Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAvery returns to college as a competitive swimmer after getting his life back on track. But his life takes another unexpected turn when he and his two friends (Bonds, Casseus) are wrongly ac... Leggi tuttoAvery returns to college as a competitive swimmer after getting his life back on track. But his life takes another unexpected turn when he and his two friends (Bonds, Casseus) are wrongly accused of murder and end up in prison.Avery returns to college as a competitive swimmer after getting his life back on track. But his life takes another unexpected turn when he and his two friends (Bonds, Casseus) are wrongly accused of murder and end up in prison.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Graffiti
- (as David Shark Fralick)
- Gains
- (as Dwayne Macopson)
Recensioni in evidenza
Richard T. Jones was new to me. If he is going to be a star, he shouldn't do what Sidney Poitier did: ignore his own lighting. The star MUST always be lit correctly, especially if he is darker skinned. Mr. Jones is a good-looking leading man type and he should "tend to his business" and make sure HE looks good on that screen.
"Lockdown" is an okay movie. Gabriel Casseus as Cashmere was appropriately ignorant and vacuous. His "don't care" attitude is pervasive in poor neighborhoods where people feel helpless and hopeless in America. It was not surprising that he, a drug dealer, with a violent demeanor ended up in jail and adapted easily to that macabre world behind bars.
Of course it was different for Dre (De'Aundre Bonds) as the sensitive brother of Jones' girlfriend, Krista (Melissa De Sousa). Dre is not gay, but his good looks scream "woman" to brutes behind bars. He is viciously raped by two Aryan thugs the first day he arrives in the big house. He is immediately frightened into becoming Graffiti's "bitch," sexually available at "his man's" will. Graffiti (David "Shark" Fralick) is a muscular and insane drug dealer who is in competition with the head black dealer, Clean Up (played by rapper, Master P) who is a psychotic, disgusting character who would kill you for a nickle, no problem. His speech is as brutal as the part he portrays.
The movie is about survival, and that is what Avery (Jones) has to do, if he wants any kind of life and future. Yes, the characters are sterotypical, but aren't they always in this kind of vehicle?
The sex was played down in this, as it is in all American-made prison films. Americans are very squemish about man/man sex and DO NOT want to see it on the screen. Two woman. That's okay. When are we going to grow up?
If you liked "OZ" you might like this. But be prepared. It's not an easy watch.
Gabriel Casseus's performance of the hyper and thuggish Cashmere was brilliant. Bonds role of Dre was not bad, but it didn't live up like the roles of Richard T Jones and Gabriel Casseus. Master P is also great as Clean Up, the vicious inmate who has security guards working for him, his drugs being brought in and out of the prison a ho of a girlfriend who Cashmere gets a piece of, and he wants Cashmere to do his dirty work.
The supporting cast was brilliant. Melissa De Sousa as Avery's girl Krista; Sticky Fingaz as Broadway the ex drug dealer turned inmate; Bill Nunn as Avery's scouter for college and his attorney; And Clifton Powell who was the OG of the prison, and I felt he should've had a longer part in the movie.
Lockdown is Master P's best movie to date.
This movie has a few valuable segments worth the rest of its deficits. A few scenes may take you to a place you do not want ever to be. There are moments in the prison scenes where the actors are so credible it might as well be real. The directing had flickers of greatness to capture that intensity.
But just like that, in a flicker you're back to watching a $2 film worth a penny. Just watch it for the acting and directing behind a few prison scenes that fairly represent "Lockdown".
Lo sapevi?
- QuizDe'aundre Bonds was shot four times just days before the film began shooting. He arrived on the set limping and his limp was written into his character.
- Citazioni
Dre: Graffiti man, I told you man. I ain't with this shit.
Graffiti: It's cool...
Dre: God don't fuckin like this!
Graffiti: [shoves Dre] It's cool!
Dre: Fuck that man!
[Graffiti reaches for Dre, but Dre throws a punch, missing him]
Graffiti: C'mon man!
Dre: Motherfucker!
[Dre throws another punch that misses]
Graffiti: [Grabs Dre in a chokehold] You my bitch!
[Proceeds to hit Dre with multiple punches and knees]
Graffiti: [Puts Dre in a Full Nelson and "dances" him around] You wanna do another dance, huh? You wanna do a little dance for daddy?
[Kisses Dre on the forehead and throws him on the bed as he starts to unbuckle his trousers]
Graffiti: [Pans over to Graffiti getting oral sex from Dre as his bare butt thrusts back and forth] Yeah... uh-huh.
- Curiosità sui creditiOpening credits have the following excerpt: "I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me... ...they only see my surroundings, themselves, or figments of their imagination -- indeed, everything and anything except me." Ralph Ellison Invisible Man
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 449.482 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 200.000 USD
- 16 feb 2003
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 449.482 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 45 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1