( A Look Back ) Fresh

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Vader_F_Kennedy
Vader_F_Kennedy Members Posts: 17,715 ✭✭✭✭✭
edited May 2014 in Lights, Camera, Action!
Fresh_movie_90s.jpg


Fresh is a 1994 crime film written and directed by Boaz Yakin in his film directorial debut, and produced by Lawrence ? (seen in a cameo appearance), who was riding the wave of success of Reservoir Dogs. It was scored by Stewart Copeland, a member of The Police.

Marketed as a hip hop 'hood film, Fresh went relatively unnoticed by the public, but won critical acclaim. An emotional coming of age story, it offers a realistic glimpse of the dangerous life in New York City's projects during the ? epidemic. "There's shocking resonance to the notion of a grade-school boy who's become a criminal out of sheer pragmatism," wrote Entertainment Weekly's Owen Gleiberman.[1]




Michael, nicknamed Fresh (portrayed by Sean Nelson), is a 12-year old kid running drugs for gangsters, notably Esteban (Giancarlo Esposito). Inspired by the chess lessons of his father, an alcoholic speed-chess master (Samuel L. Jackson), Fresh devises and executes a brilliant plan to extricate himself and his drug-addicted sister (N'Bushe Wright) from their hopeless lives.[2][3]




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_gs34X5rU1c

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_WmVPg1vPM


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QG1MKeO8FWA&list=PLB7EA997FFEA1EFCE&index=8

Comments

  • Trollio
    Trollio Members Posts: 25,815 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    One of my favorite movies. Lil boy fresh played chess with his father then played chess with the streets and won.

    that last scene was emotional as ? .
  • Vader_F_Kennedy
    Vader_F_Kennedy Members Posts: 17,715 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    the scene where jake shoots the lil boy and girl was sad af that ? deserved his chain beatin
  • Elzo69Renaissance
    Elzo69Renaissance Members Posts: 50,708 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    The full movie is on youtube ...one of my favorite movies the soundtrack was banging too...Fresh was sonning and ethering everybody
  • kzzl
    kzzl Members Posts: 7,548 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Cool movie. But to be honest, Estaban reached out and had lil' homie killed after he got locked up.
  • jono
    jono Members Posts: 30,280 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    It's alright. Incredibly unrealistic but okay for what it is.
  • deadeye
    deadeye Members Posts: 22,884 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited May 2014
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    Underrated Classic.


    Only thing that "might" have been able to top it would've been a remake with the actor who played Lil Kenard from the Wire in the lead role.


    Too late now because he's too old, but he's the only one I could think of who would have the acting skills to pull that off.
  • focus
    focus Members Posts: 5,361 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    I still need to go back and finish this movie. My girl made me change it when he hung his dog.
  • atribecalledgabi
    atribecalledgabi Members, Moderators Posts: 14,063 Regulator
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    i heard about the dog scene years before i actually saw the movie & it put me off of watching it.
  • Swiffness!
    Swiffness! Members Posts: 10,128 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Never saw it in full start-to-finish until 2 years ago actually. Anyone calling this a "hood flick" deserve a slap because it was a cinema classic, get it correct. Sean Nelson deserved a Oscar nod.

    Fresh

    4 STARS OUT OF 4

    by ROGER EBERT

    Characters are never at a loss for words in the movies. They talk quickly, never hesitating or repeating themselves. Kids are especially articulate, like well-trained little word machines. Movies are getting to be more and more like television, where there's never a moment to spare.

    "Fresh" isn't like that. Here's a movie filled with drama and excitement, unfolding a plot of brilliant complexity, in which the central character is solemn and silent, saying only what he has to say, revealing himself only strategically.

    Fresh is a 12-year-old boy who lives in Brooklyn. He is a runner for drug dealers. Because he is smart and honest, they respect him. Fresh lives with 11 other children in the spotless, orderly apartment of his aunt, who is a saint, he agrees, but who is helpless against the dangers that children face in the streets. Sometimes he sees his dad, an alcoholic who lives in a camper and supports himself by hustling chess games for cash. Sometimes he sees his sister, who has moved out of their aunt's apartment to live with a dealer. Her days pass in a sad haze of drugs.

    Fresh knows a lot about drugs, and has a good relationship with a local dealer named Esteban, who is not a bad man as drug dealers go, and who is proud of Fresh - thinking of him almost like a son. Fresh's life, and the city that formed it, are drawn carefully in the early scenes of "Fresh," which was written and directed by Boaz Yakin, a sometime writer of Hollywood thrillers ("The Rookie"), who dropped out, moved to Paris, and told himself he would return to the movies only when he had something to say and control over how it was said. "Fresh" meets those qualifications.

    You may think, having seen an urban thriller or two, that you can guess how "Fresh" feels and sounds. You would be wrong. The soundtrack is not filled with loud, angry music. The plot is not manic, but focused and perceptive. Fresh, the central character, is played in an extraordinary performance by Sean Nelson, as a boy who sees and understands much, and keeps his own counsel.

    It is important that the film establish its world. We will need to understand it in order to appreciate the remarkable last act of this movie, in which Fresh pulls off a plan that is part scam and part revenge - an unforgiving retribution against the system that is destroying the lives of those he loves.

    The early scenes are fascinating. Fresh is doted on by the dealers (Giancarlo Esposito is engaging in his portrayal of Esteban).

    A great future is predicted for him. He doesn't use drugs himself, and his opinion of those who do is indifference laced with contempt - except in the case of his older sister (N'Bushe Wright), who makes his heart weep. Fresh saves his money, and has a lot of it. He has some friends his own age, especially Chuckie (Luis Lantigua), who talks too much - a mistake Fresh never makes.

    To fill the great vacuum in his life, the need for love and discipline, he returns to his father (Samuel L. Jackson), a man who might have been a great chess champion, and still is almost unbeatable in the rough school of New York street chess. His father, who is never far from a bottle purchased with his winnings, does the best he can for Fresh, using chess as a metaphor for life. It is during one of his chess lectures that Fresh conceives the audacious scheme he pulls off. Seeing the movie at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival, I thought I was hearing some chess advice. Seeing it the second time, I realized that the actual outcome of the movie was being predicted.

    Fresh is barely old enough to be noticing girls, but there is one he does notice, and as she smiles sweetly at him, he feels his heart sing for perhaps the first time in his life. It is the outcome of this first schoolyard crush that influences all the rest of the movie. The movie is well constructed; no event is unmotivated, and Yakin's screenplay establishes all of the emotional reasons, too, so that nothing is unexplained, even what seems at first like the gratuitous death of a dog.

    Sudden, violent death is a fact of life in America today.

    Guns have made our cities unsafe for children. What "Fresh" does is bring a new perspective to those facts, in the form of both drama and thriller. This is not an action film, not a clever, superficial thriller, but a story of depth and power, in which the dangerous streets are seen through the eyes of a 12-year-old who reacts with the objectivity he has learned from chess, and the anger taught to him by his life.

    NOTE: It is a rich irony that "Fresh" and "Milk Money," both about the adventures of 12-year old boys with the vices of the city, should open on the same day. Although "Milk Money" is worthless and "Fresh" is strong and original, you might find it interesting to see both, and reflect on their two views of America.

    http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/fresh-1994
  • playmaker88
    playmaker88 Members Posts: 67,905 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Stupid dope movie son


    Rip chucky
  • goodlookinout
    goodlookinout Members Posts: 5,302 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Chucky wanted to be a big shot and got shot smh