Life Is Hot in Cracktown (2009) Poster

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7/10
Life is Hot in Crackdown
Scarecrow-885 June 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Human misery in it's purest form. LIFE IS HOT IN CRACKDOWN is the new film from Buddy G and concerns the daily lives of a various assortment of characters living on the streets dealing with difficult situations such as drug abuse, gang violence, among other hot button issues. A mother(Illeana Douglas) allows her abusive boyfriend to lash out at her and the kids because of his personal problems after losing his job. A store employee, Manny(Victor Rasuk), who runs it at night, with a wife and kid(the kid, when we first are introduced to the family cries all the time, causing an emotional stress for them all)is almost killed by a robber whose gun is jammed. A married couple, Marybeth(Kerry Washington)and Benny(Desmond Harrington), both junkies, try to remain a solid couple despite their habits(and she is best friends with a wealthy transvestite, Ridley(Mark Webber) while Benny has a hard time adjusting to his decision to get a sex change)and times of friction in their relationship. Black youths, led by thug Romeo(an intense Evan Ross), consider themselves quite the gangsters until they are betrayed by who they thought was their ally on the street. Two cops work the beat on these streets, one a young rookie(Thomas Ian Nicholas) along with a tired partner(Vondie Curtis-Hall) who has been a veteran cop a long time and has seen it all.

Drug movies are never easy for me to sit through because you see people voluntarily destroy their lives. Unlike COMBAT SHOCK which ends in depressing fashion, Buddy G's newest film does provide some hope for a few of his characters. For instance, when it appears that their parents have left them all alone, Willy(Ridge Canipe)and Susie(Ariel Winter) may've, in actuality, been spared a life of despair and horror..if anything, it's quite possible that foster care would better benefit them. When Benny attempts to rob a store and is shot in the process, he's left in a comatose state, but it could be a wake-up call he needs to get things right in his life.

But, there are also plenty of bleak, uncompromising moments as well. An old man is bullied by Romeo and his boys unmercifully because he used money "owed to them" to buy his medicine and groceries..while his sick mother deteriorates, Romeo is out living a life of crime, basking in the power he thinks he has, his inevitable doom apparent in who he chooses to align himself with. It's never fun watching a little girl hiding behind a pillow afraid she'll be hit by a screaming man complaining that his "family" isn't doing enough to help pay the rent. Ridley feels liberated that he'll finally be able to address who he really is, but when faced with being cut off from his trust fund, this freedom could be shortlived..and that could include abandoning the one true friend who helped motivate him to embrace his homosexuality, Marybeth.

LIFE IS HOT IN CRACKTOWN is what Buddy G can do with a decent budget and a good ensemble cast. Children aren't admonished from the harsh environs of life on the streets..one girl Willy knows is stabbed and we see others prostituting themselves. The black youth who terrorize the old man and follow orders to do a series of chores for their gang brothers are punished for the life they chose. And, to protect himself, Manny packs a pistol but how will he respond when a gun is pointed at him and to the idea of actually shooting someone, even if it's a robber? Nothing's more disconcerting than seeing kids with guns and constant eruptions of violence at their hands. Buddy Giovinazzo is a brave filmmaker who doesn't take the easy way out, instead portraying urban squalor and broken homes/lives as they really exist. This movie is based on his own collection of stories and it's an impressive return. With Shannyn Sossamon as Manny's wore out wife Concetta and Laura Flynn Boyle as an aging hooker, Betty. Lots of drug abuse is featured in this movie and there are endless instances of unpleasantness, but Buddy G doesn't wallow in the details as much.
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7/10
A slice of black lives with a slice of bleakness, is a little too "clean" which makes it hard to lose yourself-which is good since this is a punch in your face
dbborroughs25 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This is a bleak black film about how crack and other ills destroy the lives of people. We have a small boy who has to figure out how to survive with his sister and his parents; pre-op transsexual whose boyfriend is addicted; a young man with a wife and baby who works days as a security guard and nights in a bodega trying to get enough money to get out, and a gangbanger and his crew who run rough shod over everyone and each other in a crack fueled haze.

I began by saying that this is bleak and black and I mean it. The film begins with our gangbanger taking his girlfriend away from watching a street basketball game to show her something. Instead of showing her something he turns her over to his boys who brutally rape her and leave her crying in an alley. Its not a fun and happy film by any stretch of the imagination. It's not the sort of film that I would normally watch but the opening kind of floored me and I had to see where it was going. You would think it could only get better from there but it doesn't, we're on the fast track to hell as we watch as most things and people are broken.

Well acted, you like many of the "bad" people despite their actions, this film remains bearable thanks to the very good cast.

If there is any flaw in the film it's that its too clean. The film doesn't have a grittiness to it that speaks of the street. The film often has the feel of a Hollywood idea of the street and the poor. Its not that what happens doesn't ring true, it does, it just that things look dressed up. In a way it feels like people re-enacting events transpiring in the next room. The characters, the young boy and his sister most glaringly, seem to be playing dress up. The kids seem too well fed, the dirt on their faces too perfect. For me it put a distance between the actors and what was going on, some of the edge was taken off things.

Then again maybe that's a good thing since this is still an uncomfortable movie no matter how you slice it.

A good little film, this should have been great. Regardless of good or bad this film with haunt you like a bad dream.

Worth a look if you like your slices of life black with a side of hopeless.
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7/10
Overdone To the Max
halfrocentric19759 January 2010
First off let me say that I used to live where this movie was filmed and its some what like that but this movie is madness maxed out. Its really not like that. They show these people has having no humanity what so ever. That couldn't be farther from the truth. Bad things do happen but when u live in a neighborhood no matter how down trodden the people are still your neighbors. You have to live with those people. They show crackheads as just animals with no souls. Its not true.

Another reviewer said that it was unreal because the transgender character was beautiful. He's obviously not been around many trans women or seen many. There are some trans women who are absolutely stunning like the character in this film.

Again this movie is gritty but its sensationalism. I also resent that the only redeemable characters are white people. All the black men are barbaric and the white are more docile. This is not true. I'm sick of seeing this mess in films.
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6/10
Don't do crack
magicsinglez26 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Don't do crack.

The message could also be, 'Don't move to NYC, anytime'. At least not if you are poor. It's a message a bit more timeless than don't do crack, and a message it wouldn't hurt to remind folks of even here in North Carolina.

The message could also be: buy a gun and be ready to use it. The movie shows a cast of characters willing to rape teenage prostitutes, hold hostage, and rape senior citizens, male ones, in a daily maneuver to get their welfare checks, and, when one tenant calls the police, not only do they not show up but the landlord kicks him out for making the call. It's inviting trouble apparently.

A third of the way through the movie finally someone fights back, a mumbling character who's the boyfriend of a transsexual being harassed. He's the good guy in the movie. It's good to know even a movie this depraved can still find room to put in a pro-gay theme. Robbery, murder, sexual harassment: You have to draw the line somewhere and apparently on those who won't march in favor of homosexuality is where.

A shopkeeper in the movie at what would amount to 'the arab store' (who is actually Hispanic, I think) fights back too, shooting a would be robber. It's this scene where we learn fighting back isn't good either, as it leads to ugly death. It's not even his store, he's just a worker apparently. The store clerk could not regret his decision more.

So the message seems to be don't anything. Don't feel anything. Ball up like a rollie-pollie on the floor and try to avoid being stepped on. Take no action in this world. Everything is bad. There are no good guys. Being neurotic, and being gay, is a small price to pay for there to be one less person out there being shot by a stupid guy. There was a book out once with the title, "The Pursuit of Loneliness". This movie is saying the opposite. We'd be better off alone. At least in Cracktown. It's probably up to you to determine the boundaries of 'Cracktown'.

Oh - and don't trust black guys. All the really-bad guys in this movie, getting away with everything, are black.

My favorite scene in the movie is when the transsexual goes to her friend Gabrielle's house, in tears, "My boyfriends been shot. They don't know if he's going to make it" unwisely adding "how are you". Gabrielle immediately launches into an explanation of how he can't be 'Gabrielle' anymore. His mother is going to take him back, if he ends his current ways. "I can't be poor" he says. So there are two heroines in this movie. 'Gabrielle' Gary now or something, says they can't be friends anymore and shuts the door on the crying transsexuals face! So white. So gay. How real can you get?

This is one of those ultra violent (and this particular one is dirty and desperate and ugly) movies we can gush about afterward saying how great and amazing (and artistic) and (sadly) how real? it is, because it is supposed to be an anti-violence film. And I suppose if we don't understand the action we're probably some kind of wimp. Apparently, the only way to curb violence is to show more and more of it. Anything less would be reactionary, or conservative, not to mention a lot less hip. I'm willing to bet the original title was intended to be 'Life is Hard in CrackTown' (certainly an adequate one-line review) but, 'too preachy'.

I was entertained but, while I didn't really like the movie a lot on a conscious level, I did enjoy myself watching the movie, I think. . . When I left the theater, as I was walking out (or as I am usually walking out) and that strange feeling I get? - after watching a film filled with splendor - I felt completely the opposite of that. On some kind of subliminal level this film brought those feelings close to the surface, but in an opposite way. The lives of those in Cracktown are so sad and desperate and the scenes so dirty and ugly, my own very sad life began to seem livable.

So, while you don't want to live in Cracktown, it's not so bad living a few blocks away.
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6/10
I know what I am. Don't think for a second that I don't, 'cus I do.
lastliberal5 June 2010
A drama about living in the inner city, where crack and prostitution reign. Some say it is too dark, but it's real and dark is what this life is all about.

Waking up with cockroaches running across your face, and having nothing more than a cracker for breakfast, would make anyone despair.

The film features pre-op transsexual Marybeth (Kerry Washington) and her boyfriend Benny (Desmond Harrington), Manny (Victor Rasuk) who works two jobs to support his wife (Shannyn Sossamon) and baby, street kids Willy (Ridge Canipe) and Suzie (Ariel Winter) and gang member Romeo (Evan Ross). Among the other recognizable faces are Brandon Routh (Superman Returns), Illeana Douglas (Otis), Lara Flynn Boyle (Land of the Blind), Vondie Curtis-Hall (The Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call - New Orleans), Mark Webber (The Laramie Project), RZA (American Gangster), Carly Pope (Young People F*cking), Thomas Ian Nicholas (American Pie, Pie 2, Wedding) and Tony Plana (Slayer).

If you like poverty-porn, then you will find four good stories and lots of familiar actors in this film.
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6/10
Might be realistic but its only remotely watchable and mostly depressing
Robert_duder9 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Life is Hot in Cracktown shows a gritty and disturbing life on the streets as a result of crack shown from various viewpoints and stories. The concept is certainly interesting enough and almost invariably the story will be depressing and attempt to show some moral and terrifying look at the human spirit and the underbelly of the drug infested community and all that is true. Where the film stumbles is that the characters presented aren't necessarily interesting enough to hold your attention or the story lines that could potentially be riveting end up not getting enough coverage and end up being buried by the other stories. Granted I find this happens consistently in the multiple story type films made even more popular by award winning "Crash" from a few years ago. The moral message behind Cracktown doesn't force it down your throat but still manages to show the degradation essentially caused by crack and addiction in this community. The stories don't really cross each other which is different in some ways but also makes you feel like you're watching several different movies at once.

Kerry Washington gives a very good performance as a pre-op Transsexual. Obviously her character has an interesting history and Washington brings this character to the forefront of the film. She is probably one of the best performers in the film certainly. Victor Rasuk plays hard working Manny. Rasuk's character is probably potentially interesting and yet he also fails to bring the character to the forefront. Rasuk and Shannyn Sossamon who plays his wife are bordering on boring as far as their story goes. Granted they are only the focus because Rasuk's character tends to be around when the other characters are. Fourteen year old Ridge Canipe is terrific as Willy, the young boy forced to beg on the streets to care for his little sister while his mother runs around with her abusive boyfriend. Canipe gives a powerful performance and I kept wishing that the film focused on him and his sister because clearly they were the most interesting. Evan Ross plays a gang leader that seems to be completely blood thirsty and will stop at nothing to get vengeance for his brother's murder. Ross is good but has absolutely no character arc. He comes on the screen as a murderous psychopath and leaves the film exactly the same if not worse. You will never feel any empathy for him and you will feel like his end is just and worthy, which I don't think is the intention.

I think the best description of Life is Hot In Cracktown is "mish mash." All these characters, some potentially interesting, are thrown together and rushed through their stories. The ending is so slapped together and happens so quickly and all at once you will feel like none of the characters are properly closed off leaving you feeling essentially ripped off after sinking time into these characters. There are certainly some potentially good performances but they are hampered by the slapped together story and lesser characters. Writer and director Buddy Giovinazzo seems to have a certain ego about his own work. He wrote the original novel in 1993 and then the screenplay and then directed it. He hasn't had any real experience on the big screen and his biggest claim to fame appears to be Maniac 2: Mr. Robbie and as producer of a project called "Suck My D$#%." I'm not bad mouthing either project but I'm thinking he should potentially think about doing something a little less serious. Life is Hot In Cracktown is worth seeing but I doubt you'll be blown away by it. Its gritty and often disturbing but doesn't tie anything together at any point. 6/10
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1/10
Awful, Awful Movie.
crispusattucks30 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
I am sitting here reading all these reviews of this horrible, poorly directed, poorly cast, awful dialogue cliché ridden film and I am amazed to see people describe this film as "realistic", "real" & "authentic". I grew up in poor neighborhoods and know people who are drug addicts and their is nothing "real" about this film. "Life is Hot in Crack Town" is filled with cliché'd two dimensional stereotypes (not stereotypes from film which tends to be more PC, but stereotypes from news headlines) lacking all humanity and believability. Actually, I take the last part back. This movie is probably believable and "real" to people who have no contact or first hand knowledge of what goes on in these types of neighborhoods (which I am sure is the case with the reviewers who found this film so "authentic").
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10/10
Ignore vested interests whenever possible
gs207 June 2010
Well, let's see. where do i start? If you listen to the negative reviews one might think this is a bad film.........when in fact, it is a very good movie......the only people that I can think of that might not have liked it may be crack dealers. If anyone wants to know what it might be like to use, sell, or have association with crack even without one's desire to; they should see this film. Crack life truly is dangerous, frenetic, unhealthy, and it twists people's relationships with each other; and yes, there can be cruelty, and mindlessness; rarely is there any lasting kindness. The people in the story are, by the nature of their involvement egocentric and self-centered of course; all using addicts are. It is the nature of the beast.

Someone said the characters didn't show any humanity. I didn't get that at all. I thought the authors demonstrated quite ably how their humanity was being destroyed by their addictions and their environment.

Some others criticized the fact that only the white characters were redeemed. I wonder if they actually watched the film? or that all the crack dealers were black; all the crack dealers were NOT black actually. The actual ethnic make-up of the population of crack dealers, while sad, is irrelevant and anyone who focused on that missed the point. In actuality the most important fact about the make-up of crack dealers is that they were originally poor and came from terribly corrupted neighborhoods.

Some reviewers claimed it was unrealistic because the transsexuals were too pretty; well. They weren't all too pretty, if they watched the film. I have to wonder if some of the people who judge the realism of a film from their personal life experience really have the experience they think they do. There is a vast difference between what one imagines, what one reads, what one hears, other films people think are realistic because they want them to be and real life experience. So. Be careful with their critical advice when it is clear they are having an episode of fantasy about their real life. Someone else complained about casting.......i can't imagine how hard it must be to cast any film but i would like to offer that compared to say, the new version of Pelham 123 for instance, this film is brilliantly cast.

One thing I think bothers me more than anything with this particular venue, by the way, is the strong possibility that some of these more ridiculous negative reviews may come from people who may have some vested interest in bad mouthing a particular piece of work because they are the competition, a jilted lover, a disgruntled former employee, an un-hired employee, or the multitude of other bad reasons people say terrible things about good efforts; sadly, it is just a part of human nature. Human nature, at it's worst, as demonstrated by some of the characters in this film.........maybe some who had such personal problems with this film see themselves too closely paralleled with some of the characters.

Anyway, I thought it was quite realistic, possibly a little too sanitized but it really isn't necessary to overwhelm an audience with too much of the horror of violence in respect to the characters situations to get the messages of this film across.

The best thing to do is see it for yourselves and make up your own mind........please bear in mind; I have no vested interest involved in this review as I have never worked in "Hollywood" or any other related occupation.
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7/10
It has something to say stating the problem
jordondave-2808515 July 2023
(2009) Life Is Hot In Cracktown DRAMA

Somewhat of a raw documentary drama style film based on the stories told through Buddy Giovinazzo's novel of the same name who also wrote and directed it. The film although not for everyone since anyone can see something like this on some documentary channel or another about pushers and low life's, but the thing is that the film does have an ending if not a satisfying one, but have to go through all the retro tape to go there which just 'states' the characters without viewers able to identify with any of them until at least after the first hour! There's also a realistic feel to the characters since it's centered on the poor side of town portraying a particular neighborhood unnoticed and often ignored by civilized residents and hard not to look. Style is similar to (1995) Kids and Bully of (2001)
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1/10
Typical film filled with Minority Stereo Types
mochteam18 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
This film isn't made for the type of audience that's portrayed in the film. The film is made for people that have never stepped foot in the inner city in their life time. Think of it as a "Friday the 13th" for people that live in the suburbs and no where near the so called inner city. Every minority is a rapists, crook, prostitute, junkie or a drug dealer. So expect this movie to feed off all those stereotypes in entertainment for the audience that this film was designed for.

For example there's some scene where a group of minority thugs rape another minority in broad daylight out of nowhere. They're all okay with it because they're minorities and that's what they do in the inner city. They even look like the typical stereotypes of thugs wearing hoodies,smoking marijuana, laughing and having a good time while watching the rape go down. This movie couldn't be more offense and stereotypical if they used black face and called it "The Birth of a Nation 2".
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10/10
The REAL Reality...
markgrizzly2 July 2009
With this being the FIRST movie review i've done, i couldn't have picked a harder movie to summarize.. If you've seen Buddy Giovinazzo's 1986 street slime suicide epic "Combat Shock", than you'll know what to expect.. A perfectly made film thats downbeat and depressing, a Drama that can pass for horror And characters that you are supposed to hate, but can't.. The only difference here is that instead of the gritty 80's look this film has a nice pop-polished feel (and more characters to feel bad for)

The movie basically follows four groups of characters in their day to day struggles in a drug/hooker infested neighborhood (Not unlike Hollywood). There's Marybeth (Kerry Washington) and Benny (Desmond Harrington) who roam the streets looking for johns. Marybeth is a Transsexual who's trying to save money for her sex change by giving head to old filthy tricks and at the same time supporting her loser boyfriends (bennys) drug habit. Benny's trade is a burglar, but his drug problem and age has made it difficult to pull anything off without F**king it up. Then There's Willy (Ridge Canipe) A pre-teen who, like all kids in these neighborhoods has no future. He wakes up to cockroachs running across his face, hangs out with the Junkie outside his welfare building (Brandon Routh), Has a crush on a local hooker named "Melody" (Elena Franklin) who's roughly the same age as he is.. He also has to watch after his little sister while his Mom (Illeana Douglas) and her abusive boyfriend smoke rock.. Romeo (Evan Ross) is the neighborhood punk who roams the streets terrorizing people, extorting and brutally beating down the elderly for their welfare checks, raping, robbing, killing.. People may think his character is an exaggeration of a street punk, but there are HUNDREDS of "Romeos" in every city.. The kids that were number one on the football team 2 years ago, now sell crack and aspire to live out the "Scarface" life. Then There's the people in the neighborhood who are trying to make a life for themselves, but they are too naive to realise that it will NEVER happen.. Manny (Victor Rasuk) works two jobs.. A Day job at the local Liquor Store and a Security job at the welfare apartments (were Willy Resides). He and his wife Concetta (Shannyn Sossamon) live in squalor and have a newborn son who NEVER STOPS CRYING (Kinda reminiscent of Frankies 'Agent Orange" Baby in "Combat Shock"). Of all the people in the neighborhood (that we see) he is the only one trying to make a better life for himself and his family, but in the end not even THREE jobs can help. (you just have to LEAVE!!)

Of the four of us that went to the film i think i was the only one who really loved it.. My Girlfriend (who's favorite film is "Bloodsucking Freaks")said that it was too dark. My two other friends liked it, and one friend actually sparked his stem about half way through.. The truth is, we all grew up in a neighborhood just like the one shown in the film. Its hard to watch "Hollywood" almost Glorify and Exploit this reality for rich snobby dick heads to watch and try to analyze.. (Its basically Hollywood Exploiting ITSELF!) I've been in willy's shoes and the reality is that no matter how innocent he seems in the film, eventually he will grow up to be a junkie, thief or dealer (or all three) Some people finally realise that it would be easier to just LEAVE the neighborhood and move to the suburbs. You'd still have to struggle, BUT after everything you've already dealt with, moving would be a walk in the park. HOPEFULLY some Crackheads out there will see this film and realise that they should NEVER have kids! Maybe they will see that this life is a vicious cycle that they will pass on to their kids and they'll grow up to be our future addicts and hookers OR WORSE, They'll become the future "Romeos". Too many kids in the city end up like him. In a neighborhood full of druggies you realise that the only REAL job out there is to actually supply these drugs to these losers. When your Mom and Dad cant pay the rent and your able to hustle $1000 A DAY selling crack and heroin you feel like a success. Thats the trap. Only 1 in 10 will be able to stay off the drugs they sell, and only 1 in 10 will save that money and move to Riverside and get a job selling DVD's and VHS tapes on Amazon :) Anyways, this is my first movie review to a movie that still doesn't have a review. (now i'll try to sound like everyone else) The movie had GREAT direction, excellent acting from an excellent ensemble cast and it will give you a realistic look into the streets! I heard somebody say this film was like "Short Cuts on Drugs". That sums it up nice, except there isn't some stupid earthquake. Unlike "Short Cuts" this movie has a realistic ending. Good job Buddy G!! Hopefully you'll adapt some of your other books to film. Then you'll have my SECOND review ever!
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7/10
Raw, hard, violent truth
bluntineye18 December 2010
A previous reviewer said this was a terrible movie, blah, blah, blah. I found it to be a hard look at what drugs do to people and that its not just one type of person. The first scene was a girl getting raped which is very disturbing. I think this sets a disgusted mood from the get go. I do not think it was needed much, but it is powerfully disturbing. The movies character selection is good, unlike what the other reviewer said. I disagree with everything from that previous viewer. That person must not be from the streets or knows much of anything about drugs. If your into seeing movies like 'Kids' this is comparable. I have no issue with the violence, but the showing of the entire rape is not needed. Crack kills and its not just for Wall Street f'ups!
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1/10
Should be a comedy
Edondada5 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
U know when you're laughing and it's not supposed to be funny? That's this movie. Characters are a joke. Not believable at all. Crackheads wearing make up, hair done...Story doesn't have meaning when you're watching "thugs" walking in unison to a funky beat...R u kidding? Those thugs were hilarious! I thought it was a Wayans movie! Good the director got it made....its hard to make an indie... but using "whoa look how far we're gonna take it" shocking scenes to make it seem more real?...actually does the opposite. Casting's wrong, direction, pacing, everything... could even be considered an insult to those battling real drug addiction. Really belittles their struggle. Some good talent, solid actors, but the story's so cliché no performance could save it. Tell a story about real crackheads and junkies not actors trying new stuff in this fictional urban jungle
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1/10
Worst Movie Ever!!!!!
marasha8 October 2009
Most awful casting I've ever seen. Clark Kent as a crack head, a very feminine looking woman as a trans and on and on.............

Stupid ass violence just for the sake of being violent. No content, no meaning. This person has never been on the streets. It's a joke!

The only thing dumber than this movie is the fact that I finished watching it. I just kept thinking it couldn't get any worse but it did to the very end.

Trying way to hard to be an off the hook movie. Trying to be freaky. So stupid! I really have no more to say but can't leave a comment unless I write more.

Please take this advice and DO NOT BOTHER WATCHING THIS MOVIE!!!!! AWFUL!!!
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9/10
A realistic look at life in the inner city.
Captain_Couth28 August 2009
Life is Hot in Cracktown (2009) is a movie based upon a collection of short stories written by the director Buddy Giovinazzo. The film follows four story lines: a man who works two jobs trying to support his family and move out of the inner city, a brother and sister who try to survive in a roach infested hotel, a pre-op transsexual who works the streets to make ends meet and a young hoodlum who lives an empty life with no future to look forward to. They are just some of the faceless people who try to make a life inside a poverty stricken ghetto. even though they have a bleak present, something inside of these people drives them to try and look for a way out of there lives and look for a brighter future.

I really enjoyed this movie. Most of the films I see about the inner city are full of cartoonish and stereotypical characters that you don;t care about. The people in this film are real as the person next door. I found a lot of the dialog and situations these people are faced with to be real and very authentic. Buddy Giovinazzo has come a long way since his first film (Combat ShocK) but he still retains the gritty realism and spirit of that film in his latest project. He seems to have a genuine feel for his characters and none of that pseudo-liberal guilt complex that similar films that come out of Hollywood have. No phony baloney middle class guilt trip here and I really appreciate that in a film like this one.

Highly recommended.
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1/10
terrible,waste of time,
juliansplanet25 August 2009
I feel dumber after watching the first 20 min,luckily i walked out and saved the rest of my brain, people should watch better films and take notes on why they are rated highly,not because of the budget of the film or the special effects, just simply good acting and getting simple things right,and MOst importantly--not being LAME--, but i guess this was produced for those Sheeple without taste and not a clue of what is ''A good Movie''don't be scared of rating films low,save your under-appreciated high scores for ''once in a life time movies''. Keep in mind that many use IMDb for trusted reviews and opinions,don't spoil the broth by sugarcoating turds Peace & love
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8/10
A triumphant return for Buddy Giovinazzo
Corpus_Vile5 May 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Life Is Hot In Cracktown is the harsh uncompromising plethora of tales about people who do crack, spend their time looking for money for crack and live within its addiction 24/7. There's no frills here, no upside, and no real hope. There's Mary Beth, (a dazzling turn by Kerry Washington) a pre-op transgender, hooking to survive as her crack frazzled boyfriend Benny (Desmond Harrington) robs apartments. Then there's Romeo, (Evan Ross) a shell like dead eyed teen gangbanger, husked out after his brother's death, and who spends his days raping and terrorizing when he's not smoking up. Kids aren't spared either, with ten year old Willie (Ridge Snipe) panhandling the streets for money, partly to feed his younger sister, and partly to contribute towards his parents addiction, all the while observing Melody, a teen prostitute who he has a crush on.

Life Is Hot In Cracktown is a bleak, depressing yet strangely touching tour de force from one of the most underrated (and sadly and unjustly overlooked) director's around, Buddy Giovinazzo, who's searing debut Combat Shock was no less disturbing despite its micro budget.

Unsympathetic yet non-judgemental, it's quite frankly one of the best films I've seen recently and if this film was done by a mainstream or famous director, it would probably reap awards, with one in particular going to Washington and another to Evan Ross.

I caught this at the Edinburgh fabfest and it was one of the highlights of an already impressive lineup of films, with Buddy Giovinazzo as a special guest, who is one of the nicest, unassuming self deprecating guys you can meet. Hopefully Cracktown will get a US distribution because it deserves to be seen.

A highly recommended film, check it out. 9/10
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1/10
Just so god-awful
matt-247724 August 2009
I cannot stress how bad this movie is. This director took every cheap little unintelligent shot at making these people look so "distressed". Why are their clothes so dirty? Why on earth would you get the new clark kent to play a crack head? You should be banned from motion pictures for the rest of your life Buddy Giovinazzo.

I take serious offense to this fool wanting to cast real actors as thugs and lowlifes as some kind of clever joke. Why would you ask Clark Kent to play a crackhead? Why are they yelling so much? Why is everyone so mean? Why are those kids so filthy? No one would want to be so filthy? Not even a crackhead child.

You need to grow up and not make any movies ever again.
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8/10
Gritty. Real. Personal. Unfortunate About The Title...
fwomp2 September 2009
I'm gonna have to eat some crow here, especially after complaining about the last film I reviewed, SHADOWHEART. Both it and this one – LIFE IS HOT IN CRACKTOWN – came to me via Amazon's Vine Program. And I was becoming rather tired of the careless films that tended to populate The Vine's DVD list. Well, Life Is Hot In Cracktown has reformed me ...somewhat. It isn't great. It isn't stupendous. But it is gritty, real, and put together in a way that made it extremely watchable.

All of these characters are well-rounded and exceptionally well acted. There will be someone that every watcher will be able to connect with. Whether it's the young boy looking after his younger sister as his mother and her boyfriend get high and leave them alone for days, or the pre-op transsexual Marybeth (Kerry Washington, THE LAST KING OF Scotland) and her emotionally labile boyfriend Benny, or Manny, the guy working two jobs trying to support his wife Concetta (Shannyn Sossaman, WRISTCUTTERS) and their colicky baby, or the gang-banger Romeo who's life on the street is turning him into a dangerous individual, there's someone here for everyone.

The interest comes in the fact that you watch most of these people make horrible decisions or do terrible things, yet you cannot look away or even condemn them. They are the best and worst of us all, and it shows a rugged side of humanity that most of us would rather not see ...except to realize that one of these people might have been you had you not had a few breaks. It's frightening and enlightening.

The best part of the film is toward the end as we watch each person forced to make a decision and wonder at what the outcome will be. It is a turning point in their lives and we are given front row seats to it. Amazing how it all came together.

Watching the special features, I have to disagree with Kerry Washington's comment about transsexuals never being shown on film in any meaningful way. The film TRANSAMERICA focused specifically on this subject and was a fantastic film. Just FYI, Kerry.

Anyway, this film is actually quite good, even though I found the title a bit unfortunate.
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8/10
A quick note
FishSteak10 August 2013
Warning: Spoilers
A quick note to address a couple of points reviewers have made: (1) "The only redeemable characters in the film are non-black." Really? One of the kindest, most decent and, yes, redeemable, characters in the film is not only black, but a black woman. The transsexual prostitute is quite decent and redeemable at the end. I guess it all goes up to what you consider "redeemable." If you mean they have hope for the future, well, any of them being "redeemable" in that sense is rather unrealistic. But when I see that word I interpret it as whether they, aside from being crushed by circumstances, have the makings of morally good people (morally in the universal sense -- caring about others, helping others, etc.).

(2) "The film is preachy." I don't think so at all -- in fact, several reviewers have shown appreciation for the fact that it isn't, here. But you'll always have some who find something so, I suppose. To the contrary, while there's an element of "just desserts" -- I too did find Romeo's end right and proper, and never found him forgivable, but I don't think he was meant to be so -- while there's that element, as I experienced it, it left the characters and the situations rather ambiguous and complex, not subject to easy preachiness at all. If anything, I think it did an admirable job of saying, these things are not simple.

(3) "The characters are too prettied up." Well, there's some truth to this. But this is a message film, and it's an unfortunate fact that the kind of people in the "To:" line of this film are psychologically unprepared for it all at once, and many, though well-meaning, would be strongly turned away by more realistic squalor, skin tones and visible signs of ill health. You can't have it all, and I think he found a good balance. I *do* think he showed the cops as way too much of a positive force in these neighborhoods, and *that* could have also used some counterbalance. Corrupt and/or hostile cops is a *big* deal in inner-city neighborhoods. The main cop was the image of gentle kindness, and even the smug young white cop just ended up being smug and demeaning a bit.
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8/10
Requiem For A Dream On Crack
chicagopoetry16 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This one would make Hubert Selby Jr. proud. Although it doesn't seem to have the budget of Last Exit To Brooklyn, it certainly has the balls. It starts out with a rape. I can't remember another movie that starts out with a rape except for High Plains Drifter, although this one is a bit more violent although not as intense as the one in Irreversible. In any case, smoking crack or doing drugs seems to be the running theme ala Crash or Babel, but the cinematography is more in the lines of the cable drama The Wire, which isn't putting it down since The Wire is a pretty good feakin' show. The characters are well acted but not really likable and at times not believable but that's okay because this is a story about crackheads so what is there to like or believe in? Some of the screen writing is a complete mess and at times it doesn't make sense, like why is the mother who in one scene cares so much about her children abandoning them in the next, and the entire bit about the gangbanger who is hired to kill someone but then is targeted by killers is totally confusing, but coming from probably one of the most well made low budget movies it's all okay. I watched it, flaws and all, from beginning to end, and it kept me on the edge of my seat, and I was impressed, so I give it an eight.
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8/10
Bleak portrayal of poverty and misery
dworldeater18 May 2015
As a fan of writer/director Buddy Giovanno's bleak low budget horror classic Combat Shock, I sought out this film looking for more of his work. While Life Is Hot... is a drama and Combat Shock is a tweeked out horror film, they do share some similarities. Both films are bleak, depressing and urban. Like Crash this movie links together various characters from this story. However all of these characters all live in the same neighborhood and each has their own set of problems. Buddy humanizes these undesirables and shows many different sides to their everyday existence. The most sympathetic characters in this picture are Marybeth and Benny , a pre op transsexual streetwalker hooker and her hood burglar boyfriend. The least likable of the bunch is Romeo, a ruthless gangbanger on borrowed time. While this little indie film won't appeal to much of a mainstream audience, it has a lot more substance than some of those films that draw people in droves and do huge business. Life Is Hot in Cracktown shows the dark underbelly of urban America in a new light and fresh perspective. Anyone can fall on hard times and the film shows the hopelessness and misery that is a harsh reality for many people. The film is gritty and uncompromising and very real in its approach and vision. Performances are excellent as well. For me the film is a humbling experience. I am thankful that I did not grow up in this environment and that I did'nt have to shake the roaches from my clothing, then go out and hustle so me and my kid sister can eat.
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Los Angeles "cracktown", a slice of life few of us can identify with.
TxMike9 March 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Saw it on Netflix streaming movies. Good picture and sound.

For those, like myself, who grew up in the rural south, never used drugs, got a college degree, built a career in the business world, while being married and raising a family, what is depicted in this movie is very foreign, very hard to understand. What I don't know is how realistic it is, but for lack of any other guidance I will assume it fairly depicts a slice of life where the participants are involved, directly and indirectly, with crack cocaine.

This is not an "enjoyable" movie, it is all dirt and grit and people killing each other, either with the drug lifestyle, or with guns. The cast is good, the acting is good, but much of it is very difficult to watch.

The movie uses the editing technique where in the very last minute or so we see the coming together of 4 parallel but different stories. One about a young boy and his little sister, escaping the ratty apartment, starting their journey for a better life. The street thug waiting for the door to open with law-enforcement guns ablaze. The young married corner store clerk forced to use the pistol to protect himself. The racially mixed couple and their struggle with drugs and violence.

Not a pretty or enjoyable movie, but an interesting one.
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