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Cornbread, Earl and Me

  • 1975
  • PG
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Cornbread, Earl and Me (1975)
Home Video Trailer from American International
Play trailer0:27
1 Video
51 Photos
BasketballDramaSport

A 12-year-old is traumatised by the murder of his friend, a star basketball player.A 12-year-old is traumatised by the murder of his friend, a star basketball player.A 12-year-old is traumatised by the murder of his friend, a star basketball player.

  • Director
    • Joseph Manduke
  • Writers
    • Ronald Fair
    • Leonard Lamensdorf
  • Stars
    • Moses Gunn
    • Rosalind Cash
    • Bernie Casey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joseph Manduke
    • Writers
      • Ronald Fair
      • Leonard Lamensdorf
    • Stars
      • Moses Gunn
      • Rosalind Cash
      • Bernie Casey
    • 17User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Cornbread, Earl And Me
    Trailer 0:27
    Cornbread, Earl And Me

    Photos51

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Moses Gunn
    Moses Gunn
    • Benjamin Blackwell
    Rosalind Cash
    Rosalind Cash
    • Sarah Robinson
    Bernie Casey
    Bernie Casey
    • Officer Larry Atkins
    Madge Sinclair
    Madge Sinclair
    • Leona Hamilton
    Jamaal Wilkes
    Jamaal Wilkes
    • Nathaniel 'Cornbread' Hamilton
    • (as Keith Wilkes)
    Stefan Gierasch
    Stefan Gierasch
    • Sgt. Danaher
    Charles Lampkin
    Charles Lampkin
    • Fred Jenkins
    Vince Martorano
    Vince Martorano
    • Officer John Golich
    Logan Ramsey
    Logan Ramsey
    • Deputy Coroner
    Thalmus Rasulala
    Thalmus Rasulala
    • Charlie
    Antonio Fargas
    Antonio Fargas
    • One-Eye
    Laurence Fishburne
    Laurence Fishburne
    • Wilford Robinson
    • (as Laurence Fishburne III)
    Stack Pierce
    Stack Pierce
    • Sam Hamilton
    Tierre Turner
    Tierre Turner
    • Earl Carter
    Bill Henderson
    Bill Henderson
    • Watkins
    Randy Martin
    Randy Martin
    • Shifty
    Don Newsome
    • Jack
    Erik Kilpatrick
    Erik Kilpatrick
    • Ace
    • Director
      • Joseph Manduke
    • Writers
      • Ronald Fair
      • Leonard Lamensdorf
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    6.91.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8richard-1787

    Parts are painful to watch, but it's a very fine movie

    I'm not going to summarize the story of this movie; you can find that above.

    Rather, I'll just leave my comments on the experience of watching it.

    The ;movie is well acted throughout. And that can, at times, make it difficult to watch. When one of the characters is killed, it is difficult to watch his mother's at first unbelieving reaction to the tragedy. You feel something of her grief just in watching the contorsions of her face and body. It's not easy to watch.

    Later, watching the police dept intimidate witnesses to avoid a wrongful homicide verdict is also difficult to watch, but in a different sense. You see how powerless the people in this poor neighborhood are to fight back against such administrative corruption. (I also suppose it doesn't make a lot of sense. I would imagine, though I don't know this as a fact, that even in 1975 police depts would have been insured against such expenses.)

    It's refreshing that it is a Black lawyer who wins this suit, and not some Great White Savior.

    But at the end, you have no assurance that the same thing won't happen again. And again. And again. The shooting of the young Black man was not directly an act of racism - one of the policemen who shot at him was Black himself, and they had been told the rapist they were pursuing was Black. His death is, rather, the result of sloppy procedure and very bad coincidence.

    But the intimidation of the potential witnesses by police dept reps suggests that the people in this neighborhood and other poor ones like it have little access to real justice.
    pazuzu-2

    Promising film hampered it's by music

    This is a rather well done film with great performances. Where it drops the ball is on the overdramatic music that sledgehammers the emotional tone of the more dramatic scenes.

    It resists the temptation of villianizing all of the antagonists, especially the judge (which no doubt would've been portrayed as racist and corrupt in a similar film made today).

    Bernie Casey (who I'll always think of as U.N Jefferson in Revenge Of The Nerds) is terrific and it's too bad I don't see him in too many films today.

    Great 70's feel and the first appearance of Larry Fishburn makes this a film to check out.
    6Cineanalyst

    Cop Out

    Intermittently powerful, all-too-familiar social-problem realism and maudlin melodrama, "Cornbread, Earl and Me" is, either way, a melancholic affair. The overwrought histrionics, overly-optimistic resolution, and some poor acting are especially unfortunate given how moving the best scenes are here. The rainy killing by policemen and subsequent attack on those murderous officers by the neighborhood is a strong scene--ever more shockingly so as it comes after a dull first act. Moreover, it's well foreshadowed by prior unlawful actions by the cops in harassing and unwarranted searching of suspected criminals. The subsequent intimidation of witnesses leading up to the courtroom conclusion is in way familiarly spot on, too, as the police department and city officials close ranks to obstruct justice and protect their own, but it also often veers over-the-top, as does much of the rest of the picture.

    Rather surprisingly given that they cast would-be NBA Hall-of-Famer Jamaal Wilkes that the basketball scenes, or single brief montage rather, are scant and unimpressive. It seems evident he wasn't cast for his acting abilities, after all, and is in good company there with other sports legends. (Not everyone is as fortunate as Wilkes's Lakers teammate Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, to be memorably cast in "Airplane!" (1980), and some face the far more reprehensible fate of appearing in a "Space Jam" burger (1996 and 2021).) The gee-wiz simplistic saintliness of Wilkes's "Cornbread" is of eye-rolling annoyance. And, those poor neighbors putting up with his dribbling a basketball in his flat on his way to an athletic scholarship. Either that apartment building was constructed with some of the best in sound-proofing floor and walls or those neighbors are unsung heroes.

    Laurence Fishburne also made his debut here, and evidently he could act even as a child, or at least it seems that way by comparison to the actress, Rosalind Cash, playing his mother, who is the most prominent offender here of some very poor, soap-opera levels of acting (and, indeed, Cash's career ended with a role on daytime soap "General Hospital"). They should've cut the candy bar theft scene that results in her ridiculously weeping over her kid stealing 15 cents worth of merchandise. I get the point of the scene--everyone gets the obvious intent of it--to establish Wilford's, the "Me" protagonist of the title, maturing sense of ethics, but there are better ways to accomplish as much without constantly hitting the audience over the head with the cinematic equivalent of a sledge hammer. Perhaps, this is a product of its era, as much of the representation of African Americans on screen was in blaxploitation flicks, so subtlety doesn't seem to have been valued much, but this material was and is still is socially-relevant and powerful enough to do without the dramatic cop-outs.
    10Carrj145

    The message and delivery are BOTH great

    I was very disturbed by the negative review given by a man who actually lived during the times dramatize in "Cornbread, Earl and Me." I am a 26-year-old Black female watching this movie for the first time. I found that every issue addressed in this movie is transcendent, relevant even today.

    It amazes me that we overlook the importance of a message simply because of the delivery. In all fairness to this movie, there is no blaxploitation present; the language, attire, scenery, etc., everything necessary for a realistic plot, is perfect for the setting and time frame of this movie. Regarding the comment about "ghetto language" there is a balance between the use of the formal and informal in the movie.

    As an English teacher, and one who has a strong disdain for negative images of African-Americans, I can honestly say that this movie's depiction of African-American life was very well done. It was also poignant and ahead of its time. It is movie that, when the time comes, I will show to my children as a reference to how very little times have changed regarding the ease of wrongful deaths, slandering of names, harassment of witnesses because of racial advantages, or rather disadvantages.

    The movie is GREAT;-)
    hotnoodletuna

    a sharply mixed bag

    The film does have a moderately intriguing mesage about polkice brutality and political corruption being obscenely hoisted upon African American communities in the urban United States. That said, the film is horribly dated, and elements of it are unnacceptable by today's standards. I mean the slain icon's name is Cornbread for Pete's sake!!! Where wre his cohorts Fried Chicken and Watermelon? Moreover, the societal corruption is presented in a way that makes us feel sad and powerless rather than angry and indignant. This is really a product of the early seventies Blaxploitation genre that would be utterly offensive by today's standards were it not for the still relevant and timely subject matter of the film. Worthwhile viewing for those who can differentiate between the message and the overdone elements. I fear, however, that the film's excess could leave white biggots laughing at the maudlin African American stereotypes on parade rather than addressing the political concerns of the film at all.

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    Related interests

    Woody Harrelson and Wesley Snipes in Les blancs ne savent pas sauter (1992)
    Basketball
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Brad Pitt and Jonah Hill in Le stratège (2011)
    Sport

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Laurence Fishburne's film debut. He is credited as Laurence Fishburne III.
    • Goofs
      When a clay pot is thrown at Officer Atkins and hits the windshield of his cruiser, it breaks. Pieces of glass hit Atkins and embed in his face. But windshields are made of safety glass and though windshields break, they keep the glass in place. So, the glass in this windshield would NOT have flown at Atkins, let alone embed in his face. He would have come out of this situation shaken but physically unharmed.
    • Quotes

      Wilford Robinson: ...they killed Cornbread and he wasn't doin' nothin'

      [pause]

      Wilford Robinson: all he was doin wuz jus goin' home...

    • Connections
      Featured in Dusk to Dawn Drive-In Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 2 (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      Wilford's Gone
      Written by Donald Byrd

      Performed by Donald Byrd with The Blackbyrds

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Cornbread, Earl and Me?Powered by Alexa
    • Artistic graffitti that at any direction one would stand and see signature's spray painted and/or permanent markered on any surface from the seat of any, ANY public transportation to the extreme top of a water tower in 1960's & 70's in what U.S. city?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 21, 1975 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • MGM
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Hit the Open Man
    • Filming locations
      • Pike Amusement Park - 95 South Pine Avenue, Long Beach, California, USA(demolished)
    • Production companies
      • American International Pictures (AIP)
      • ML Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $800,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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