We the Party (DVD REVIEW)
We the Party
DVD Review
by Kam Williams
DVD Features African-American Answer to American Pie
It’s hard to ignore the parallels
between We the Party and American Pie (1999). After all, the latter revolved
around a quartet of horny, high school students competing to lose their
virginity before graduation, and we find the testosterone-driven quintet at the
center of We the Party in pursuit of the same rite of passage shortly before
their senior prom.
However, despite sharing that
deceptively-identical point of departure, We the Party actually proceeds to
morph into something far more substantial than males merely bonding around the
attempt to mate indiscriminately. For, this inner-city dramedy seamlessly
blends that rather raunchy theme with a timely cautionary tale about the
pitfalls of failing to plan for one’s future. Plus, it has some inspired comedy
and a cutting-edge score, featuring performances by a number of emerging
hip-hop acts, including Pink Dollaz, The New Boyz and The Rej3ctz.
Unfolding like a 21st
Century answer to such African-American cinematic classics as House Party
(1990) and Love Jones (1997), We the Party effectively captures the angst and
aspirations of the Millennial Generation. Written and directed by Mario Van
Peebles, the film stars his son, Mandela, as Hendrix Sutton, a kid more
concerned with buying a flashy automobile and finding a girlfriend than with
getting good grades and going on to college.
This unfortunate focus frustrates
his divorced parents to no end. After all, Hendrix’s father (Mario Van Peebles)
teaches at his high school where his mom (Salli Richardson) is the principal.
So, the slick slacker has to listen to endless lectures about the consequences
of not applying himself academically.
Still, Hendrix’s dad’s warning that
“Minimum effort now means minimum wage later,” only falls on deaf ears since
the recipient is a teenager with raging hormones. After all, his head has been
hopelessly turned by cute classmate Cheyenne
(Simone Battle). Yet, to land the girl of his dreams, he not only has to
compete with a handsome jock, but he has to convince her “Ro-bro-cop” of a
father (Michael Jai White) that his intentions are honorable.
Meanwhile, Hendrix’s motley posse,
Quicktime (Moises Arias), Chowder (Patrick Cage II), Que (Ryan Vigil) and Obama
(Makaylo Van Peebles) are experiencing their own unique relationship drama
during their separate searches for sexual satisfaction. Be forewarned, much of
the R-rated humor here ventures to the crude, like when the boys mount a tiny
camera on a shoe in order to look up girls’ dresses; and the language is both
profane and peppered with the N-word.
Look for Snoop Dogg, Tiny Lister and
the director’s legendary father, Melvin Van Peebles, in supporting roles,
although they’re not the reason to see We the Party. What makes the movie worth
its while is its anti-materialistic message that one’s character is of far more
import than where you live, what kind of car you drive, and your sexual
conquests.
The African-American answer to
American Pie!
Very Good
(3 stars)
Rated R for profanity, sexuality, ethnic slurs and teen drug use.
Running time: 104 minutes
Distributor: Xlrator
Media
DVD Extras:
Feature-length commentary by director Mario Van Peebles, and stars Mandela and
Makaylo Van Peebles, 4 music videos from the film, and the theatrical trailer.
To see a trailer for We
the Party, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h0W9i6GvfPE
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