Jordon Briggs

Aug 24, 2015

All For One & One 4 All: Straight Outta Compton Review

Dir: F. Gary Gray. Wri: Jonathan Herman, Andrea Berloff, S. Leigh Savidge Alan Wenkus, Andrea Berloff Prod: Look it Up. There’s a lot. Starring: O’shea Jakson Jr. Corey Hawkins Jason Mitchell, Aldis Hodge, Neil Brown Jr.

For the lovely Anna Jaramillo


 

Straight
 

 
Outta Compton is a compelling film with a few weak spots. But of course, when you’re
 

 
tying to depict a super group and tell a history story, maybe some parts are
 

 
better or more dynamic than others. Take your pick –it’s history. Outta Compton is a film about friends,
 

 
about LA and what the entertainment business—really, the world that’s been
 

 
created not to house you but to keep you on the porch begging for entrance does
 

 
to you: being black and from the hood in LA. Outta Compton is about black history.  My roommate came by my room—the door was
 

 
open—and asked what I did today. He usually does this because he’s partly
 

 
interested, partly concerned and at the same time wants me to experience life
 

 
in my new city: New York. I told him I hung out a few stops away from our
 

 
apartment at Book Culture down the street from Columbia University. Then took
 

 
the train downtown to Strand then came back up to finish out the day. Before
 

 
this I saw Straight Outta Compton.
 

 
And being from the west coast, being born in LA and spending time there during
 

 
my childhood (I moved to Sacramento after I was born) walking out of the
 

 
theater into the New York streets after seeing a movie about LA, was a bit
 

 
weird. But in some way helped me sort of accept that I’ve been living New York.
 

 
The roommate said that he heard good things but the movie and the praise for
 

 
the movie, brought up an issue for him—the #BlackLivesMatter movement. “When
 

 
kids say to me ‘Black Lives Matter’ I say back, but why? They don’t have an
 

 
answer.” Straight Out of Compton is black
 

 
history—whether you like N.W.A. or not, whether you like hip-hop or not, or
 

 
maybe were a fan of it at one point (talking to the older generation) and can’t
 

 
get with it anymore. And what’s a bit confusing about Outta Compton is its timeliness. It’s a historical piece that
 

 
presents issues that blacks now are facing. But at the same time, do we really need Straight Outta Compton?

The story follows Dre (played by Corey Hawkins
 

 
) Ice Cube (played by O’shea Jackson Jr) Eazy (played brilliantly by Jason
 

 
Mitchell) MC Ren (played by Aldis Hodge) and DJ Yella (played by Neil Brown Jr)
 

 
and their rise to rap superstardom in 1988. The story starts in ‘86 at the
 

 
height of the crack epidemic. The interesting thing about Outta Compton is that these characters, these five young men, as
 

 
N.W.A. live two decades just to see the same exact things happen to them from
 

 
where they started.  Police brutality, the
 

 
force of street life, the dying and passing away of friends and family, and
 

 
change. A lot of what F. Gary Gray’s film seems to be saying is that –much like
 

 
Rick Famuyiwa’s Dope—certain things
 

 
for a black person are almost inescapable; no matter how hard you try to do the
 

 
right thing. Eazy E and Jerry Heller’s relationship is a perfect example.
 

 
Anyone who’s watched a documentary on Dr. Dre or Death Row or Snoop or N.W.A.
 

 
know about Eazy E’s and Heller’s father and son, old buddy relationship—even
 

 
though Heller was cheating him. The film starts out with Eazy  making a drug deal that goes bad. And we see
 

 
that ever since this happens, Eazy has one foot in the streets, and the other outside
 

 
of them, but where that foot lands, we don’t know. That’s where Dre, O’shea.
 

 
and Yella come in. They help, or at least try, to get Eazy out of his futile
 

 
path, while at the same time trying to do the same for themselves. O’shea is a
 

 
writer, “a poet” as one of his friends describes him. “The rawest one”, who
 

 
becomes conflicted early by attesting to the segregation in LA. Dre is the headman–the
 

 
Superman of the group pulling everyone together under his vision (as he’s
 

 
always done). Ren is the homie who’s hungry for opportunity, and Yella is the
 

 
funny man driven by his motivation to have fun and be with his friends. Why my
 

 
roommate said that he finds a problem with BlackLivesMatter is because he feels
 

 
the kids don’t know what black lives mean. He tells me to Google Althea Gibson,
 

 
the first black professional tennis player–“They don’t even know who she is…this
 

 
is what I’m talking about. How do you fight for black lives and you don’t even
 

 
know who these people are”. By these people he means black people. What he
 

 
means: black people are people, not just abstractions. Outta Compton’s importance lies right here. The story is more about
 

 
Ice Cube and Eazy and how the group manages the rift, silmalteanousesly dealing
 

 
with fame and dealing with being black and famous. It’s not all about Dre
 

 
(which I’m actually happy about) but I do almost wish there was more of Ren. The
 

 
feud between Ice Cube and Eazy, with Dre being more of a team player, same as  the other members, was not only something I
 

 
needed to see because I felt that part of the N.W.A. story was glossed over in the
 

 
documentaries, but really was the films bread and butter. Outta Compton gave life to Eazy and O’shea’s feud. And in a way it made
 

 
it important– in terms of its relevancy for now and its depiction of hip- hop.
 

 
Like the heroes and heroine’s of the Harlem Renaissance, the heroes of the civil
 

 
rights movement, and in this film, the heroes of the molding and shaping of hip
 

 
hop culture, a movements leaders do not always see eye to eye. This piece of
 

 
the plot seemed more relevant than others–(Heller and Eazy, getting out of the
 

 
hood) due to the fact that they were different and could different in the midst of belonging to black culture and the
 

 
same set of principles that  propelled
 

 
them out of the hood, and into places where they could make change. They were attached
 

 
to their blackness whether they liked it or not, and like you, if you’re black
 

 
and reading this,  are too.  

Oshea and Eazy were not connected
 

 
just because of N.W.A. but they were tied together because they were brothers–
 

 
in every sense of word, and however their methods were not the same. They were
 

 
individuals as well as a community.  What
 

 
F. Gary Gray does with these stories, particularly Cube’s and Eazy’s is  humanize black rich teenagers. And yea, that
 

 
includes the misogyny, sorry to say. O’shea Jackson Jr and Jason Mitchell’s performances
 

 
were very good and in one scene where Cube (having left N.W.A. releasing Amerikkka’s Most Wanted, and beefing
 

 
with Eazy) gets in a fight, accompanied by the Lynch Mob, that almost severs
 

 
his ties with Eazy. It’s  as if you could
 

 
see, in Jackson Jr’s performance along with the costume choices mirroring those
 

 
of his father’s during that time, that O’shea felt like the forgotten one– “the
 

 
step child” as her proclaims on the song “I’m the N You Love to Hate”. The
 

 
scene was one most heart wrenching scenes in the movie. O’shea represents the outcast–The
 

 
guy that you’re not supposed to be like, the guy everybody has a problem with. He’s
 

 
not the crack a joke,  humorous, cool
 

 
guy. He’s the guy who takes shit personal. He’s the guy who takes shit
 

 
seriously. He’s the guy a lot of kids get shit for being like. The Kanye’s, The
 

 
Kid Cudi’s, The Lupe Fiasco’s of the black community. The heart of the movement:
 

 
the Malcolm X guy who even though he may not agree with the Million March, will
 

 
still have the FOI ready if them boys get out of hand. The contrast between
 

 
Eazy and Cube is the timelier element of the movie. And the fact that Gray made
 

 
the film two and half hours was, I think, equally important, because he
 

 
giftedly displays how much life–whether it be the life we live as regular
 

 
people trying make a dollar and follow our dreams, or the life we as people
 

 
under oppression, connected to the chasing of our dream—is impossibly lived sans
 

 
other people. In a movement like #BlackLivesMatter where it is crucial that its
 

 
supporters learn and recognize that black life doesn’t just mean a certain
 

 
group of people, Straight Outta of
 

 
Compton does a good job of reminding people that we’re just as much as
 

 
individuals as we are a community. And either position needs be respected.

#StraightOuttaCompton #hiphopmovies #NWA #LA #blackmovies

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