A poorly-acted shambles.
Wild Style (1982)
Rated: 15
Runtime: 2 hrs 30 mins
Theatrical Release: 10-08-2007
Synopsis: A graffiti "tagger" taken under the wing of an East Village art collector prepares for a festival of rap and hip-hop music. This film details the early 1980's cultural turning point which occurred in the South Bronx, New York, at which time Old School hip-hop was first crystallizing. A fairly... A graffiti "tagger" taken under the wing of an East Village art collector prepares for a festival of rap and hip-hop music. This film details the early 1980's cultural turning point which occurred in the South Bronx, New York, at which time Old School hip-hop was first crystallizing. A fairly authentic document of the early '80s South Bronx rap scene, with a soundtrack featuring Grandmaster Flash, Busy Bee, and co-star Fab 5 Freddy. [More]
Genre: Dramas
Starring: Lee Quinones, Fab 5 Freddy, Patti Astor, Busy Bee, Grandmaster Flash
DVD Info
Release:
Jan 7, 2007
DVD Features:
- Region 1
- NTSC
- Keep Case
Audio:
- Dolby Digital - English
Additional Release Materials:
- Audio Commentary - Charlie Ahearn - Director
- Deleted Scenes
- Featurettes - 1. "Bongo Barbershop"
- 2. "WILD STYLE 25th Anniversary Reunion"
- 3. "WILD STYLE 20th Anniversary Amphitheater Jam"
- 4. "Busy on the Beach"
- Interviews
Text/Photo Galleries:
- Stills/Photos
Reviews
It's great to see again this bolt of ghetto joy, a kind of updated West Side Story, that shows hip-hop as a living, breathing expression of cultural resistance rather than a crunky, cheerless set of cruddy grunts and boasts from which to make money.
Nothing else comes close to capturing the atmosphere of the early days of hip-hop and spraycan art, of the burned-out and derelict Bronx.
This unpolished but authentic film, a drama with the honesty of a documentary, shows hip-hop pure and unvarnished.
The acting is stilted, and the story almost non-existent. But that isn't the point, Wild Style is a cult classic - indisputably the most important hip hop movie, ever.
Mixing early-’80s nostalgia with mild social anthropology, the film successfully crystallises the optimism and vivacity of the early New York hip hop scene and suggests that film and TV portrayals of the Bronx as a savage and inhospitable hellhole were pe
A fascinating study of an era that now feels so remote, it might as well have occurred on another planet.
Wild Style lacks a lot of the style of the people in it, but it never neutralizes their vitality.
Hip-hop rolls on tractor treads now, unafraid to colonize those who hesitate, but in 1982 it was small, self-selecting, and as specific to New York as the World Trade Center.
Shot independently, this film captures a movement in its genesis.
It's a fascinating time capsule, worth examining for anyone interested in the cultural roots of hip hop.
The pacing is slow -- inexcusable in a film about music -- except when hip-hop takes over, and Ahearn wisely gives plenty of screen time to the likes of Busy Bee, Rock Steady Crew, and Fab Five Freddy.


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