Fly By Night (1993)
Facts
| Directed by | Steve Gomer |
| Cast | Jeffrey D. Sams, Ron Brice, Larry Gilliard Jr., Brendan Kelly, Geeta Citygirl, Sharon Angela, Leo Burmester, Todd Graff, Daryl Mitchell and Maura Tierney |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 1992 |
| DVD Release | July 6, 2004 |
| Running Time | 94 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | R (Restricted) |
| UPC Code | 043396064270 |
| Buy this item | $12.99 at Amazon.com As of Jul 27 2:45 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Sony, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Full Screen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround) Or 18 new from $7.62, 17 used from $2.74 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| for ppl for love early new york 90s rap |
| THE SCHOOL OF HARD KNOCKS VS. HARVARD... |
He has charisma just as he does in his' other roles. ''I realize that certain viewers don't own the depth to appreciate this film,simply because they can't relate''! Reality isn't always pretty, it has a Grotesque side as well! A Synopsis of this film is simply about a college student who uses RAP as a pawn in order to exscape true responsibility! As a result he falls in the path of a Die Hard Rapper/drug-addict...Rich is caught up in the Hype of what he thinks RAP can bring. What Rich finds out is that ''all that glitters isn't gold''. May 24, 2005
| Pass this one up....... |
There is this one rapper who is hardcore, and very angry. He calls himself I Tick. When Rich and I team up they become an instant hit. Rich is the lighter of two, dancing around, smiling, and I remain angry. They call themselves the King and I. There is another rapper named Rick who has this old white dude that is his DJ, he is so out of so out of place.
Rich's aunt digs into him about leaving his family also, "Your actions have consequences," she tells him. All he can see is being on stage and getting famous.
There is one scene where The King and I rap at a sweet 16 party. Maybe that would not have been so unusual except it's in a white neighborhood, so of course the audience can't relate to what they are rapping about. When the mother of the birthday girl comments by saying "your songs are garbage (by the way I agreed, they really were)," the artist are determined to justify why they say the things the way they do. Their arguments don't hold water. I also had a really hard time believing that a suburban white mother would even want to hire this act for her child's birthday party.
Rich and I have an opportunity to sign on with a label. I is not with it and feels it's selling out. Rich on the other hand thinks it will give them the exposure he wants. Rich is finally realizing that I's attitude on life is wearing him down, and he tries to separate himself from I, but I is not trying to even hear it. I will go to any length to make sure Rich does not go off on is own.
There is a scene after I Tick says "I don't see no violence just people that want to have a good time," violence breaks out in the club. First you have a stabbing, and then shots are fired. As people try to leave the club you have folks being trampled. What really got me was there were some young kids in this place, and my question is why were they in there to begin with? 8, 9 and 10 year olds have no place in a club!!!
I never quite understood Mierna Tierny's role in the movie. It was not fully developed in my opinion. What was the deal with her roommate in the film? His role just served no purpose. Why was he working out in heels, pantyhose and a leather skirt? The movie was really weak. The film just gave the impression it was thrown together, the director hoped certain scenarios would fit, but they seemed out of place. This is one movie I won't see again.
December 22, 2004
| Captivation |
| i have mixed feeling about this flick |
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