Tag Archives: Dwayne Johnson

F. GARY GRAY IN ACTION

STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON

Biopic follows N.W.A straight outta Compton as they take their case to the people

STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON (F. Gary Gray, 2015)
Metrograph
7 Ludlow St. between Canal & Hester Sts.
Saturday, August 19, 9:40, and Sunday, August 20, 9:10
Series runs August 11-20
www.straightouttacompton.com
metrograph.com

Born in New York City and raised in South Los Angeles, F. Gary Gray got his start making hip-hop videos for such artists as Outkast, Dr. Dre, TLC, and Ice Cube before directing his first film, the 1995 favorite Friday, starring cowriter Ice Cube, Chris Tucker, and Nia Long. Since then he has nine more films under his belt, focusing on action crime thrillers.

Running at Metrograph August 11-20, “F. Gary Gray in Action” consists of five of his hottest flicks, beginning with 2009’s Law Abiding Citizen, in which an honest man (Gerard Butler) battles a prosecutor (Jamie Foxx) after a home invasion. In 1996’s Set It Off, Jada Pinkett, Vivica A. Fox, Kimberly Elise, and Queen Latifah play friends who decide to rob a bank. In 2005, Gray helmed Be Cool, the sequel to the 1995 smash Get Shorty, both based on Elmore Leonard novels; this follow-up brings back John Travolta as Miami mobster Chili Palmer, who now gets involved in the music industry, joined by Uma Thurman, Vince Vaughn, Cedric the Entertainer, Andre Benjamin, Steven Tyler, Christina Milian, Harvey Keitel, Dwayne Johnson, and Danny DeVito. Gray’s 2003 remake of Peter Collinson’s 1969 heist comedy, The Italian Job, upped the action ante, with Mark Wahlberg, Charlize Theron, Edward Norton, Jason Statham, Mos Def, Franky G, and Donald Sutherland.

The ten-day series concludes with 2015’s Straight Outta Compton, which comes barreling out of the gates with all the rage and fury of the 1988 title track that kicks off with Dr. Dre declaring, “You are now about to witness the strength of street knowledge.” The energetic film traces the rise and fall, or creation and dissolution, of N.W.A, the seminal south L.A. hip-hop group that changed music forever. In the late 1980s, Ice Cube (O’Shea Jackson Jr.), Dr. Dre (Corey Hawkins), Eazy-E (Jason Mitchell), MC Ren (Aldis Hodge), and DJ Yella (Neil Brown Jr.) formed a rap group that sought to capture the sound and feel of what was happening on the streets of Compton, from drugs and gangs to racist cops and poverty.

They were a smash hit, particularly their controversial song “Fuck Tha Police,” which set up confrontations with authorities as the band hit the road on a nationwide tour. But when Cube and Dre start questioning where all the money is going — Eazy-E and manager Jerry Heller (Paul Giamatti) seem to be doing a lot better than the rest of them — everything they have built up threatens to unravel. And once Suge Knight (R. Marcus Taylor) enters the picture, the violence level increases, and things start getting even more out of control.

Life threatens to get outta control for N.W.A in STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON

Life threatens to get outta control for N.W.A in Straight Outta Compton

With Ice Cube, Dr. Dre, and Tomica Woods-Wright, Eazy-E’s widow, among the producers, Straight Outta Compton doesn’t pussyfoot around as the various characters make their cases for artistic and financial freedom while reinventing the music business. Juilliard graduate Hawkins (BlacKkKlansman, In the Heights) is outstanding as Dre, maintaining a calm demeanor even as all hell breaks loose around him, while Jackson Jr. (Just Mercy, Cocaine Bear) has trouble hitting the high notes portraying his father, Cube, and Mitchell (Detroit, Mudbound) gives Eazy-E an unpredictable nuance. Taylor (Baby Driver) wreaks havoc as Knight, the extremely dangerous cofounder of Death Row Records, who makes sure he gets what he wants, while Oscar nominee and Emmy winner Giamatti (Cinderella Man, Sideways) has a steady disposition as a white man in a black man’s world.

The music scenes are spectacular, especially a Detroit concert that turned into a showdown between the cops and N.W.A, and it’s cool to see Snoop Dogg (Keith Stanfield), Chuck D (Rogelio Douglas Jr.), and Tupac Shakur (Marcc Rose). The film wavers a bit when it tries to get overly sentimental or inject too many side stories; it’s best when it just forges ahead with the frenzy and furor that was N.W.A, taking on exasperating social conditions the only way they knew how. Straight Outta Compton also features several scenes in which primarily white cops harass black men and women that evoke what is still going on today around the country. Gray (Men in Black: International, A Man Apart) even throws in a fun reference to Friday when the band throws a naked woman out of a hotel party, telling her, “Bye, Felicia.” (If you don’t get the reference, look it up.) At the end of the song “Straight Outta Compton,” N.W.A concludes, “Damn, that shit was dope.” The same can be said of Gray’s dynamic film. Up next for Gray is the January 2024 Netflix heist thriller Lift, starring Kevin Hart.

[Mark Rifkin is a Brooklyn-born, Manhattan-based writer and editor; you can follow him on Substack here.]

SAN ANDREAS

Carla Gugino and Dwayne Johnson

Emma (Carla Gugino) and Ray (Dwayne Johnson) search for their daughter in SAN ANDREAS

SAN ANDREAS (Brad Peyton, 2015)
Opens Thursday, May 28
www.sanandreasmovie.com

“The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars,” Cassius says in Julius Caesar, and indeed, San Andreas is not the fault of its stars, Dwayne “the Rock” Johnson and Carla Gugino, who try their best in this disaster of a disaster movie. Johnson is Ray Gaines, a Los Angeles Fire Department search-and-rescue chopper pilot going through a divorce with his wife, Emma (Gugino), who is shacking up with her new beau, ridiculously wealthy architecture mogul Daniel Riddick (Ioan Gruffudd). Ray and Emma clearly still care for each other, but they have been torn apart by the tragic loss of one of their daughters; they are both very close with their remaining daughter, Blake (Alexandra Daddario), who is about to head off for college in Northern California. But an earthquake in Nevada that destroys the Hoover Dam triggers further destruction in Los Angeles and San Francisco, and Ray is soon commandeering vehicle after vehicle to save his family. Meanwhile, Caltech seismologist Dr. Lawrence Hayes (Paul Giamatti) is tracking the quakes, putting his new theory to work to predict where and when the next rift will happen, and how devastating it will be, desperate to get his message to the public via an investigative journalist (Archie Panjabi) before it’s too late.

Oscar winner Paul Giamatti stars as a seismologist in disaster epic

Oscar winner Paul Giamatti stars as a seismologist in disaster epic

Director Brad Peyton, who previously teamed up with producer Beau Flynn and Johnson on Journey 2: The Mysterious Island, borrows elements from such disaster flicks as Airport, Tidal Wave, Titanic, The Towering Inferno, The Day After Tomorrow, The Poseidon Adventure, and, of course, Earthquake, but not even Sensurround could have helped the absurd plot twists that threaten to set new records on the ludicrosity scale, at times evoking the Kentucky Fried Movie spoof That’s Armageddon. (The often mind-numbing screenplay is by Carlton Cuse, who cocreated Lost and is currently behind such other television series as The Strain and The Returned.) Destruction of all kinds runs rampant throughout San Andreas, but death is barely acknowledged, which does a disservice to some of the real-life tragedies the film evokes, including Hurricane Katrina, the Fukushima disaster, and 9/11. Perhaps we have become inured to such horrific events, as Peyton gets so caught up in special effects — buildings collapsing, fiery explosions, giant floods, in 3D! — that he discounts the human aspect, except for his protagonists (which also include Hugo Johnstone-Burt and Art Parkinson as British brothers helping Blake), who are apparently immune to most of what is going on around them. There are plenty of unintentional moments of laughter — although it is funny that Ray’s rival for Emma’s affections is named Riddick, the name of the character portrayed by Vin Diesel, Johnson’s fellow bald action star — but through it all, the eminently likable Johnson and Gugino are actually steadfast and strong, turning in solid performances among all the maddening mayhem. And Sia’s version of the Mamas and the Papas’ “California Dreamin’” over the closing credits is pretty cool, too. But I still miss Sensurround.