE TOLD...
Review: C'mon, who can resist all that bummy-ass gear some of our Hip Hop hero's are rockin' in this movie? lol Or how about the infamous ball court face-off with Cold Crush and the Fantastic 5? Not to mention Double Trouble's classic set in gangster garbs and totin' "toolies". Wild Style, though low in budget, is definitely high in spirit and Hip Hop talent. One of the very few pieces of urban cinema to capture New York Hip Hop pioneers during their zenith, Wild Style is a cult classic. But before we head down to the "Dixie" to puff cheeba and jam; there is one bone that needs to be picked. What in God's name was director Charlie Ahearn thinking when he replaced the original music from the infamous "kitchen" scene with Grandmaster Flash!? For those of you who need more clarity - in the original version of Wild Style (i.e., pre-DVD) turntable legend, Grandmaster Flash butchers Bob James' infamous "Mardi Gras" on a pair of 1 & 2's in his kitchen. In the DVD version, (to my surprise) Flash is cuttin' up another breakbeat! My jaw dropped when I heard this b-list beat replacing a breakbeat classic. I think Mr. Ahearn n' gang were out on tour when Henry Chalfant and Tony Silver (creators of the classic, Style Wars) were teaching "Hip Hop Integrity 101" and "How To Release A Hip Hop Classic on DVD". Was Ahearn too cheap to pay for the rights to use that beat? Damn Charlie, I know Wild Style has been (financially) good to you; so, what gives? How could you sell the consumers short, (on DVD no less)? The lil' extras on the DVD are cool and the movie itself is still classic, but Ahearn definitely get's a 0 for "remixing" one of the illest Hip Hop scenes of all time! Nuff said. --James "Koe" Rodriguez

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The all-time classic on DVD!
Review: For any fans of hip-hop, breakin', rappers and the 80's New York b-boy culture, this movie is for you! Shot in a documentary style, we follow around a New York tagger (artist) as he ventures into the b-boy club scene. INCREDIBLE old skool rapping and turntable scratchin' makes this THE DEFINITIVE RAP MOVIE. The acting is bad, but as I said, this is basically a documentary about the first mc's to break out (Grandmaster Flash, Busy Bee etc..) of New York in the early 80's. The Beastie Boys say this is one of their favorite movies and they even use footage from it in their Root Down video. Pumas, Adidas, gold chains and attitude fill this classic from end to end. I'm out!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Scooby-Doo!
Review: Hip Hop back in the day told by the greatest pioneers that set the foundation on what we listen to today. If you really want to know how hip hop was back then you have to see Wild Style. The acting is ridiculous, but any true hip hop head will find and understand the artistic values of this movie.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Informed Response to Paulie's Problem with the Movie...
Review: I just spoke with Charlie Ahearn this weekend at the panel discussion in NYC for the book "Aerosol Kingdom" (which you should definitely check out) and I asked him about the kitchen scene. The problem was money (I know, big surprise). The people that hold the rights to the two songs used in that small clip wanted $8,000 each, which was far more than Charlie could pony up, especially after all of the other costs of re-releasing a film.

People always think there is some major multi-national corporation behind every project, but in this case it was just Charlie Ahearn (Rhino is distributing, but they don't get involved with the production costs). So, in short, try to understand that sometimes unfortunately money is a real issue, especially when you have real people (not companies) involved.

By the way, the only version that had the original music in it was the theatrical release. The VHS release is the same as the DVD version.

I would HIGHLY recommend that you check out this hip-hop classic for the truest depiction of what it was like back in the day.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Informed Response to Paulie's Problem with the Movie...
Review: I just spoke with Charlie Ahearn this weekend at the panel discussion in NYC for the book "Aerosol Kingdom" (which you should definitely check out) and I asked him about the kitchen scene. The problem was money (I know, big surprise). The people that hold the rights to the two songs used in that small clip wanted $8,000 each, which was far more than Charlie could pony up, especially after all of the other costs of re-releasing a film.

People always think there is some major multi-national corporation behind every project, but in this case it was just Charlie Ahearn (Rhino is distributing, but they don't get involved with the production costs). So, in short, try to understand that sometimes unfortunately money is a real issue, especially when you have real people (not companies) involved.

By the way, the only version that had the original music in it was the theatrical release. The VHS release is the same as the DVD version.

I would HIGHLY recommend that you check out this hip-hop classic for the truest depiction of what it was like back in the day.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Don't expect Shakespeare, expect Hip-hop!
Review: I think it's possible that a generation raised on "realism" in movies, and now "reality TV" (oxymorons for morons), have come to expect De Niro-style dramatic acting in every movie they view. But drama is not reality. Real life might seem more like film, and perhaps as exciting, if God the Director would see fit to edit out all the bathroom breaks, stretches of boredom, mundane and inane dialogue, and blow things up more often. Alas, He doesn't. Still, people tend to ham it up when a camcorder's trained on them, as if this is more interesting than how they normally behave. Conversely, if they view a film where the actors behave normally, they malign it as "bad acting".

Hence Wild Style's bad "rap" in the acting department. What's brilliant about Wild Style is that all the key roles are played by real emcees, deejays, breakdancers, and graf writers. Unlike Beat Street, where the center character (Ramo) is portrayed by some thirty-year-old white guy pretending to be a teenage graffiti writer. Or Breakin', which has as its cast everyone who got kicked off the set of the TV show Fame.

And Wild Style's "poor plot" is another victim of the reality/drama confusion. Yeah, there's no awesome John Woo-style gunplay or revenge drama. Instead we have an honest and historical account of the merging of South Bronx subculture and New York's Uptown art scene. Fab Five Freddy, whose character "Fade" in the movie shuttles between these two worlds, was, in reality, a liason who helped hip-hop cross boundaries into mainstream culture (first, as depicted in the film, and later as vee-jay for Yo! MTV Raps). Lee Quinones really was a young artist trying to find his place in a world of alienation, and in the film is the archetype of the individual vs. society, who "comes of age" with the realization that he is an individual within society, a society comprised of individuals. Lee's pontifications on graffiti as outlaw-art throughout the film are key to understanding the essence of hip-hop as a whole.

See my review of the Wild Style soundtrack for my list of how influential this film has been to hip-hop music itself. Thank Charles Ahearn and Fab Five Freddy for this time capsule, without which a gaping hole would exist in the musicological timeline. My one beef here is that, probably out of copyright considerations, the classic Grandmaster Flash scene has been butchered to remove the Bob James "Take Me to the Mardis Gras" bells. Oh well. The film still rocks.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The 1st and only true hip hop movie
Review: I've been into the hip hop and b-boying scene for almost 12 years. I have seen all the breakin movies; breakin, beat street, style wars,etc. Wild Style is Hip Hop in it's purest form. You won't see any flashy cars or any fake rappers in this movie. You will see some of the greatest pioneers in the game; busy bee, double trouble,ken swift,lee,zephyr,lady pink,grandmaster flash, and so on. I love this movie so much. Certain parts of the movie give me chills because it's so raw and pure. Definitely a must have for any true hip hop head. peace out, B Boy TRON one

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: classic
Review: If you are into Hip Hop and don't own this then you should! It's a capture of the early eighties scene on the edge of going worldwide..the very end of the old school. Classic rhymes and breaking. Worth owning alone for the A to the K scene...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: classic
Review: If you are into Hip Hop and don't own this then you should! It's a capture of the early eighties scene on the edge of going worldwide..the very end of the old school. Classic rhymes and breaking. Worth owning alone for the A to the K scene...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: legendary classic
Review: im from england and in 1984 the hip hop breaking and grafiti scene arrived. but it took me a good 6 months to really get into it. i use to bomb my school walls and break too. in 1985 the breakin scene died down, but in my heart i wanted to keep it alive. it wasnt till the summer of 1986 when i went to NEW YORK that i was looking forward to seeing the greatest breakers and graffiti artists, but when i arrived it was all finished. i even asked people on the street wheres all the breakin and graffiti, they replied its out of style man. i was just so saddened i could not have seen a culture which in my view was new yorks greatest. it wasnt till after that i saw WILD STYLE,WHICH made it more saddened for me. i actually stayed in the south bronx, in which was the centre of it all. Wild style bought the real fruit of the culture. if there was no wild style, i dont think there would of been beat street, breakin or any of the other classics. Even to this day i still have the pleasure in watching it. Many people in ENGLAND believed that going and bombing trains in new york was part of the film, but life in NEW YORK was exactly how you saw wild style. I remember a puerto rican guy named CHICO who i made friends with over in new york, said to me" wild style exactly how new york was in 1983,84. i guess my real sadness was i couldnt of gone to new york at that time to see it.

GOD BLESS, all old skool lovers....

adesh kumar.... many thanks


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