Superfly
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Trevor
Jackson Plays Iconic Title Character in Stylized Remake of
Blaxploitation Era Classic
Super
Fly (1972) was one of the most profitable of the Blaxploitation Era
flicks. Released during the genre's heyday, the picture revolved
around its iconic title character, Youngblood Priest, a flamboyant
cocaine dealer who dressed like a pimp, drove flashy cars and sampled
his wares from a spoon shaped like a cross draped around his neck.
Overcoming
a modest budget of just a half-million dollars, the film's phenomenal
box-office success led to a couple of sequels, (Super Fly T.N.T.
(1973) and The Return of Superfly (1990). Nevertheless, the franchise
is probably best remembered for the original's soundtrack by Curtis
Mayfield which enjoyed a long run at #1 atop Billboard's Top 100
chart.
Given
its woeful production values, Super Fly is a movie almost begging to
be remade. And 2.0 represents an upgrade which does not disappoint in
that regard. As overhauled by Julien Christian Lutz (aka Director X),
the highly-stylized production bears a greater resemblance to McG's
frenetically-paced Charlie's Angels (2000) and Baz Luhrmann's
decidedly-decadent interpretation of The Great Gatsby (2013) than to
any blaxploits made back in the Seventies.
The
setting has been shifted to Atlanta, but the basic plotline is
otherwise faithful to the source material. The blow-by-blow is
narrated by the picture's protagonist, played with perfect aplomb by
Trevor Jackson (of TV's Grown-ish).
At
the point of departure, a beleaguered Priest informs us via
voice-over that he's been selling drugs on the street since the age
of 11. He now sits atop a gang caught up in an escalating bloody turf
war marked by drive-by shootings with a flashy posse called the Snow
Patrol.
Understandably,
Priest wants out of the game, but first he has to do a bigger deal
than he's ever attempted before. That involves going over the head of
his supplier Scatter (Michael Kenneth Williams) and securing a huge
shipment of narcotics directly from the South American cartel
kingpin, Adalberto Gonzales (Esai Morales).
Somehow
Lutz, a veteran director of music videos, manages to manipulate the
audience into rooting for the sort of unsavory characters you'd cross
the street to avoid in real life. Listen, the cinema has a long
history of championing ruthless lawbreakers like Bonnie and Clyde,
the Godfather and more recently, the Ocean's 8 crew.
The upshot: this incarnation of Superfly proves to be a riveting,
slick and pulse-pounding reboot that easily blows away the original!
Rated R for pervasive profanity, graphic sexuality, violence, ethnic slurs, nudity and drug use
Running time:108 minutes
Production Studios: Columbia Pictures / Sony Pictures Entertainment / Silver Pictures
Distributor: Columbia Pictures
To see a trailer for Superfly, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MQIvV800Atk
1 comment:
Kam Williams I was so disappointed in your review saying that the original Superfly was blown away by the 2018 remake.T he music alone made it a classic along with the actors in the movie.This youngster was no match for Ron Oneal playing "priest" in the original.
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