Black Caesar
Tommy Gibbs is a tough kid, raised in the ghetto, who aspires to be a kingpin criminal. As a young boy, his leg is broken by a bad cop on the take, during a pay-off gone bad. Nursing his vengeance, he rises to power in Harlem, New York. Angry at the racist society around him, both criminal and straight, he sees the acquisition of power as the solution to his rage.
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- Cast:
- Fred Williamson , Gloria Hendry , Art Lund , D'Urville Martin , Julius Harris , Minnie Gentry , William Wellman Jr.
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Reviews
Plot so thin, it passes unnoticed.
It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.
Each character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.
The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.
(73%) Without a doubt one of the better blaxploitation movies ever to be spawned from the 1970's era. Fred Williamson is pretty perfect in the lead role playing a character that is far away from being the good guy, or hero of the movie, as he ruthlessly takes whatever he can get, and with force if needs be. And like a lot of these movies they tried to please the audience with a mix of drama and action which works well, so too James Brown's super cool soundtrack. Of course the movie isn't perfect (the pace goes AWOL at times, and the small budget is pushed to the limit), but overall this is a fine example of the breed, with a good(ish) morality tale at its heart.
Writer & director Larry Cohen chronicles the rise of an urban, African-American youth to the position of a New York City crime boss. This is a prime example of a Blaxploitation crime thriller with our hero Fred Williamson comes up the ranks from being a lowly shoeshine boy to a top metropolitan mobster. This 1973 actioneer contains nudity, profanity, blood, and violence. Several individuals die in this R-rated epic. Williamson is good as the protagonist who pulls himself up by his own boot straps and becomes the number one crime boss in New York City. Cohen doesn't let our hero off the hooks. Gloria Hendry, John Larch, D'Urville Martin and Julius Harris co-star. Cohen's mobster movie clocks in at 94 minutes without a shred of too much or too little. John Larch makes a convincing corrupt NYPD cop.
When Edward G. Robinson filed "Little Caesar" in 1933, he could never have imagined that fifty-two years later it would be reconfigured as Blaxploitation and become a cult classic in its own right. Williamson stars as a former shoeshine boy who strives to get ahead by shoehorning his way into the formerly all-white organized crime ring. He bullies one of the figureheads into giving him a chance and then uses that chance to springboard into a leadership position of his own, always stomping out anyone in his way and always with an eye on paying back the dirty cop (Lund) who mistreated him as a youth and gave him a limp with which to remember him by. He reaches unheard of heights financially, but, like so many before him, loses the most important things like the respect of his friends and the love of his woman (Hendry.) Williamson has quite a presence as the title character, his tall, athletic build cutting an imposing figure while his sly and slick personality covers the business end of things nicely. Hendry runs hot and cold. Her quieter moments are solid, but anytime she's called upon for heated emotion it all goes way over the top and is histrionic in the extreme. Lund is an exceedingly effective villain. His ruddy face is just begging to be pummeled as he expels nasty remarks and racial epithets. Martin and Roye play Williamson's childhood buddies who aid him as an adult and Harris and Gentry appear as his estranged parents. Wellman, a long way from "Lafayette Escadrille", plays Williamson's shady attorney while former Miss USA Hansen plays his curvy wife. It's a rough and tumble, at times heavily violent, film with lots of politically incorrect language and a dollop or two of brief nudity, which is all to be expected in this genre. What makes it fascinating, despite its obviously low budget, is the filming technique of director Cohen who shot the film in mostly authentic locations with no permits or intensive planning. Thus, when chases occur in the streets or a character wanders bloodily past onlookers, the reactions of the crowd are real! The film is set in various times from the 50's to the 60's, but there isn't a shred of period detail to be found anywhere. There's also some mighty choppy editing at times with scenes lasting mere moments or seemingly coming out of nowhere. It winds up mattering little, however, with all the audacious goings-on. Fans of the genre ought to really enjoy this one, which takes little time to breathe in between shootings, maimings, fisticuffs, chases and any other form of action. There's a great score as well with songs provided by no less than James Brown. Despite the downbeat ending, a sequel was in theaters within a year's time called "Hell Up in Harlem".
Movie starts out in 1953 where we see young black Tommy Gibbs doing jobs for the mob. He starts developing his own little gang. As he gets older (and becomes Fred Williamson) he works his way into the white mob--even though they don't want "ni**ers" (as they say throughout the film). Then he steals some damaging ledgers and uses it to run crime in the city, help black people and keep the evil white people at bay. But the white guys in the mob aren't about to give up...Perhaps I'm not the best person to review a Larry Cohen movie--he's the producer, writer and director of this. I've never liked any of his movies and he makes really bad low budget films (unlike Roger Corman who makes good ones). This one is full of goofs--I love it when you hear a baby crying on the soundtrack but you can clearly see that the baby isn't making a sound! This is full of bad dialogue and has a very predictable script. This is the type of gangster film Hollywood was making in the 1930s--it's just done with black characters now. The movie also contains plenty of swearing and some pretty graphic bloody violence. Also I can't think of any film I've ever seen that has such a negative view of women--they're either vicious witches, use sex to get what they want or are slapped around left and right. It doesn't help at all that Gloria Hendry (the main victim) gives a terrible performance.To be truthful I was struggling to stay awake. The bursts of violence helped and Williamson is tall, handsome and pretty good in the title role. But the technical goofs (there are plenty) and the by the numbers story got annoying. Poorly made on a low budget. Check out "Foxy Brown", "Coffy" or "Blacula" for a good blaxploitation film.