You won't look at race onscreen the same way again.
Bamboozled (2000)
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Reviews Counted:95
Fresh:45
Rotten:50
Average Rating:5.4/10
Consensus: Bamboozled is too heavy-handed in its satire and comes across as more messy and overwrought than biting.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] strong language and some violence
Runtime: 2 hrs 18 mins
Genre: Television
Theatrical Release:Oct 6, 2000 Limited
Box Office: $1,883,628
Synopsis: Spike Lee turns up the controversy notch once again with BAMBOOZLED, a sizzling satire on race and racism within the modern media world. Harvard-educated writer Pierre Delacroix (Damon Wayans), the... Spike Lee turns up the controversy notch once again with BAMBOOZLED, a sizzling satire on race and racism within the modern media world. Harvard-educated writer Pierre Delacroix (Damon Wayans), the only black employee on the staff of a struggling television network, suggests the most absurd idea for a pilot that he can possibly imagine, hoping it will convince his tyrannical boss, Dunwitty (Michael Rapaport), to terminate his contract and fire him. However, his plan backfires and his idea--MANTAN THE NEW MILLENNIUM MINSTREL SHOW--finds great success. The show is a stereotypical and racially charged depiction of the tap-dancing Mantan (Savion Glover) and Sleep 'n' Eat (Tommy Davidson), two lazy, homeless black men who spend their days in a watermelon patch. As the show becomes a national sensation, Delacroix, his assistant Sloan Hopkins (Jada Pinkett), as well as her older brother, aspiring rapper Big Black Af' (Mos Def), begin to see the harm the show is causing the community, triggering outbursts with deadly consequences. Shot on digital video, Lee uses his basic premise to mock and accuse today's entertainers (including Chris Rock, Ving Rhames, gangsta rappers, and Lee himself) for being modern reincarnations of the stereotypical caricatures that were so offensive in the past. The result is a biting commentary that is at turns hysterical, absurd, and poignant. [More]
Starring: Damon Wayans, Savion Glover, Michael Rapaport, Tommy Davidson
Starring: Damon Wayans, Savion Glover, Michael Rapaport, Tommy Davidson, Jada Pinkett Smith, Mos Def
Director: Spike Lee
Director: Spike Lee
Producer: Jon Kilik
Composer: Terence Blanchard
Studio: New Line Cinema
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Reviews for Bamboozled
Yes, Bamboozled is a picture of genuine importance. Yes, it is also crude, unstable and hazardous.
es, it's true that Hollywood has a lot to answer for in its portrayals of blacks as patsies and fools. But this fraudulent, self-important movie does little to rectify the situation.
The mix of comedy and hard-hitting outrage sits uneasily, and two-dimensional characters and performances (Wayans and Rapaport spring to mind, though Pinkett delivers a rigorous integrity) are further impediments as the film increases in hysteria.
the use of blackface, while extreme, serves as a readily inflammatory symbolic gesture of how the racism of yesterday still exists, but in different forms
The question of where ethnic comedy stops and cruel stereotype begins also gets lost as the cast improv well beyond any given scene's point, and it can all end only with a contrived last act of kidnappings and shoot-outs with the cops.
As usual, his dogmatic politics blind [Lee] from making a coherent movie that both services his message and entertains.
A near masterpiece ambiguously balanced between brilliance and incoherence.
Whereas Do the Right Thing left audiences stimulated, at the end of Bamboozled we feel exhausted and confused.
Even amid the overload of foul imagery, Lee creates scenes so rich in meaning and implication that they achieve a kind of terrible beauty.
It's been a long time since I've seen a movie that made me feel, think, laugh and cry -- often simultaneously.
The film, veering clumsily between satire and drama, often feels like a history lesson.
Features scenes that are strong, confrontational and flat-out brave enough to salve the frustration of sketchy characters and a narrative that spirals out of control.
The story that Bamboozled tells could hardly be more urgent or timely.
Louder than a bomb -- and just as explosive and messy -- Bamboozled doesn't always hit its mark, but it keeps on firing.
Latest News for Bamboozled
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