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Street Fight

Título original: Coonskin
  • 1974
  • 18
  • 1 h 40 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,4/10
4,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Scatman Crothers, Charles Gordone, Philip Michael Thomas, Jesse Welles, and Barry White in Street Fight (1974)
Animação desenhada à mãoAnimação para adultosComédia de humor negroParódiaSátiraAçãoAnimaçãoComédiaCrimeDrama

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaRabbit, a country-born trickster, takes over the organized crime racket in Harlem, facing opposition from the institutionalized racism of the Mafia and corrupt police.Rabbit, a country-born trickster, takes over the organized crime racket in Harlem, facing opposition from the institutionalized racism of the Mafia and corrupt police.Rabbit, a country-born trickster, takes over the organized crime racket in Harlem, facing opposition from the institutionalized racism of the Mafia and corrupt police.

  • Direção
    • Ralph Bakshi
  • Roteirista
    • Ralph Bakshi
  • Artistas
    • Barry White
    • Charles Gordone
    • Scatman Crothers
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,4/10
    4,2 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Roteirista
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Artistas
      • Barry White
      • Charles Gordone
      • Scatman Crothers
    • 36Avaliações de usuários
    • 33Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:06
    Trailer

    Fotos145

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    Elenco principal14

    Editar
    Barry White
    Barry White
    • Samson
    • (narração)
    • …
    Charles Gordone
    • Preacherman
    • (narração)
    • …
    Scatman Crothers
    Scatman Crothers
    • Pappy
    • (narração)
    • (as Scat Man Crothers)
    • …
    Philip Michael Thomas
    Philip Michael Thomas
    • Randy
    • (narração)
    • (as Philip Thomas)
    • …
    Danny Rees
    • Clown
    • (narração)
    Buddy Douglas
    • Referee
    • (narração)
    Jim Moore
    • Mime
    • (narração)
    Jesse Welles
    Jesse Welles
    • Miss America
    • (narração)
    • …
    Ralph Bakshi
    Ralph Bakshi
    • Cop with megaphone
    • (narração)
    • (não creditado)
    Frank DeKova
    Frank DeKova
    • Mannigan
    • (narração)
    • (não creditado)
    • …
    Ben Gage
    • Brother Bear
    • (narração)
    • (não creditado)
    Al Lewis
    Al Lewis
    • The Godfather
    • (narração)
    • (não creditado)
    Mihaly 'Michu' Meszaros
    Mihaly 'Michu' Meszaros
    • Boxing referee
    • (não creditado)
    Richard Paul
    Richard Paul
    • Sonny
    • (narração)
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Roteirista
      • Ralph Bakshi
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários36

    6,44.1K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    7abyoussef

    Don't Let The Title Throw You. This Is Definitely One To See....

    by Dane Youssef

    "Coonskin" is film, by the one and only Ralph Bakshi, is reportedly a satirical indictment of blaxploitation films and negative black stereotypes, as well as a look at life black in modern America (modern for the day, I mean--1975). Paramount dropped it like a hot potato that just burst into flame.

    But this is a Bakshi film, controversial, thrilling, and a must-see almost by definition alone. Not just another random "shock-jock" of a movie which tries to shock for the sake of shock. It's by Ralph Bakshi. Anyone who knows the name knows that if HE made a movie, he has something big to say...

    Although it's roots are based in cheap blaxploitation, "Coonskin" isn't just another campy knock-off of mainstream white film or any kind of throwaway flick. "Coonskin" wants to be more. It aims it's sights higher and fries some much bigger fish.

    The movie doesn't just poke fun at the genre. Nor does it just indict black people, but actually seems to show love, beauty and heart in the strangest places.

    "Coonskin" tells a story out of some convicts awaiting a jail-break. The fact that it's even possible to break out of a prison in the "Coonskin" world alone makes it old-fashioned.

    One of the inmates tells a story about a trio of black brothers in Harlem named Brother Bear, Brother Rabbit, Preacher Fox who want respect and a piece of the action and are willing to get it by any means necessary. The Itallian mob is running all the real action.

    Big name black musicians star: Barry White and Scatman Crothers, as well as Charles Gordone, the first black playwright to take home the Pulitzer. Something big is happening here obviously.

    The movie plays out like a descent into this world, this side of the racial divide. From an angry, hip, deep, soulful black man with a hate in his heart and a gun in his hand.

    Bakshi's films never know the meaning of the word "sublety." This one looks like it's never even heard of the word. But maybe a subject like this needs extremism. Real sledgehammer satire. Some subjects can't be tackled gently.

    Bakshi is god-dammed merciless. Here, no member or minority of the Harlem scene appears unscathed.

    The characters here are "animated" to "real" all depending on what the mood and situation are. The animated characters and the human ones all share the same reality and are meant to be taken just as literally.

    Bakshi never just shows ugly caricatures just for shock value. He always has something to say. Nor is black-face is gratuitously. Here, unlike in Spike Lee's "Bamboozled," he seems to be using it to try and really say something.

    Like 99.9% of all of Bakshi's films, this one incorporates animation and live-action. Usually at the same time. Bakshki isn't just being gimmicky here. All of this technique is all intertwined, meshing together while saying something.

    Somehow, this one feels inevitably dated. Many of these types of films (Bakshi's included) are very topical, very spur of the moment. They reflect the certain trend for the day, but looking back of them years later, there's just an unmistakable feeling of nostalgia (as well as timeless truth).

    Even though the music, clothes, slang and the city clearly looks like photos that belong in a time capsule, the attitude, the spirit and the heart remain the same no matter what f--king ear it is. Anyone who's really seen the movies, the state of things and has been in company of the people know what I'm talking about.

    Even some of the of the black characters are a bunny (junglebunny), a big ol' bear and a fox. One of the most sour and unsavory racist characters is a dirty Harlem cop who's hot on the trail of these "dirty n-----s" after the death of a cop. But for him, it's not just business. Nor is it for the rest of the brothers who wear the shield. It's just pure sadistic racist pleasure of hurting blacks.

    The sequence involving the Godfather and his lady is one of the most moving pieces in the whole film, of which there are many. It plays out like an opera or a ballet.

    The promo line: WARNING: "This film offends everybody!" This is not just hype. Proceed with extreme caution.

    You have been warned...

    --Happy Viewing, Dane Youssef
    Grimlock-2

    Don't be offended

    Sure this flick is very racist in content, but it's very entertaining if you give it a chance. The movie begins where we see Preacher (Gordone) talking to God, then go meets up with Samson (White, R.I.P.), as they head out to go break their friends, Randy (Thomas) and Pappy (Crothers) out of prison. While they're waiting outside the prison walls for Samson and Preacher to come, Pappy tells Randy the story of Brother Rabbit, Brother Bear, and Preacher Fox, about how they got runned out of the South and into Harlem. Just as they get into Harlem, the guys attend a *so-called* church social held by Rev. Simple Savior. Brother Rabbit figures out its nothing' but a big joke and takes out the phoney Reverend and tells his ex-cohorts that he and his friends are taking over, but there's one thing. Before he can take over, he must take out a crazy cop named Manigan and the Godfather and his mafia (4 homos, 1 straight, and 1 clown). Very entertaining, I recommend it to anyone who wants to see something unique and different.
    9Le Samourai

    Fantastic examination of Racist Stereotyping

    One of the most interesting movies to be classified as "blaxploitation," Bakshi's "Coonskin" is a rich text full of wonderful insight. He wrote it in collaboration with Scat Man Crothers and Barry White, who appear in the film as well. The racist imagery can often be disturbing, but the message of the movie was so powerful that the NAACP gave it an endorsement (but only grudgingly).

    I highly recommend this movie to anyone who is interested in an examination of the pervading atmosphere of racism that Bakshi attempts to deconstruct. Wonderful stuff.
    9abracadaver

    a hard, uncomfortable look at racism in America

    Street Fight is a brilliant piece of brutal satire. This is not a movie you just watch for fun. It is not a comfortable experience, although it does have some laugh-out-loud moments. This is a movie you watch when you need food for thought.

    To dismiss this film as simply racist is to miss the point entirely. This is not only a satire of Song of the South, it's also a biting commentary on the prejudices that Americans still have as a society. Every ethnic group portrayed in the movie gets shown as grotesque caricatures of their stereotypes, which in turn are grotesque caricatures of real people. Through this wild exaggeration, the filmmaker shows just how absurd these tightly-held beliefs really are.

    If you're the sort of person who's willing to acknowledge the ugliness of the prevalent prejudices American culture still holds, and if you're not afraid to look your own prejudices in the eye, this movie may be for you.
    7tomgillespie2002

    Brutal satire on stereotyping and racism

    Randy (Philip Michael Thomas) and Pappy (Scatman Crothers) escape from prison and await a pick-up from their friends Sampson (Barry White) and Preacherman (Charles Gordone). Pappy begins to tell a strange story about three crooks, Brother Rabbit (voiced by Thomas), Brother Bear (White) and Preacher Fox (Gordone), who rise up throughout the Harlem crime ring. They come up against an evangelistic maniac who teaches his followers to kill whites, a crooked white cop with a hatred of Brother Rabbit, and a fat, Italian-American, Godfather-type who put out a contract on the trio.

    Ralph Bakshi, one of the most revolutionary cartoonists in recent times, had a long history with the making of Coonskin. He experienced segregation first-hand growing up in Brooklyn where he was forced out of an all-black school due to the fear that the whites may discover it and cause havoc. These racist attitudes seem to have left their mark on Bakshi and he wanted to satirise it brutally, leading to the birth of Coonskin, a film that was picketed and protested against by various groups before any screenings of the film had been arranged, and a film that remained so misunderstood by many until recently.

    Bakshi savagely attacks stereotyping and racist iconography by using, well, stereotyping and racist iconography. He employs characters in minstrel show blackface that were so popular in Civil War-era America, and portrays the black characters as loud, crude and violent. Yet no one is safe here - homosexuals, Italians, white-trash, Jews - all are portrayed as wildly over-the-top stereotypes. Bakshi conquers the problem by facing it head on, exaggerating it ten-fold, and then throwing it in our face. If you don't get satire or if you completely miss the point of Coonskin, then this is possibly the most offensive film ever made.

    The animation is crude and dirty-looking, but I believe this was Bakshi's intention. By giving it a grimy, almost sloppy feel, he brings the story closer to the street, where his characters live out their lives. The mixture of animation set against real backdrops evokes Disney's still-banned Song of the South (1946), a film that Disney are so ashamed of due to the fact that it could be construed as racist, that they placed the ban on it themselves. The film is also quite strange, jumping between different styles and tones, and the result is as often confusing as it is mesmerising.

    They are some truly inspired moments, such as the scene when our animated trio enter Harlem (the "home to every black man") to be greeted by a wailing saxophone in the street, as well as Scatman Crothers' rendition of Ah'm a N****r Man over the opening credits. I would recommend anyone with a fleeting interest in racial history to watch this film as long as they can stomach the viciousness of the satire, as it is as powerful as it funny, and as smutty as it is sophisticated. How this film was managed to be made escapes me, and how it was made by a white man simply perplexes me. Essential viewing.

    www.the-wrath-of-blog.blogspot.com

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    Drama

    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      When Martin Scorsese was filming Taxi Driver: Motorista de Táxi (1976) near Times Square, he captured footage of people running out of a theater showing this film due to protesters setting off a smoke bomb. He sent this footage to Bakshi who said "I didn't know whether to laugh or cry".
    • Citações

      [first lines]

      Man in Blue: Fuck you.

      Man in Yellow: Alright, I'm gonna give some example: I heard that 350 white folks committed suicide by jumping off the Golden Gate Bridge. And out of the 350, there was two that was niggers.

      Man in Blue: And one of them was pushed.

      Man in Yellow: [laughs]

    • Versões alternativas
      The 95 minute cut of the film originally planned for release by Paramount was long thought lost, until 2024, when an Italian YouTuber uploaded this cut in it's entirety, albeit dubbed in Italian.
    • Conexões
      Edited from O Nascimento de Uma Nação (1915)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Ah'm A Nigger Man
      Lyrics by Ralph Bakshi

      Music by Scatman Crothers

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    Perguntas frequentes15

    • How long is Coonskin?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 20 de agosto de 1975 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Central de atendimento oficial
      • Ralph Bakshi.com
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Coonskin
    • Locações de filme
      • Nova Iorque, Nova Iorque, EUA(location)
    • Empresas de produção
      • Bakshi Productions
      • Ruddy Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 40 min(100 min)
    • Mixagem de som
      • Stereo

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