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Wild Style

  • 1982
  • R
  • 1h 22m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,0/10
3,1 k
MA NOTE
Patti Astor, Lady Pink, Fab 5 Freddy, Lee Quiñones, Andrew Witten, and Busy Bee in Wild Style (1982)
South Bronx graffiti artist Zoro is commissioned to paint a backdrop for a hip-hop concert.
Liretrailer1 min 34 s
1 vidéo
9 photos
DramaMusic

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueSouth Bronx graffiti artist Zoro is commissioned to paint a backdrop for a hip-hop concert.South Bronx graffiti artist Zoro is commissioned to paint a backdrop for a hip-hop concert.South Bronx graffiti artist Zoro is commissioned to paint a backdrop for a hip-hop concert.

  • Director
    • Charlie Ahearn
  • Writers
    • Charlie Ahearn
    • Fab 5 Freddy
  • Stars
    • Lee Quiñones
    • Lady Pink
    • Fab 5 Freddy
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,0/10
    3,1 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Charlie Ahearn
    • Writers
      • Charlie Ahearn
      • Fab 5 Freddy
    • Stars
      • Lee Quiñones
      • Lady Pink
      • Fab 5 Freddy
    • 22Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 15Commentaires de critiques
    • 63Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:34
    Trailer

    Photos8

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    Rôles principaux64

    Modifier
    Lee Quiñones
    Lee Quiñones
    • Raymond 'Zoro'
    • (as 'Lee' George Quinones)
    Lady Pink
    • Rose 'Lady Bug'
    • (as Sandra 'Pink' Fabara)
    Fab 5 Freddy
    Fab 5 Freddy
    • 'Phade'
    • (as Frederick Braithwaite)
    Patti Astor
    Patti Astor
    • Virginia
    Andrew Witten
    • Z-Roc
    • (as Zephyr)
    Busy Bee
    • Chief Rocker…
    Carlos Morales
    • Hector
    Alfredo Valez
    • Chico
    Niva Kislac
    • Niva
    Glenn O'Brien
    Glenn O'Brien
    • Museum Curator
    William Rice
    • Television Producer
    • (as Bill Rice)
    Johnny 'Crash' Matos
    • Union Crew
    Daze
    • Union Crew
    • (as Chris 'Daze' Ellis)
    Fred 'Caz' Glover
    • Union Crew
    Edwin 'Obe' Ortez
    • Union Crew
    Lisa Lee
    • Fly Girl
    Henrietta Henry
    • Fly Girl
    Pamela Smith
    • Fly Girl
    • Director
      • Charlie Ahearn
    • Writers
      • Charlie Ahearn
      • Fab 5 Freddy
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs22

    7,03K
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    Avis en vedette

    10repo136

    The rites-of-passage of hip hop turning from a boy to a man

    The likes of a film such as Wild Style will never, unfortunately, be made again. Mainly because this was the culture of hip hop in a form of infancy, still naive to the ways of Hollywood and the music industry.

    I first saw this when I was 16 years old - although it had been released 5 years prior, though not to my knowledge in the UK - and it has remained stamped in my memory ever since. Who cares if the actors weren't actors or if the camerawork was slightly dodgy in places ("look at the cinematography on the motherf****r!" - Chris Rock). It was a snapshot of a time and a place and that counts for than a thousand over-processed, overdone Hollywood versions of hip hop (Beat Street? C'mon!!)

    In it's most basic essence, the director Charlie Ahearn just let the 'actors' improvise their lines with a few plotlines to guide them. These were real people. PHADE is actually FAB 5 FREDDY who DID promote shows and WAS actually an ex-graffiti writer. ZORO WAS a top writer and is played by graffiti legend LEE QUINONES. The 2 rap crews, COLD CRUSH and FANTASTIC 5 were vicious rivals in real life (although to my knowledge never actually participated in any basketball throwdowns ;)

    I fully recommend this to any hip hop fan and try to steer New-Schoolers to it too.

    Buy the Region 1 dvd version for the great FAB 5 FREDDY/CHARLIE AHEARN commentary track.
    10Ernasto

    Never exaggerating if I say this is a true Hip Hop Classic..

    If you think you are a true Hip Hop fan and when I talk about Wild Style and you are asking me "What?", then something must be wrong...

    Wild Style is the first and true Hip Hop documentary/film about a culture that remained one of the strongest of the past few decades. Never has there been an artform of music that was just basically made of other music styles, but has managed to grow and evolve on its own.

    If you want to understand the basic elements of Hip Hop (Rappin', DJin', Breakdancin' & Grafitti) then don't look any further, here's what you need.

    As one of the top titles wanted on my "Please-Release-It-On-DVD-List", this movie is not a movie in its real form. Because it was pretty much lowbudget, it has a feel of documentary, but it certainly has a story. Not very much, but the knowledge that almost everyone of the cast was/is someone in the Hip Hop Community 1982, makes this title very interesting to see what they contribute to this movie, and Hip Hop in general.

    You've probably read the plot outlines in other reviews, so I won't tell you anything you've already read in those reviews. All I can say is, if you wanna know what the TRUE meaning is of Hip Hop, instead of the BLING-BLING type o' Hip Hop which is totally (well, almost totally) commercialised, see if you can get a copy of this movie and "take a trip down memory lane", like my man Nas said in his 1994 DJ Premier produced cut "Memory Lane (Sitting In Da Park)", another Hip Hop Gem..

    RECOMMENDED!!
    7MartinTeller

    Wild Style (1983)

    Much like the later documentary STYLE WARS, this is a portrait of the blossoming New York hip hop scene of the early 80's, encompassing rap, break dancing, and graffiti art. However, this film weaves in a fictional plot line about a tagger (real graffiti artist "Lee" Quinones) struggling with his persona and his art and its place in society. As a film, the word that comes to mind is "amateurish". The cast consists mostly of real personalities from the scene, and none of them are particularly good at acting. The photography is lackluster and the editing is sloppy, and the low budget is obvious (a scene of people frolicking in a pile of money takes on an unintended comic edge when it turns out to be all $1 bills). But as a celebration of artistic expression, it's a joy. If the dramatic scenes aren't exactly Oscar-caliber, they're at least heartfelt, and serve well enough as the glue between the performances, which are electrifying. Featuring Grand Master Flash, Busy Bee, Lisa Lee, Double Trouble, Rock Steady Crew and more, and culminating in a dynamite outdoor amphitheater show, it's a showcase for a lot of great talent. Not the best filmmaking in the world, but a hell of a party.
    10stupid_fresh

    The Old School Royalty

    Wild Style is not a documentary, despite what it may look like from packaging or even camerawork. It's a pretty slow-moving story of a man who writes on walls and his girlfriend's alleged infidelity with another man who writes on walls. While this love triangle is being played out, there is a journalist woman who wants to find out about a new sub-culture that is happening in the Bronx. There is also a musical event being planned in the amphitheatre in the park to showcase the local musical talent.

    If you were reading the synopsis to this film anywhere, it would probably read something like that. But Wild Style isn't about the story. It's not about the acting, the direction or even the camerawork or sound recording (although the soundtrack is important).

    It is a film that has shaped a generation, purely with the members of the cast and the records used in the soundtrack. Wild Style is a historical document. It perfectly captures a time and place - the Bronx, New York 1982 - and most of the figures that made that time and place so special. The plot is merely a device with which to string along a series of scenes of rappers, DJs, B-boys and spraycan artists. Some of these people were the roots of the hip hop movement. To see the impact that this film has had, look at how many times the soundtrack has been sampled - not only the dialogue (Tommy Tee, Beastie Boys, Cypress Hill, DJ Premier) but the backing loops. 'Tracks' such as Down By Law have become standards - no, classics - in battle cyphers and old school hip hop nights all over the world.

    It's basically a visual dictionary of Old School hip hop royalty -

    * GrandMaster Flash in what looks suspiciously like his bedroom cutting up the Headhunters' "God Made Me Funky" and then Bob James' "Take Me To The Mardi Gras" (although on the UK video re-release it has been replaced on the soundtrack with a Chris Stein co-produced track from the OST).

    * The Rock Steady Crew intercut with Flash, walking up the hill in the park with a roll of lino on their shoulders.

    * Fab 5 Freddy as the svengali of the film, leading others into the realms of the hip hop landscape (and hustling other members of the cast for money with card tricks).

    * The Cold Crush Brothers and the Fantastic (Romantic) MCs in the basketball court.

    * Double Trouble on the stoop ("Here's a little story that must be told...").

    * 'Lee' Quinones and Lady Pink doing their thang on the walls of NYC - Lee's 'hands' piece being done at the same time as the RSC break and GM Flash cuts.

    But enough of my salivating. This film is a slice of history for hip hop fans as much as footage of the 1966 World Cup Final is for British football fans. It should really be watched along with two other essential old school hip hop films - Beat Street (1984) and Beat This - A Hip Hop History (a BBC-TV film, 1985). Watching all three of those in one is an absolute education for anyone out there who has even a passing interest in hip hop (or even just rap) music. As a film, OK, it's limited and trite. The plot is pretty much non-existent and the acting is pretty variable. But no-one should watch it for that. Its whole reason d'etre is to provide an overview of a time and a place, when hip hop was innocent and a way of life, instead of a calculated business venture.

    Beat Street was a bigger budget version of Wild Style, even down to the big name guest stars, the graffiti-artist-being-thwarted theme and the big show at the end of the film. It's easier to watch, but doesn't have that raw, cinema-verite style that Wild Style has.

    Some trivia on the film. Chris Stein from Blondie co-produced he backing soundtracks that the MCs rap over. The records that the DJs use were pressed in very VERY limited quantities, and were not the result of crate digging. They were made for the film... According to popular legend, the opening scene of the (graffiti) bombing of the train was the only scene that Charlie Ahearne - director - could get the money together to do 'properly' (ie legally). If the rumours are to believed, the rest of the film was done 'on the run' - without permission.

    If you like hip hop, are interested in it or even if you have never really thought about it, then watch Wild Style. It sums up a place and time and a FEELING quite unlike anything else. Now hip hop is the world's biggest selling music, watch this film to see where it came from. It'll probably make you reach for the nearest tracksuit, Kangol and lino and have you down the park in a fit of nostalgia.
    7gavin6942

    A Cultural Shift

    Legendary New York graffiti artist Lee Quinones plays the part of Zoro, the city's hottest and most elusive graffiti writer. The actual story of the movie concerns the tension between Zoro's passion for his art and his personal life, particularly his strained relationship with fellow artist Rose.

    Director Charlie Ahearn was approached by graffiti artist Fred Braithwaite, later known as Fab 5 Freddy, who wanted to make a film about hip-hop (as a broad culture encompassing emceeing, DJing, graffiti and break-dancing) and graffiti as an art form. Braithwaite was an acquaintance of Lee Quiñones, whom Ahearn had long-wanted to film and whose murals he has always admired. Braithwaite brought Quiñones in to meet Ahearn and the three began discussions about creating a hip-hop movie.

    As a film, this movie is pretty lacking -- the plot is weak, and the acting is completely awful. But that was never the point. With most of the characters ad libbing their lines and actually being real life hip hop and graffiti artists, this almost serves as a pseudo-documentary. Probably no other film better captures the rise of hip hop than "Wild Style".

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The stick-up guys were cast when Charlie Ahearn saw them hanging around the location. Ahearn offered them a prop gun but they insisted on using their real sawed-off shotgun. All of their lines were improvised.
    • Gaffes
      At 6:18 Hector tells Raymond 'Zoro' to take off his do-rag. Then Ray's hair pops back and forth between being flat from the do-rag to a picked out Afro during their conversation.
    • Citations

      'Phade': Scooby Doo!

    • Connexions
      Edited into And You Don't Stop: 30 Years of Hip-Hop (2004)
    • Bandes originales
      South Bronx Subway Rap
      Composed by Fab 5 Freddy and Chris Stein

      Performed by Grandmaster Caz

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Wild Style?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 8 octobre 1983 (Japan)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Graffiti Wild Style
    • Lieux de tournage
      • New York, États-Unis(Location)
    • société de production
      • Wild Style
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 4 948 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 22 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Patti Astor, Lady Pink, Fab 5 Freddy, Lee Quiñones, Andrew Witten, and Busy Bee in Wild Style (1982)
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    By what name was Wild Style (1982) officially released in Canada in English?
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