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- VIEW POINTS, Page 65CINEMAA Chill on the Heart
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- By Richard Schickel
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- To be young, gifted and black in America today is to live
- poised on a cruelly honed knife-edge. There are doubtless more
- opportunities than ever for bright, ambitious kids to escape the
- ghetto. But the chances of being wasted by random violence have
- also increased. In his remarkable debut film, BOYZ N THE HOOD
- (as in neighborhood), writer-director John Singleton, 23, maps
- gang-ridden South Central Los Angeles with a cartographer's cool
- realism. But what gives powerful resonance to his film -- whose
- opening was accompanied by shootings in theaters across the U.S.
- that left at least one dead and dozens wounded -- is his
- portrait of three young men struggling to keep their balance as
- drive-by shootings redden the night streets. Tre Styles (Cuba
- Gooding Jr.) is sustained by the example of a strong father,
- while his best friends, brothers Doughboy (Ice Cube, the rapper)
- and Ricky (Morris Chestnut), are betrayed by the lack of such
- a man. Singleton is aware that the ghetto is the chanciest of
- universes where one's fate can be determined by a moment's loss
- of temper. Or by standing on the wrong corner at the wrong time.
- Even in its warmest moments, there is a fearful chill in this
- hood's air. And on the hearts of its boyz.
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