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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.
It isn't often that I would say that a film has almost no redeeming value. Sadly, this is one of those cases. "Knights of the City" has virtually nothing going for it. The story is pretty bad and rather uninteresting. The characters are decent, I suppose, but nothing spectacular. The acting is far from top-notch, but I've seen worse. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, but the cast is made up of unknowns (and this was made back in 1986...so they've all had some time to make a name for themselves).
The only cast member that I did recognize is Janine Turner from "Cliffhanger" and must I say that she is the ONLY reason to watch this film. Janine looks absolutely fantastic in the film.
The ending to the film is unbelievably unsatisfying. The whole point of the film was that these a-little-too-old-to-be-gang-bangers wanted to get out of their wasted lifestyle and do something meaningful. But in the end, they basically threw it all away and stuck with their barbaric ways...at least they have each other right? ...And the main guy (Leon Isaac Kennedy) didn't even get the girl in the end!!! I guess I have to give the makers some credit for not being predictable and somewhat ballsy...but this was just stupid if you ask me.
I definitely wouldn't recommend this movie to anyone, unless you are really into the look of Michael Jackson's "Bad" Music Video or films like "The Warriors" (1979). I thought this film was rather laughable and obviously made in the 1980's. If for some reason you MUST see this film, I hope you enjoy it more than I did. Thanks for reading,
-Chris
The only cast member that I did recognize is Janine Turner from "Cliffhanger" and must I say that she is the ONLY reason to watch this film. Janine looks absolutely fantastic in the film.
The ending to the film is unbelievably unsatisfying. The whole point of the film was that these a-little-too-old-to-be-gang-bangers wanted to get out of their wasted lifestyle and do something meaningful. But in the end, they basically threw it all away and stuck with their barbaric ways...at least they have each other right? ...And the main guy (Leon Isaac Kennedy) didn't even get the girl in the end!!! I guess I have to give the makers some credit for not being predictable and somewhat ballsy...but this was just stupid if you ask me.
I definitely wouldn't recommend this movie to anyone, unless you are really into the look of Michael Jackson's "Bad" Music Video or films like "The Warriors" (1979). I thought this film was rather laughable and obviously made in the 1980's. If for some reason you MUST see this film, I hope you enjoy it more than I did. Thanks for reading,
-Chris
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???.
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.
My review was written in February 1986 after a screening at Harris theater on Manhattan's 42nd St.
"Knights of the City" is a silly mishmash filmed in South Florida two years ago under the title "Cry of the City" (retained as a theme song). Filmmaker-star Leon Isaac Kennedy attempts to mix elements from the youth gang pics of the late 1970s with the recently demised ("Beat Street", "Flash Forward") genre of dance/rap music contests. Hokey result, picked up by New World, is yet another dud ready to line the shelves of home video stores.
Pic gained some notoriety when its production company, Miami Gold (not credited on screen in release print) left Florida after much local ballyhoo and exec producer Michael Franzese was later charged by the feds with racketeering and allegedly using his film companies to launder funds.
With new producers, music and post-production changes, pic emerges as a diffuse tale of three urban gang members (setting is indeterminate despite Florida lensing) played by Kennedy, John Mengati and Nicholas Campbell, at war with a rival gang, The Mechanix, led by Jeff Moldovan, that is invading their turf. Kennedy and Mengati also head up a musical group, which looks like their ticket out of the ghetto when they are briefly befriended in jail by drunk record company owner Michael Ansara.
Kennedy crosses both the color line and social classes by romancing Ansara's daughter, statuesque Janine Turner (named Brooke here and styled after Brooke Shields), who, a la "Flash Forward", organizes a street talent contest. After being coached in the latest dance steps by (fellow ex-Clevelander) Jeff Kutash, Kennedy & crew win the $10,000 prize and a recording contract, even though their much-applauded performance is pretty bad.
Campbell is a hardliner who wants to keep the gang together, and there is some chummy solidarity in the final reel when the good guys unite to wipe the floor with The Mechanix.
Filmed by director Dominic Orlando with too much back lighting and smoke machine effects, pic is padded with quickie turns by numerous guest stars from the music world, including Smokey Robinson as the contest emcee. Sammy Davis Jr.'s stint ended up on the cutting room floor, however.
Kutash's choreography is unimpressive and pic's musical sequences never generate the excitement of such models as "Breakin'" or even New World's own "Body Rock". The hope to modernize a "West Side Story" format is stillborn because this is not a musical but rather an action pic, with interpolated musical performances.
Campbell wins the overacting honors with a strident, screaming act, while his future teammate on tv's "The Insiders" series, Stoney Jackson, has little to do as the group/gang's drummer. Kennedy's script is extremely self-serving, unbelievably adding to his screen persona as "a lover and a fighter" the status of rap singer.
"Knights of the City" is a silly mishmash filmed in South Florida two years ago under the title "Cry of the City" (retained as a theme song). Filmmaker-star Leon Isaac Kennedy attempts to mix elements from the youth gang pics of the late 1970s with the recently demised ("Beat Street", "Flash Forward") genre of dance/rap music contests. Hokey result, picked up by New World, is yet another dud ready to line the shelves of home video stores.
Pic gained some notoriety when its production company, Miami Gold (not credited on screen in release print) left Florida after much local ballyhoo and exec producer Michael Franzese was later charged by the feds with racketeering and allegedly using his film companies to launder funds.
With new producers, music and post-production changes, pic emerges as a diffuse tale of three urban gang members (setting is indeterminate despite Florida lensing) played by Kennedy, John Mengati and Nicholas Campbell, at war with a rival gang, The Mechanix, led by Jeff Moldovan, that is invading their turf. Kennedy and Mengati also head up a musical group, which looks like their ticket out of the ghetto when they are briefly befriended in jail by drunk record company owner Michael Ansara.
Kennedy crosses both the color line and social classes by romancing Ansara's daughter, statuesque Janine Turner (named Brooke here and styled after Brooke Shields), who, a la "Flash Forward", organizes a street talent contest. After being coached in the latest dance steps by (fellow ex-Clevelander) Jeff Kutash, Kennedy & crew win the $10,000 prize and a recording contract, even though their much-applauded performance is pretty bad.
Campbell is a hardliner who wants to keep the gang together, and there is some chummy solidarity in the final reel when the good guys unite to wipe the floor with The Mechanix.
Filmed by director Dominic Orlando with too much back lighting and smoke machine effects, pic is padded with quickie turns by numerous guest stars from the music world, including Smokey Robinson as the contest emcee. Sammy Davis Jr.'s stint ended up on the cutting room floor, however.
Kutash's choreography is unimpressive and pic's musical sequences never generate the excitement of such models as "Breakin'" or even New World's own "Body Rock". The hope to modernize a "West Side Story" format is stillborn because this is not a musical but rather an action pic, with interpolated musical performances.
Campbell wins the overacting honors with a strident, screaming act, while his future teammate on tv's "The Insiders" series, Stoney Jackson, has little to do as the group/gang's drummer. Kennedy's script is extremely self-serving, unbelievably adding to his screen persona as "a lover and a fighter" the status of rap singer.
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
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- Also known as
- Knights of the City
- Filming locations
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $601,451
- Gross worldwide
- $601,451
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Top Gap
By what name was Les seigneurs de la ville (1986) officially released in Canada in English?
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