"CATCH YOU FUCKERS AT A BAD TIME?"

Original Gangstas

May 10, 1996

I don’t remember ORIGINAL GANGSTAS playing in a theater near me, but it apparently opened on 474 screens, enough to make it into the top 10 (at #9, below JAMES AND THE GIANT PEACH, which had been out a whole month already). I was excited for it because it was basically a Blaxploitation family reunion. It stars Fred Williamson, Jim Brown, Pam Grier, Richard Roundtree and Ron O’Neal, it was back when you actually had to have them all on set together to make that work, and director Larry Cohen (BLACK CAESAR, HELL UP IN HARLEM) did manage to get a shot of them all in a row firing guns in front of an exploding car. In the dark, though. But I think it’s them.

Unfortunately the script by Aubrey K. Rattan (HIT LIST) doesn’t do anything beyond trudging through the most basic tropes you expect, and Cohen doesn’t manage to find much energy, momentum or style in it (much less humor). Unsurprisingly, but crucially, the score by Vladimir Horunzhy (ELVES) could not hold a candle to the worst and most generic of ‘70s studio musician jams, and the modern songs we hear bits of don’t do much even though they got Ice-T, Geto Boys and MC Ren to contribute. This movie has the most famous faces of the genre, but not a single drop of the juice.

It’s set in Gary, Indiana (like THE SPOOK WHO SAT BY THE DOOR), depicted as a couple of mom and pop businesses on a strip surrounded by an expanse of boarded up buildings and sidewalks grown over with weeds. O’Neal narrates the opening montage explaining that they have “the highest murder rate in America, maybe the world,” chronicling the economic downfall of the area after the closing of a steel mill, the location of the headquarters’ for rival gangs the Diablos and the Rebels. Then members of the Rebels do a drive-by on a young athlete named Kenny (Timothy Lewis) for beating their guy in a half court basketball game. Store owner Marvin Bookman (the singer and writer Oscar Brown Jr.) witnesses it and violates the no snitching code by giving Detective Slatten (Robert Forster, SCANNERS: THE SHOWDOWN) a license plate number. Then he warns Kenny’s friend “Now son, don’t go trying to get your own justice, it just ain’t right.”

Of course, “trying to get your own justice” is what his own son and founder of the Rebels, the ex-football star John Bookman (Fred Williamson right after FROM DUSK TILL DAWN) will return to town to do after the Rebels shoot at Marvin for narcing them out. John shows up in a small plane smoking a cigar with soul music playing on the soundtrack, so that’s pretty cool. There are shots of him looking cool carrying a bag around, looks like a bag of loot, but of course it’s his luggage.

For what it’s worth, the Rebels co-leader Spyro (Christopher B. Duncan, “Soldier #1,” IN THE ARMY NOW) seems genuinely hurt when he hears about Marvin’s betrayal. “That’s my favorite fuckin store! Why’d he do that, man?” He seems to share equitable leadership with Damien (Eddie Bo Smith, Jr., a musician who’s in several Andrew Davis movies). Their main enforcer is a hothead named Kayo, played by the rapper Dru Down. The weird thing about Dru Down is that he’s the son of Bootsy Collins (though he didn’t grow up knowing that) and he looks alot like him. So in this movie he’s like an evil Bootsy going around yelling and pointing guns at people.

John tries to get help from one of the old crew, Bubba (O’Neal), but he resents John for leaving town and literally tells him “Fuck you, motherfucker” to end their conversation. So at first it’s just John who sometimes shows up to slowly punch the new jack Rebels as they cause trouble at the mini-mart or the barbershop. When he’s losing a fight suddenly his old friend Jake Trevor (Brown) shows up from Cleveland wearing a British Knights windbreaker to help. He reveals that he was Kenny’s father, though he never met him because the mother, Laurie (Grier) didn’t want him around. (She later says she didn’t want to get in the way of his boxing career.)

Another former Rebel, Slick (Roundtree), happens to be in the same bar as them playing pool. He stayed in town, owns a hardware store. He says when they were Rebels they protected people, now it’s about drive-bys. But he also says “It ain’t about breakin fingers no more” so I guess they did used to break fingers, which doesn’t sound that heroic.

John wants to make a truce with the Rebels. Jake wants revenge. Laurie wants them in jail. So it’s, like, different philosophies. Reverend Dorsey (Paul Winfield, WHITE DOG) arranges peace talks between the parties. Some people think he’s a sellout, but he’s not a total nerd – he has a dangly cross earring.

Eventually all options are exhausted and the o.g.s agree they need to fight back, so they go to a scooter-riding kid named Dink (teenage Wu-Tang affiliate Shyheim), who arranges an arms deal in the parking lot of a firework stand. He guiltily admits to John that he was the one who snitched on his dad and got him killed, but he still charges them 15 grand. He takes a 10% commission, plans for it to be his last big score, says he’s moving to Seattle, but Damien snaps his neck before he leaves town.

Wings Hauser is in this too by the way. Not a big part. Fred Williamson produced it, so there’s a part where a young woman says “He ain’t so bad lookin for an old man.” Unfortunately this was Cohen’s last time directing, though he did continue writing. In fact PHONE BOOTH (2002) was one of his biggest films.


I didn’t like ORIGINAL GANGSTAS whenever I first got to it on video, but I was excited to revisit it as a period piece. Unfortunately it’s as boring as I remembered. The so-called Blaxploitation genre obviously had an appeal at the time because it countered previous cinematic depictions of Black characters. The movies have always been controversial for promoting other stereotypes, but people were excited to see these larger-than-life Black men and women who stood up proudly, took no shit, had swagger and flair, called attention to themselves, and yet were untouchable by the racist cops or anybody else.

Whatever aspect of empowerment those movies do or do not retain, they still stand out because those types of characters are fun to watch, especially as they become less common, which was part of the reason ORIGINAL GANGSTAS seemed like a great hook. It was two decades later and shit seemed less exciting, it was time to bring back the o.g.s to show everybody how it was done.

Maybe if it had had the energy or style of the classics it would’ve worked, but absent that the whole endeavor seems ill-judged. In the movies Williamson, Brown, Grier, Roundtree and O’Neal made in order to earn their places in this cast, they were against the system. Maybe they were beloved in the neighborhood, maybe they were even there to clean up the neighborhood, but they were a thorn in the sides of the cops and mayors and racists. In this ‘90s context, though, they come off as conservative. They are the system. Marvin sagely notes the societal conditions that made the new Rebels the way they are, but it still feels like the grownups telling the kids to pull their pants up and behave. John disagrees with the mayor (Charles Napier around the same time as RIOT) but grew up with him and can go meet with him. Also he wears a tucked in polo shirt with the alligator on it!

Yeah, these new Rebels are bad news, maybe worse than the o.g.s were in their day. But worse than the characters those actors played, or the criminals they were friends with? Not by much. I’m getting to be an old guy but I can’t get fired up by these old guys coming to lecture the youth for not overcoming the conditions their own generation helped create.

This update also doesn’t move beyond the sexism of the old movies, and is in fact a regression if compared to the ones that starred women, because Grier is primarily here to be the emotional female presence. She’s there to weepily express the common sense criticisms of the men’s violence, not to be Foxy Brown or Coffy (though, to be fair, she does teach a self defense course and gets to clumsily hit Kayo with a garbage can lid and then shoot him). Thank God she had JACKIE BROWN right on the horizon.

So really the biggest gimmick it has going for it is to do Blaxploitation in the hip hop era, which had already been done better (but not that good) five years earlier in THE RETURN OF SUPERFLY, which didn’t have O’Neal but did have a soundtrack by Curtis Mayfield. Hell, I’d also say I’M GONNA GIT YOU SUCKA did it better in 1988, even while being a comedy. And that also had Jim Brown in it (plus Bernie Casey, Antonio Fargas and Isaac Hayes). Anyway, the ’70s/’90s gap is illustrated by having the Chi-Lites perform in the bar where the old guys go, while the youths go to a huge dance party where there are cameos by Bushwick Bill and Scarface of the Geto Boys and Numskull and Yukmouth of the Luniz. But they don’t perform or do anything at all.

It would be nice if this to had more to say. But it needed to be more fun. It was legit exploitation in the sense that it just went through the motions and had the right names on the poster to possibly make some money (on video and cable). But I think everybody involved was capable of something better. Honestly, watching this again makes me more forgiving of THE EXPENDABLES. At least that had a little personality. You win some, you lose some I guess.

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5 Responses to “Original Gangstas”

  1. I remember seeing this on video and the great cast + Cohen got me to try and convince myself that it was sort of okay, even though I knew better. I haven’t made a point to watch it since, so there ya go. Not-as-good Expendables seems unfortunately about right.

    I never knew (or somehow forgot) that about Dru Down! I’ve actually been listening to his Can You Feel Me? record a lot lately, as this series has inspired me to revisit a lot of the music that I was into back in ’96. In contrast to Original Gangsters, I’m surprised at how well CYFM? has aged – I certainly liked it well enough at the time but had mostly forgotten it, and it’s really grown on me in the last week or so. Maybe I’m entering my own back in my day / kids these days phase….

  2. Saw this 25 something years ago on video and my takeaway was Cohen (one of my favorite directors) had lost lead in his pencil for these sort of movies. It happens unfortunately.

  3. I’m remember when it opened, but it basically got overshadowed by Twister.

  4. I forget if it was Ebert who said that a mark of a bad movie is if you’d rather watch the leads read a phone book. And here it sure sounds like they assembled an amazing cast and then didn’t do anything with them. I never understand how, if you spend all the time and money to get these people together, that you aren’t firing on all cylinders in the script and directing departments. I don’t like the Expendables movies, likely for a similar reason – you got the best actions stars of the 1980s together… for this?

  5. I have, well, an odd history with this film. As someone who is a longtime fan of hip-hop, one of the things that drew me towards this film was seeing the list of soundtrack artists on the TV spots for this film. Back in the 1990s, it was a common thing to see trailers and TV spots with some promotion for the film’s soundtrack album. Yes, even at the age of 9 or 10 (yes, I was that young then), I was not only exposed to that kind of music (Maybe even years prior), but I was also somewhat familiar with movies like “Super Fly” and “Foxy Brown,” even though I had not watched those movies yet (It would be a while before I watched them, like when I became an adult). However, I didn’t watch this movie in theaters. In fact, I don’t even if any theaters in my area even showed it. At the time of its release, some theaters in my town hadn’t opened yet, so I would have to go somewhere about 25-30 minutes away, but really, I doubt my mom or my dad would have even taken me to see it.

    As a matter of fact, the first time I watched this movie was I think in 2001 when I found it on BET. Yes, it was the TV version, but it was one of those TV versions where you would hear mutes and bleeps over expletives as opposed to bad dubbing (I still think “Menace II Society” was one of the worst offenders of that example, especially when I figured some of the censors were for variants of MF; Here I am also talking about a much better film). What was even funny was when you hear the censors of the song lyrics in some scenes. Another thing I must add is that in 2001 during those days of eBay, I recall finding that there were different versions of the home releases. One was the original 1996 release from Orion Home Video that had the poster art and there were bonus features that were three music videos from the soundtrack. However, when MGM bought out Orion’s library, I recall that they put out VHS and DVD copies of their “Soul Cinema” imprint. I had a strong feeling that the DVD for “Original Gangstas” wouldn’t include the music videos as extras. I recall being entertained when I watched as a teen but then years later when I watched it again, this time with the profanity and some violence intact, I was more underwhelmed than anything. I could see some elements where Fred Williamson and Jim Brown tried to act like the badass types that were depicted from their old films, but in that time, were people going to the cinema to see a precursor to “The Expendables” and see this a love letter to those old Blaxploitation films? I don’t think so.

    Not to mention that this one of the few films that I saw Pam Grier playing somewhat of a, well, “Normal-looking” type of woman. I know she was about 46 when the movie was shot, and it annoys me to see memes that talk about how people looked a certain age in a certain time from compared to modern times. But really, Pam Grier had always been rather attractive. I even recall watching “Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey” on TV around the time this movie came out and thinking she was still hot at that time. This one, however, I wonder if she was supposed to look like an old lady. She even still looked good in the flashback scenes in 2001’s “Bones” with Snoop Dogg. That was released five years after this one.

    One more thing about the soundtrack. I remember at the age of 9 or 10 when I went with my family to a store called Incredible Universe, which was one of the mega electronics stores. I went into the music section and saw that there was that sampling section where you could listen to some songs to see if you want to buy it. I remember listening to it and liking what I heard. However, there was no way my mom was going to buy a 10-year-old a CD or cassette tape of that soundtrack with profanity and violent lyrics. I knew that the CD went out of print at some point, but lucky for me, I found a copy of it at a new/used record store many years after. In fact, it was 2009 when I bought it. It was definitely worth it as there are some songs that hold up now.

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