Bones (2001)
Facts
| Directed by | Ernest R. Dickerson |
| Cast | Snoop Dogg, Pam Grier, Michael T. Weiss, Clifton Powell, Ricky Harris, Sean Amsing, Lynda Boyd, Khalil Kain and Michael T Weiss |
| Theatrical Release | October 24, 2001 |
| Running Time | 96 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
About Bones
Sleepy-eyed hip-hop luminary Snoop Dogg stars in Bones, an energetic horror film about a hustler who returns from the dead. Jimmy Bones used to rule his street, but now his body lies in the basement of a gothic abandoned house. When a troupe of young DJs and promoters decide to turn the house into a nightclub, dark forces are, unsurprisingly, unleashed. Bones has a cutting sense of humor, and Ernest Dickerson's direction snaps, crackles, and pops. It's not exactly subtle--the opening scene launches into gore and special effects--but there is some evocative imagery, particularly a large black hellhound that the club kids foolishly adopt as a pet. Snoop casts an effectively spectral aura, and Pam Grier, as the hustler's psychically gifted former girlfriend, has her usual presence and energy. All in all, a dynamic and enjoyable horror flick. --Bret Fetzer Amazon.com
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User Reviews
Average user review:| ILL BE STROCKING YOUR NECK TONIGHT |
IF YOU ARE A FAN OF SNOOP ITS A MUST SEE IF NOT THIS MOVIE HAS A WICKED STORY LINE AND A EXCELLENT TWIST AT THE END OF THE MOVIE "DOG EAT DOG WORLD" September 30, 2008
| Blaxploitation at it's best |
| LOVED IT |
| Cut and paste assemblage of borrowed tidbits |
Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, University Paris Dauphine, University Paris 1 Pantheon Sorbonne & University Versailles Saint Quentin en Yvelines
October 15, 2007
| a demented horror film |
This movie isn't even close to the African American Horror films of the 1970's in fact it was better, and not only that you have to know the influences involved with this one. The kinship is closer with Dario Argento's work, the film Suspiria (the maggot scene in Bones is a direct nod to this film.) The intense Gothic imagery will call to mind some of his movies and the level of darkness involved with the film is that of the works of either Algernon Blackwood or H.P. Lovecraft.
This film is its own entity, and in some ways the humor is in it but not a lot of humor. The scene that I was laughing at was the scene with the maggots. That was gross but that's what made the film one hell of an old school horror film. I have an eye for this kind of movie but I think it would be a lot scarier as a book or short story format. Some of the jolts in the story lend itself well, but you have to sit down and watch the film a few times to see some of the jolts -- in fact I stumbled acrossed it on BET but didn't watch it then because I wanted to see everything uncut.
The imagry in this one is just as strong as either BLACK SABBATH which is Mario Bava's work, and the director says it's cousin is Mario Bava's films. It lends itself more as Gothic horror film than a Slasher because the imagery is a lot darker than most of the films in this genre. The theme of the sins of the father play into this one, and the imagery of this film is more indepth than Tales from da Hood.
The kinship it shares with that movie is it is set in the Ghetto, but what you see with Jimmy Bomes is actually a likeable guy who was put in a bad situation. I am not a fan of Snoop's music but this movie made me a fan of his horror films. Seeing him on film with a lady he idolized was surreal and for her to play the love interest in this film was cool but her part in the film was disturbing too with the elments of the Occultism in it.
The use of flashbacks in the film make it even more effective, and it lends it self to The Crow some but this is an entirely different entity than The Crow. The images described to be The City of the Dead I will say did have me disturbed too. I will say other related books to this movie is Darkness Fears: A Tale of the Moon-Chosen by Joseph Armstead and a number of his novels. African-American Horror got smarter too over the years.
BONES isn't a new installment to genre, but a continuation but adding something original into the mix. I give the writers and director a lot of credit for building on the horror and suspense in the film. The use of an actual dog for one of the characters and special effects made this one one of the most creative I've seen in a long time.
The ending in the film wasn't that bad, disturbing and it was what they called the 'f--k you' ending. The darker horror films have this ending too, not many people who are casual watches of horror will know what a 'f--k you' ending is. 'F--k you' ending is a dark ending that provides the final jolt just as you're leaving the movie theater. The blood in the film will remind you more of how the blood was with Suspriria, and this in turn creates a movie akin to that film almost as brilliant as Suspriria. The extras make the movie worth watching after the film because it shows you the roots of the film. July 6, 2007
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