Mr. Freeze
- Mr. Freeze
- (as Marc Lemberger)
- Director
- Writer
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Featured reviews
This hard to find 1986 movie where rappers are gangsters trying be fo gooders was cheesy even for the 80s. I was a kid during the breakdancing, rapping, hey day movies of Breakin, Rappin, Beat Street, Krush Groove, and forgotten film of Lorenzo Lamas-Body Rock. Back then street dancers like Shabba Doo and Boogaloo Shrimp set a pretty good tone for these kind of movies with Breakin. After that producers went crazy offering every goofy looking rapper a movie deal. This was one of them and by far one of the goofiest.
I was a fan of the Fat Boys and remember renting this on video. I remember I tried to like it, I wanted to like it, but man this movie was just stupid. Rappers as gang members trying get a record deal break out into song and dance. There really is no plot to this movie but an excuse to capitalize on the hip hop popularity of more superior music movies. Breakin opens and makes 40 million on a 1 million dollar budget so every studio wanted that same success.
Like I said, nothing happens here just rappers playing gang members performing songs. Theres a sort of back story of crime from an ex inmate producer but I've seen betting acting in six grade Christmas plays. This was cheesy in 86 and ever hilarious in 2024.
I was a fan of the Fat Boys and remember renting this on video. I remember I tried to like it, I wanted to like it, but man this movie was just stupid. Rappers as gang members trying get a record deal break out into song and dance. There really is no plot to this movie but an excuse to capitalize on the hip hop popularity of more superior music movies. Breakin opens and makes 40 million on a 1 million dollar budget so every studio wanted that same success.
Like I said, nothing happens here just rappers playing gang members performing songs. Theres a sort of back story of crime from an ex inmate producer but I've seen betting acting in six grade Christmas plays. This was cheesy in 86 and ever hilarious in 2024.
Troy (Leon Isaac Kennedy) leads the tough street gang and rock band (!) called the Royal Rockers. Locked up one night after a brawl, they are heard by a record CEO (Michael Ansara) who is in the drunk tank and get offered a shot at the big time in a talent contest. As an added bonus, Troy begins to fall for the CEO's daughter Brooke (Janine Turner in her first lead), which the record exec doesn't approve of.
Shot as Cry of the City in Miami during 1984, this could easily have been Breakin' 3. Unfortunately for producer-writer-lead Kennedy, the film sat on the shelf for nearly two years before New World picked it up in November 1985 and put it in theaters in early 1986. Kennedy contends on his site that the studio cut down his masterpiece, but I'm not quite sure this could be considered that in any form. Truth is by the time this came out the breakdancing craze was pretty much dead. The film is pretty schizophrenic in nature - you have one moment where the band is performing a goofy song and the next they are engaged in violent gang activity. Perhaps the most interesting thing about it is that it was financed by former mafia kingpin Michael Franzese. This would be the penultimate leading role for Kennedy, who was best know for the Penitentiary series (he ended his leading man career with part three after this). Musical cameos include Kurtis Blow, The Fat Boys, Harry Wayne Casey (the K. C. of K. C. and the Sunshine Band), and Smokey Robinson. And because I know you are dying to know - yes, the band wins the talent contest.
Shot as Cry of the City in Miami during 1984, this could easily have been Breakin' 3. Unfortunately for producer-writer-lead Kennedy, the film sat on the shelf for nearly two years before New World picked it up in November 1985 and put it in theaters in early 1986. Kennedy contends on his site that the studio cut down his masterpiece, but I'm not quite sure this could be considered that in any form. Truth is by the time this came out the breakdancing craze was pretty much dead. The film is pretty schizophrenic in nature - you have one moment where the band is performing a goofy song and the next they are engaged in violent gang activity. Perhaps the most interesting thing about it is that it was financed by former mafia kingpin Michael Franzese. This would be the penultimate leading role for Kennedy, who was best know for the Penitentiary series (he ended his leading man career with part three after this). Musical cameos include Kurtis Blow, The Fat Boys, Harry Wayne Casey (the K. C. of K. C. and the Sunshine Band), and Smokey Robinson. And because I know you are dying to know - yes, the band wins the talent contest.
Chris,
Little known fact, I suppose, but I want to let you know that this movie was made by a now ex-mob boss (Michael Franzese) who was dubbed by Tom Brokaw as "The Prince of the Mafia," and made more money than anyone since Al Capone. In the manner of sucking up, I'm going to say that I love this movie. Though it was made in the 1980's, it is still a beautiful representation of everything that the culture back then stood for.
Thanks.
Katy
Little known fact, I suppose, but I want to let you know that this movie was made by a now ex-mob boss (Michael Franzese) who was dubbed by Tom Brokaw as "The Prince of the Mafia," and made more money than anyone since Al Capone. In the manner of sucking up, I'm going to say that I love this movie. Though it was made in the 1980's, it is still a beautiful representation of everything that the culture back then stood for.
Thanks.
Katy
One thing that I found rather strange in this movie is that everywhere you go, you can see people dancing. On dimly lit street corners, in alleys, everywhere! What's up with that???.
I was shocked to see the low rating of this movie. It's a really cool 80s movie. I didn't see all of it, but it actually looks just as good as The Warriors, and clearly Michael Jackson was inspired by this (or vice versa). It looks exactly like the stuff from Beat it and Bad. Of course, also other cool 80s movies. It really has all the kitch-value. I wonder why this movie is so little known. I had not heard about it either, until I saw it tonight. Anyway, it is very good, with some great music and action. Clearly this is an excellent description of the rap and hip-hop environment in an urban environment in the 80s and in the USA.
Did you know
- TriviaSammy Davis Jr. filmed a cameo appearance and appears in a publicity still. But his scene was deleted from the final cut.
- Alternate versionsUK cinema and VHS versions are cut by 7 seconds for an '18'. The uncut version was released on DVD in 2004, downgraded to '15'.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Trailer Trauma (2016)
- SoundtracksLet the Music Play
Written by Chris Barbosa (as Christopher Barbosa) & Edward Chisolm
Performed by Shannon
- How long is Knights of the City?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Knights of the City
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $601,451
- Gross worldwide
- $601,451
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